after making the foregoing state; mént, delivered the opinion of the court.
The question is whether the state court erred in denying the second application for removal, and in view of our previous rulings in respect of such applications we think there was color for the motion to dismiss. . And reference to two recent deci-. sions of this court will indicate the reasons for our conclusion that the motion to affirm must be sustained.
In
Powers
v.
Chesapeake & Ohio Railway
Company,
In
Whitcomb
v.
Smithson,
It was pointed out that the ruling of the trial court “ was a ruling on the merits and not a ruling on the question of jurisdiction. It was adverse to plaintiff, and . without his assent, and the trial court rightly held that it did not operate to make the cause then removable and thereby to enable the other defendants to prevent plaintiff from taking a verdict against them. íhe right to remove was not contingent on the aspect the case may have assumed on the facts developed on the merits of the issues tried.” We held also that the judgment of the Circuit Court in remanding the cause, when removed on the first application, covered the question of fact as to good faith in the joinder, and added that “ assuming, without deciding, that that contention could have been properly renewed under the circumstances, it is sufficient to say that the record before us does hot sustain.it.”
.It will be perceived that: In Powers v. Railway Company, two applications for removal were made; they were severally denied; and the record was filed in the Circuit Court of the *70 United States in each instance. Remand was granted on the first removal and denied as to the second. Plaintiff voluntarily discontinued his action against the company’s co-defendants before trial, thereby leaving the case pending between citizens of different States, and no necessity to dispose of the issue as to fraudulent joinder arose.
In Smithson v. Whitcomb two applications for removal were made' and they were severally denied, but the record was filed in the Circuit Court of the United States only on denial of the first application, and the case was only once remanded. Plaintiff did not discontinue his action against either of the defendants and went to trial against both, and the trial court directed a verdict in favor of one of them. The ruling was on the merits and in invitum.
In the case at bar, two applications for removal were made, and they were severally denied, but the record was filed in the Circuit Court of the United States only .on the denial of the .first application, and the case was only once remanded. Plaintiff did not discontinue as to either of the defendants and went to trial against both, and the trial court sustained in favor of one of them a demurrer to the evidence. Here again the ruling was on the merits and in invitum.
The first petition in terms raised no issue of fraudulent join-der, but the second petition did. Was that issue seasonably raised, and, if so, ought the case to have been removed ? The second petition did not state when petitioner was first informed of the'alleged fraud, but left it to inference that it was not until after plaintiff had introduced his evidence, notwithstanding the averments in the first petition.
But apart from this, the averments of fraud were specifically denied, and, so fah as this record discloses, the petitioner, who had the affirmative of the issue, failed to make out its case.
Plymouth Mining Company
v.
Amador Canal
Company,
Doubtless the general rule is that issues of fact raised on petitions for removal should be tried in the Circuit "Court of the United States, but petitioner did not file the record in the Circuit Court, and as the issue was correctly disposed of, it would *71 be absurd to send the case back to be removed for the purpose of being remanded, and we are obliged to deal with the record as it is. Nor was the evidence introduced on plaintiff’s behalf, and demurred to, made part of the record, and the bare fact that the trial court held it insufficient to justify a verdict against the Terminal Company was not conclusive of bad faith. The trial court may have erred in its ruling, or there may have been evidence which, though insufficient to sustain a verdict, would have shown that plaintiff had reasonable ground for a bona fide belief in the liability of both defendants. In these circumstances, the case comes within Smithson v. Whitcomb, and the judgment must be
Affirmed.
