delivered the opinion of the Court.
We are asked in effect to hold invalid a default judgment entered by a state court in a garnishment proceeding after it had denied a petition for removal to a federal district court. The principal questions are whether we may review an order of the federal district court remanding the suit to thе court from which it was removed, and whether the latter court was free to disregard a disclosure filed in the federal court before the default judgment was entered. From the record the following appears:
On March 8, 1939, respondent obtained a writ of garnishment from a Michigan state court requiring petitiоner to appear on or before March 31 and disclose whether it was liable to individuals against whom respondent had recovered a judgment. On Mаrch 28, petitioner filed an application and bond in the state court for removal of the proceeding to the proper federal district court. On April 4, the state court denied the application. On April 10, petitioner filed in the federal district court copies of all papers оn record in the state court and its disclosure denying any liability to respondent or to the judgment debtors. The next day, respondent entered petitioner’s default in the state court for failure to appear, and notified petitioner that respondent would move for judgment on April 17:
On April 15, petitioner notifiеd respondent of its attempt to remove the suit notwithstanding the ruling of the state court. Respondent promptly moved to have the proceeding remanded, and on the same day the dis
*565
trict judge granted the motion. The remand order was filed in the state court on April 17. Respondent thereupon entered petitioner's default a second time, introduced evidence, and obtained a default judgment. On April 18, petitioner unsuccessfully moved to vacatе the judgment. Appeal to the Michigan Supreme Court followed and the judgment was affirmed.
Petitioner contends that the garnishment proceeding was removable as a separable controversy and that the state court therefore was without jurisdiction to enter the default judgment. Further, petitioner contends in substance that the petition for removal when filed in the state court deprived that court of power to proceed with the cause, at least until the federal court had passed upon the question of removability, and that in all events the refusal of the state court to accord any legal effect to the disclosure filеd in the federal district court while the petition for removal was pending there was a denial of a federal right given by the removal statute, supra. We cannot agree.
The case is ruled by
Yankaus
v.
Feltenstein,
The- rule that the remand order is not reviewable stems from § 28 of the Judicial Code (28 U. S. C. § 71) and from many decisions adjusting the relatiоnship of state and federal courts and the scope of authority of each in cases sought to be removed from the former to the latter. The rule that proceedings in the state court subsequent to the petition for removal are valid if the suit was not in fact removable is the logical cоrollary of the proposition that such proceedings are void if the cause was removable.
Iowa Central Ry. Co.
v.
Bacon,
When a petition for removal to a federal court is denied by the state court, the petitioner may do one of three things. He may object to the ruling, save an exception, and litigate the cause in the state courts.
Iowa Central Ry. Co.
v.
Bacon, supra; Stone
v.
South Carolina,
If the petitioner litigates the cаuse in the state court and preserves an exception, he may have the order of the state court denying his petition for removal reviewed in the state appellate court. In proper cases he may come here asserting a denial of his right of removal.
Iowa Central Ry. Co.
v.
Bacon, supra; Stone
v.
South Carolina, supra; Removal Cases, supra.
If he removes the сause to the federal district'court despite the state court ruling and the federal court assumes jurisdiction over the objection of his adversary, the latter, after final judgment, may contest this assumption of jurisdiction in the circuit court of appeals, and in this court in proper cases.
Powers
v.
Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co.,
Petitioner is protected whichever course he elects. If he makes timely application fоr removal and properly objects to its denial by the state court, participation in subsequent proceedings in the state court is not a waivеr of his claim that the cause should have been litigated in the federal court.
Powers
v.
Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co., supra; Removal Cases, supra; Home Life Ins. Co.
v.
Dunn, supra.
Compare
Miller
v.
Buyer,
However, the issue of removability is closed if the federal district court refuses to assume jurisdiction and remands the cause. Section 28 of the Judicial Code,
supra,
precludes review of the remand order directly
(Kloeb
v.
Armour & Co.,
Here, petitioner attempted to remove the cause, as it had a right to do, even though the state court had denied its petition for removal. The federal court held it was
*569
not removable as a separable controversy and remаnded it to the state court. For the reasons already stated, we are not at liberty to review the remand order. Consequently, we must assume, so far as this case is concerned, that the suit was not removable. Having made this assumption, we must conclude that the state court had jurisdiction to enter the default judgment
(Yankaus
v.
Felterstein,
Accordingly, the judgment of the Michigan Supreme Court is
Affirmed.
Notes
Feltenstein and another brought suit in a state court against Yankaus on October 11, 1915. On October 16, Yankaus filed a petition for removal in the state court, and on October 20 filed copies of all papers оn record in the state court and an answer in the federal court. On the latter date the state court denied his petition for removal, and on Octоber 26 entered judgment against him. On November 15, the federal court remanded the cause, and two weeks later the state court denied a motion to vаcate the judgment. The state appellate court subsequently dismissed an appeal,
It is not evident from the opinion that the judgment was taken by default, but this fact clearly appears in the record filed in this Court. Record, p. 7.
See
Pearson
v.
Zacher,
Compare
Iowa Central Ry. Co.
v. Bacon,
See
Centaur Motor Co.
v.
Eccleston,
