after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
Had the Federal court the power to permit the amendment of the petition for removal.?. • The suit was removable. Diverse citizenship in fact existed and the amount in controversy was over $2,000. The right to remove existed, but the petition for removal was defective. If it had been sufficient there would have been no need of amendment. The question is whether it was so defective as to be incurable. In other words, was the case one in which the court had power to permit the facts to be stated in order to secure to the defendant the removal to which it. had a right ? By section 1 of chap. 866, 25 Stat. 434, jurisdiction is given to the Circuit Courts of all suits of a civil nature “ where the matter in dispute exceeds, exclusive of interest and costs, the sum or value of $2,000,” and “ in which there shall be a controversy between citizens of different States.” By section 2 of the same. act any such suit pending in a state court may be removed into the Circuit Court of the United States by the defendant or defendants
*81
if non-residents. The petition for removal, which was duly verified, alleged the existence of just such a suit. True, this court, construing the statute, has held that the' difference of citizenship must exist both at the commencement of the suit and at the filing of the petition for removal.
Gibson
v.
Bruce,
It is also true that when a record presented to this court fails to show a diversity of citizenship, both, when the suit was commenced and when the petition for removal was filed, a reversal has been ordered and the case sent back to the Circuit Court with directions to remand to the state court.
Stephens
v.
Nichols, supra; Crehore
v.
Ohio &c. Ry. Co.,
*82 A petition and bond for removal are in the nature of process. They constitute the process by which the case is transferred' from the state to the Federal court. Congress has made ample provision for the amendment of process. Section 948, Nev. Stat., reads:
“ Any Circuit or District Court may at any time, in its discretion, and upon such terms as it may deem just, allow an amendment of any process returnable to or before it, where the defect has not prejudiced, and the amendment will not'injure, the party against whom such process issues.”
And by section 954 it is provided that—
“No summons, writ, declaration, return, process, judgment or other proceedings in civil causes, in any court of the United States, shall be abated, arrested, quashed or reversed for any defect or want of form, . . . arid may at any time permit either of the parties to amend any defect in the process or pleadings, upon such conditions as it shall, in its discretion and by its rules, prescribe.”
The question of the power of amendment has been decided by this court in several cases. In
Parker
v.
Overman,
“ In the petition to remove this case from the state court, there was not a proper averment as to the citizenship of the plaintiff in error. It alleged that,Parker ‘resided’in Tennessee and White in Maryland. ‘Citizenship’ and ‘residence’ are not synonymous terms; but as the record was afterwards so amended as to show conclusively the citizenship of the parties, the court below had, and this court has, undoubted jurisdiction of the case,”
In
Carson
v.
Dunham,
“ The answer was filed, which, for the purposes of jurisdiction, may fairly be treated as an amendment to. the petition for removal, setting forth the facts from which the conclusions' there stated were drawn. As an amendment, the answer was germane to the petition, and did no more than set forth in proper form what had before been imperfectly stated.”
It is true that this court, on examination of the record, found that no Federal question was even then disclosed, but that does not alter the ruling that an amendment was proper showing the facts upon which the general averment of a Federal question was based.
Grace
v.
American Central Insurance Company,
The facts here disclosed clearly show a case in which an amendment was rightfully made. The citizenship of the defendant, both at the time the suit was commenced and when the petition for removal was filed, was clearly and positively stated. There was a general .averment that it was a case of diverse citizenship, and, therefore, one in which by the statute the party was entitled to a removal. The trust deed, which was the subject matter of the controversy, showed upon • its facé that the plaintiffs were of Salt Lake County, and was' executed before a notary public in that county. The continuance *84 of that situation is tp be presumed. The first action taken by the plaintiffs after the removal was a motion to remand, based not on account of any defect in the averments of citizenship but simply in respect to the .amount in controversy. A month after filing this motion they sought to amend it by including an objection on account of a defect in the allegations of diverse citizenship, and immediately thereafter the defendant moved to amend the petition for removal so as to make it sufficient in that respect. All these things took place before any action had been had in the Federal court on the merits of the . case. It may also be noticed that the state court apparently recog.nized the removal proceedings as sufficient^ for it took no further steps in the case, and hence we need not inquire what would have been the effect of any action taken by it in disregard of the removal. Clearly the plaintiffs were not prejudiced. The case was one which the appellee had a right, to remove, and nothing had been done to prejudice the rights of the plaintiffs- before the petition for removal was perfected. It seems to us, therefore, that this is a case in which the amendment was properly allowed.
The decree of the Circuit Court will be
Affirmed.
