93 F. 697 | 4th Cir. | 1899
This aciion was brought by Herman Mecke in the superior court of Cherokee county, X. 0., against the Valley-
The motion to remand involved two questions: First. Was the petition for removal filed in time? Second. Was there a separable controversy between the plaintiff and the defendant the Eoessler & Hasslacher Chemical Company? Section 206 of the Code of North Carolina provides: “The plaintiff shall file his complaint in the clerk’s office, on or before the third day of the term to which the action is brought, otherwise the suit may, on motion, be dismissed at the cost of the plaintiff.” By section 207 of said Code it is provided: “The defendant shall appear and demur, or answer at the same term to which the summons shall be returnable, otherwise the plaintiff shall have judgment by default.” By section 274 of the same Code the courts of said state are given the power to enlarge the time in which
The fact that the petition for removal was filed during the vacation of the state court, and that the order of removal was signed by the judge in chambers, did not render void the proceedings had thereon, but, under the circumstances of this case, such procedure was proper. State v. Coosaw Min. Co., 45 Fed. 804; Phenix Ins. Co. v. Charleston Bridge Co., 13 C. C. A. 58, 65 Fed. 628.
It was clearly shown by the petition for removal that the plaintiff below was, at the time his suit was instituted, as well as when said petition was filed, a citizen of the state of North Carolina, and that the petitioner was a corporation duly organized under the laws of the state of New York, and a citizen of that state, when the suit was brought, and also when such petition was filed. It also appeared that the matter and amount in dispute exceeded the sum or value of $2,000, exclusive of interest and costs. The record therefore disclosed that the plaintiff and the petitioning defendant were citizens of different states, that the amount in controversy was sufficient to give the court below jurisdiction, and that the petition for removal was filed in due time; consequently, if such controversy was a separable one, the court did not err in refusing to remand the case to the state court.
The plaintiff below claimed: First, that the defendant the Valley-town Mineral Company was indebted to him in a certain sum of money; and, second, that the defendant the Roessler & Hasslacher Chemical Company was responsible to him for said debt because of an existing contract between the latter company and the former, to which said plaintiff was also a party. The claim first mentioned is one to which the Valleytown Mineral Company is an essential party, and while, in one sense, the Roessler & Hasslacher Chemical Company is interested in it, still such company is not a necessary party to a suit concerning it. The second claim is one as to which the appellee the Roessler & Hasslacher Chemical Company is the only contesting party. If the Valleytown Mineral Company be in fact indebted to the plaintiff, as set forth in the complaint, then that company, its creditors, and the plaintiff are together interested on one side, against the Roessler & Hasslacher Chemical Company, alone, on the other side. There- is a separable controversy, and the court properly refused to remand the case.
The remaining question relates to the action of the court in dismissing the suit so far as said defendant below the Roessler & Hass