R. C. PAXTON, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
John C. WEAVER et al., etc., Defendants-Appellees.
A. C. BAGWELL, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
John C. WEAVER et al., etc., Defendants-Appellees.
Irby L. VANCE, Jr., Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
John C. WEAVER et al., etc., Defendants-Appellees.
Robert C. SKELTON, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
John C. WEAVER et al., etc., Defendants-Appellees.
James L. GREEN, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
John C. WEAVER et al., etc., Defendants-Appellees.
Harold F. DORROH, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
John C. WEAVER et al., etc., Defendants-Appellees.
Nos. 75-2459 to 75-2464.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit.
June 10, 1977.
G. Jylеs Eaves, Louisville, Miss., for plaintiffs-appellants.
Grady F. Tollison, Jr., Robert C. Khayat, Oxford, Miss., for defendants-appellees.
Appeals from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Mississippi.
Before GEWIN, AINSWORTH and SIMPSON, Circuit Judges.
GEWIN, Circuit Judge:
Appellants in this consolidated action, all cotton farmers and residents of Mississippi, each filed suit in the chancery court of that state asserting claims arising from certain events that allegedly occurred in 1973. Appellees, named as defendants in eaсh state suit, consist of three residents of Tennessee doing business as John C. Weaver and Sons ("the Tennessee partnership") and two residents of Mississippi, James J. Smith, doing business as Loper and Smith Cotton Company ("the Mississippi broker") and George D. Nolen, one of Smith's employees. Appellees sought removal of the cases to the federal district court for the Northern District of Mississippi pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441(c),1 which appellants resisted with motions to remand. The Tеnnessee partnership filed counterclaims based on breach of contract. The district court denied the motions for remand, and after substantial discovery granted appellees' motions for summary judgment in their favor on the claims and counterclaims. We reverse.
We need refer only to the allegations of appellants' pleadings, since a plaintiff's state court pleading controls removability. American Fire & Casualty Co. v. Finn,
The district court denied the motions to remand, reasoning that a separate and independent cause of action was stated between diverse parties. The court concluded that the complaint of each appellant stated two causes of action: one for recision against the Tennessee pаrtnership based on the agent's alleged misrepresentations, and one for damages against the Mississippi broker based on the allegations of tortious interference with appellants' businesses. Citing its previous opinion in Chipman v. Lollar,
I do not believe in Mississippi, as of this time, that you can join a suit in contract and a suit in tort in the same suit. So it is my opinion, for that reason, that they are separate, independent, and distinct causes of action.
The propriety of removal in a case such as this turns on the statute and the Finn case, supra. Prior to the 1948 revision of the Judicial Code that part of a lawsuit involving a "separable controversy between citizens of different states" could be removed from state to federal court. See generally 14 C. Wright, A. Miller & E. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3724 (1976). In order to reduce the number of cases removable from state courts Congress amended the Judicial Code to allow removal only when the plaintiff states against a resident of another state a claim "separate and independent" from any claim stated against a resident of the plaintiff's state. American Fire and Casualty Co. v. Finn, supra,
In Finn a Texan sued in state court two foreign insurance companies and their Texas agent. The plaintiff sought recovery for a fire loss, alleging that the local agent had agreed to secure fire insurance on her property from one of the insurance companies. Her theory was that either one of the companies was liable for breach of an insurance contract or the agent was liable for failing to keep her property insured. The foreign insurance companies removed the case to federal court, relying on section 1441(c). After judgment was entered against one of the insurancе companies, that party sought to vacate the judgment on the ground of improper removal. This court affirmed the judgment,
. . . (W)e conclude that where there is a single wrong to plaintiff, for which relief is sought, arising from an interlocked series of transactions, there is nо separate and independent claim or cause of action under § 1441(c). Id. at 14,
In applying that test in Finn, the Court concluded that there was only a single wrong the failure to pay compensation for the loss on the property.
Appellees contend that the district court was correct in concluding that the claim for contract recision is independent of the claim for tortious interference. We need not pass on that сontention, because we agree with appellants that their complaints alleged claims against both the Tennessee partnership and Mississippi broker based on the contract formation. The complaints reasonably must be read to state claims against the broker and the buyer for compensatory and punitive damages based on the broker's alleged misrepresentations as well as for recision against the buyer.
Assuming that thе district court was correct in concluding that a cause of action for recision exists exclusively between the sellers and buyer, that does not necessarily absolve the broker of liability for its alleged misrepresentations in the formation of contracts for its principal. The Restatement (Second) of Agency § 348 (1958) states that:
An agent who fraudulently makes representations, uses duress, or knowingly assists in the commission of tortious fraud or duress by his principal or by others is subject to liability in tort to the injured person although the fraud or duress occurs in a transaction on behalf of the principal.2
Indeed, the few courts that have passed on the question hold that where a party has rescinded a transaction with the principal because he was induced by the agent's fraud, he still can enforce a claim for damages against the fraudulent agent. Nash v. Minnesota Title Insurance & Trust Co.,
Those claims are not separate and independent causes of action under Finn. They both are associated with a "single wrong" to each appellant inducement to execute a contract by misrepresentations.
The facts in each portion of the complaint involve (the Mississippi broker), the damage comes from a single incident. The allegations in which (the broker) is a defendant involve substantially the same facts and transactions as do the allegations in the . . . complaint against (the Tennessee buyer). It cannot be said that there are separate and independent claims for relief as § 1441(c) requires. Therefore, we conclude there was no right to removal. Id. at 16,
The district court thought it significant that appellants' claims sound in tort as well as contract and that Mississippi procedure would not allow joindеr of such claims. Appellants suggest here that in fact tort and contract claims could be joined in one action in a Mississippi court of equity, where this suit was brought, the nonjoinder rule being applicable only in courts of law. But we need not decide niceties of Mississippi procedure, since although state substantive law determines the nature of rights and liabilities asserted, construction of the removal statute is a question of federal law. Grubbs v. Genеral Electric Corp.,
Appellees contend that thе removal question is moot because of the Tennessee partnership's assertion of counterclaims for breach of contract, after appellees filed their petitions for removal, against the Mississippi farmers involving greater than $10,000 and allegedly arising under the Commodity Exchange Act, 7 U.S.C § 6(c). They argue that where a district court would have had original jurisdiction over a particular claim irregularities in removal cannot defeat jurisdiction, citing Grubbs v. General Electric Credit Corporation, supra. In that case the credit corporation sued Grubbs in Texas state court. Grubbs answered and counterclaimed for damages against it and General Electric Co. In his second amended answer Grubbs sought court determination of priorities among judgment liens, adding several creditors including the United States as cross-defendants. The United States petitioned for removal to district court; at no timе did the credit corporation move for remand or otherwise object to removal. The court undertook consideration of all claims in the case, and the dissatisfied credit corporation appealed to this court. The court of appeals on its own motion decided that removal had been improper and that the case should be remanded to state court.
Read broadly, Grubbs may say that if under any view the district сourt could have had original jurisdiction over a particular claim, improper removal is not cause for vacating the judgment on that claim. But Grubbs should not be read so broadly. Language throughout the opinion limits its scope. For example, the Court stated:
Longstanding decisions of this Court make clear, however, that where after removal a case is tried on the merits without objection and the federal court enters judgment, the issue in subsequent proceedings on appeal is not whether the case was properly removed, but whether the federal district court would have had original jurisdiction of the case had it been filed in that court.
The courts of appeals that have considered the question hold that Grubbs turns on the failure of a party to object to the removal. Riggs v. Island Creek Coal Company,
In the instant case it is perhaps true that the Tennessee appellees might have sued appellants in federal district court for breach of contract because of diversity (28 U.S.C § 1332) or because the claims "arose under" a federal statutе (id. § 1331). But they did not invoke federal jurisdiction in such a suit.7 Rather they filed petitions for removal of appellants' actions and two weeks later asserted the breach of contract claims as counterclaims. Appellants filed suits in Mississippi state court and were entitled to that forum unless the cases were properly removed. The removal was improper, and appellants not only promptly moved for remand, but renewed those mоtions after substantial discovery. With the issue of removal thus preserved, Grubbs is inapplicable. Assertion of appellees' counterclaims did not cure the defect or render moot the issue of removal. Therefore the district court never properly obtained jurisdiction over the claims or counterclaims.
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the cases remanded with directions to vacate the judgment and remand the cases to the Chancery Court of Lowndes County, Mississippi.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
(c) Whenever a separate and independent claim or cause of action, which would be removable if sued upon alone, is joined with one or more otherwise nonremovable claims or causes of action, the entire case may be removed and the district court may determine all issues therein, or, in its discretion, may remand all matters not otherwise within its original jurisdiction
We have nоt been cited to, and have not found any Mississippi law to the contrary on facts similar to those in the instant case. It is not our task to determine exactly how Mississippi courts would pass on appellants' various theories of liability. We only need to decide whether, under a liberal review of Mississippi law or what it might be, arguable grounds exist for recovery under appellants' theories. See Bell v. Preferred Life Assurance Society,
Appellees urge that appellants could have only a claim for relief in the form of recision because they failed to perform the contract. The fact that appellants allegedly sold their cotton to others in the fall of 1973 may not necessarily eliminate relief in the form of some damages. First, appellees' assertion that appellants sold their cotton at a high priсe to others does not appear from the complaints, and absent concealment of a federal question or fraudulent joinder of parties, removability is entirely dependent upon the course of pleading employed by the plaintiffs. American Fire & Casualty Co. v. Finn, supra, at 14,
As noted above, we look only to appellants' complaints to determine the propriety of removal. Those cоmplaints alleged that the Mississippi broker was the agent of the Tennessee partnership. Appellees contend here that the broker was not the partnership's agent but instead may have been appellants' agent. Acceptance of that contention does not change our analysis except to further support our conclusion. If the broker was not the partnership's agent, it is clear that appellants could assert claims against appellees on various contract, tort, and agency theories; but those claims would still be too closely related to be considered "separate and independent." There would be the same single wrong to appellants involving "an interlocked series of transactions" that relate to contract formation
See generally 1A J. Moore, Federal Practice P 0.163(4-2) (2d ed. 1974). As this court stated in Edwards v. E. I. DuPont de Nemours & Co., supra, at 167-68:
We take the case as stated by appellant. We look to the substantive law of Georgia to ascertain whether a legal claim was stated against either or both of the appellees, and whether a separate and independent claim or cause of action was alleged against the non-resident defendant. Georgia decisions upon procedure may be persuasive, (citations omitted), but in proсedural matters we are controlled by (federal law). . . . Aided thus, we look to the federal statutes as construed by federal decisions to determine whether the case is removable in whole or in part, all questions of joinder, non-joinder, and misjoinder being for the federal court.
See, e. g., Frontier Enterprises, Inc. v. ICA Corporation,
Apparently the Tennessee partner filed suit in federal district court against appellant Paxton for breach of contract before appellants filed their state actions. It appears that Paxton's claim for recision would have been a compulsory cоunterclaim. F.R.C.P. 13(a). But appellees did not seek to maintain the federal jurisdiction they had invoked. After the court denied appellants' motions to remand, appellees answered the complaints and counterclaimed for breach of contract; the separate suit against Paxton was then dismissed without prejudice. The claim for breach of contract against Paxton is therefore dependent, as are the rest of such claims, on the propriety of removal
