This was a suit to recover damages suffered by Stricklin while he was employed in the lumber yard of the box company, at Martin’s Ferry, Ohio. There was a long platform between the railroad track and the lumber piled in the yard. Strick-lin was pushing an empty truck along this platform and was about to meet a loaded truck drawn by a horse and driven by another em-ployé. Stricklin turned out close to the edge of the platform, next to the .railroad, and stopped. The loaded truck did not turn out far enough, the hub of its wheel struck the hub of Stricklin’s truck, and, either as the result of the blow so given or of the swing of the load of lumber as the driver pulled away, Stricklin was knocked off the platform, fell onto the railroad track, and was badly hurt by a railroad car just then approaching. He recovered a verdict of $4,750, and the company assigns error, raising a question on the pleadings and claiming that there was no evidence of negligence. Under the Ohio statute in force (the Norris Act, §§ 6242, 6245 — 1, Page & A. General Code), plaintiff’s contributory negligence would not be a bar, if it was slight as compared with defendant’s negligencé (McMyler Co. v. Mehnke [C. C. A. 6]
In this, there was no error. Not only was the court plainly right in treating the petition as one for ordinary negligence — at least inclusively if not exclusively- — but the answer did, in substance and effect, allege contributory negligence, although it did not use those words. The charge gave defendant the benefit of that defense, all known witnesses testified fully, and there is nothing to suggest that defendant could have produced any further evidence if it had pleaded the affirmative defense of contributory negligence.
It is clear, however, that a line of Supreme Court decisions (Stevens v. Nichols,
Kinney v. Columbia,
It is not without significance that the Code (section 29 [Comp. St. 1913, § 1011]) now requires notice of the removal proceedings, and we have thought this implied a right to be heard to some extent and so was vital. Butterworth v. Sessions,
Once do away with the thought that in such a case — where the removal petition was only imperfect, and where the state court had approved the transfer — the jurisdiction remains and is in the state court, and there seems no reason why it should not be viewed as liberally after judgment as is a cas.e begun in the federal court. This is especially true where, after removal, plaintiff has filed an amended but incomplete petition and issue has been again joined.
It is now well established, as to a suit commenced in a federal court, that even where the pleading allegations of diverse citizenship are incomplete, yet if no question is made on that point and its existence can fairly be presumed from the entire record which reaches an appellate court, including the proofs as well as the pleadings, the court will not reverse for that reason. Robertson v. Cease,
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.
