26 F.2d 367 | N.D. Ga. | 1928
Mrs. Reese, administratrix of Charles C. Reese, a citizen of Georgia, sued Southern Railway Company, a citizen of Virginia, in a state court of competent jurisdiction; the suit being framed under two distinct counts, one based expressly on the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (45 USCA §§ 51-59; Comp. St. §§ 8657-8665), and one on the state laws, both counts alleging the negligent homicide of the decedent while employed as switchman for thq defendant. The suit was removed to this court as one between citizens of different states.
A motion to remand is made, based on the language of the original Employers’ Liability Act, repeated in section 28 of the Judicial Code, and in section 71 of title 28 of the present U. S. Code (28 USCA § 71), to this effect: “No ease arising under sections 51 to 59 of title 45, and brought in any state court of competent jurisdiction shall be removed to any eourt of the United States.” This positive language was intended to limit the jurisdiction by removal of the District Courts, and to relieve them to that extent of having to try railroad damage suits. All the legislation touching removal enacted since 1875 has pursued this policy of restriction. The prohibition against removal is positive, denying removal for any reason to the class of eases named. The language, “ease arising under sections 51 to 59 of title 45,” is quite like that of “eases * * * arising under this' Constitution, the laws of the United States,” in article 3, section 2, of the Constitution. On the latter language, it was early held, in Osborn v. Bank of United: States, 9' Wheat. 738, 6 L. Ed. 204, that, if the case in any respect depended upon the Constitution and laws of the United States,. no matter what other questions were involved, the case as a whole was one arising thereunder. So here, while there is one count based on sections 51 to 59 of title 45, United States Code, and one based wholly on state laws, there is but one case, and that ease is. one arising under the federal laws referred to. As such, the right of removal is denied to it.
It is faintly urged that the latter count is a separable controversy, authorizing removal of the suit. The separable controversy provision has always been confined to cases where joinder of parties prevented removal, and not to those in which the nature of the action was the question. If, however, the matter were doubtful, the last expressed will of Congress, that eases arising under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act should not be removed, ought to be effectuated. While there is conflict in the decisions of the District Courts, Jones v. Southern Railway Co.,
The petition for removal urges that a case under the federal act is really not stated in the first count, because the allegation therein that the deceased and the defendant were engaged at the time in interstate commerce is a mere pleader’s conclusion. But the count further states that the deceased was a switchman in Atlanta, engaged at the time of his death in delivering a train of freight cars from the Southern Railway Company to the Central of Georgia Railroad Company. It might he judicially noticed, as common knowledge, that these two are among the most extensive railroad systems in the South, and that a train of freight cars passing from one to the other would necessarily contain interstate freight. But it is sufficient to say that the count is plainly intended to be based on the federal law, is capable of amendment, and that the petition for removal cannot usurp the function of a special demurrer.
Remand is ordered.