150 F. 801 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Montana | 1906
Plaintiff is a citizen of the state of Montana. The defendant Butte Electric Railway Company is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state of West Virginia. Defendant Alfred Jackson is a citizen of Montana. The action was brought in the district court of the second judicial district of the state of Montana, to recover damages alleged to be due by the defendants to the plaintiff for injuries which he charges were done to him by the negligence of the defendants at Butte. It appears from the plaintiff’s complaint that the defendant Butte Electric Railway Company operates an electric railway at Butte, and that about August 20, 1905, plaintiff became a passenger upon a car of the defendant company; that the defendant Jackson was the motorman, and, it is alleged, with the defendant company, was jointly running and operating the car upon which plaintiff was riding; that the car collided with a freight car of the Butte, Anaconda & Pacific Railway Company at a crossing upon one of the streets in Butte; .that the crossing was a dangerous place, and that through the negligence and carelessness of the defendants, the collision occurred, the car was wrecked, and plaintiff was seriously injured.
The defendant Butte Electric Railway Company filed a demurrer in the state court. The demurrer was general and special. The defendant Butte Electric Railway Company also filed a petition for the removal of the case to the Circuit Court of the United States, alleging that the suit involved a controversy wholly between citizens of different states, which could be fully determined between.them; that is, a controversy between the petitioner, a citizen of West Virginia, and plaintiff, who was a citizen of Montana. The petitioner set forth the nature of plaintiff’s complaint, and averred that the action against the petitioner was one founded upon contract of hire for the transportation by a common carrier of passengers, while, if there was any duty owing from the defendant Jackson to the plaintiff, it arose out of the obligation of one person not to injure another negligently, and was not founded upon contract, but arose out of a tort, and that the cause of action against the carrier affected the petitioner alone, while the cause of action against the motorman Jackson affected him alone. Petitioner further set forth that there was a fraudulent and improper, joinder of the defendant Jackson, a citizen of Montana, with the petitioner, for the sole purpose of defeating the jurisdiction of the United States Court, and preventing the removal of the cause. Petitioner alleged that defendant Jackson, although made a party, had not been served with process, and no effort had been made to serve him. Petitioner
Plaintiff also filed two affidavits — one made by John J. McHatton, Esq., his counsel, who swears that he consulted with the plaintiff and prepared the complaint, and determined the matter and manner of bringing suit, and the allegations to be contained in the complaint. He denies all the allegations alleging fraudulent or improper joinder of the defendant Jackson for the purpose of defeating the jurisdiction of the federal court, and avers that the action was brought in good faith against both defendants, because there is a good joint cause of action against both, and that defendants are both liable to plaintiff for the injuries sustained, and that affiant believed he could properly join the two defendants under the allegations of the complaint. Affiant says that he directed that summons should be served upon both defendants, and he alleges that he believes that defendant Jackson is responsible for negligence with the defendant company, and that he acted in conjunction with the defendant company; and that in law and in fact Jackson and the defendant company were jointly operating the car; and that the allegations of the complaint are each and all true and legally properly stated, tie avers that he brought the action in good faith with the intention of prosecuting it to judgment against both defendants, as he has a right to do, and as he intends to do. There is also an affidavit filed by John G. Brown, an
When the motion to remand to the state court came on for hearing in this court, the defendant Butte Electric Railway Company resisted the same, and its counsel asked leave to amend the petition for removal by inserting therein that the defendant Alfred Jackson was at the time of the beginning of the suit, and ever since has been, and still is, a resident and citizen of the state of Minnesota. Plaintiff objects to such proposed amendment, and contends that this court has no authority to allow it, for these reasons: That the defendant Butte Electric Railway Company did not ask the removal of the cause from the state court on any ground, except that'there was a separable controversy between itself and plaintiff; and, further, that the amendment proposed is a matter of substance, which was not contained in the petition for removal, and was not a ground relied upon in the petition filed in the state court.
In proceeding.with the investigation of this case, studying the point raised that the federal court is without jurisdiction, I find it becomes necessaiy for me to determine whether the state court ought ever to have ordered a removal at all; that is, whether this was not an instance of where a pure question of law only was presented to the state court. Had the petition been merely a denial of the allegations of the complaint, and had the' averment of fraud been based on such denials, and such denials only, then nothing but a question of law as to’ fraud would have been presented by the petition and record, and the showing for removal would have been insufficient as matter of law. But, as other facts were stated in the petition, particularly those to the effect that plaintiff was not summoning defendant Jackson into the state court, and was making no’ effort to summon him, and that he falsely stated facts which lie knew to be untrue, some of which are not involved in the gist of the action, the state court, admitting, as it had to, that the facts in the petition were.true, was obliged to hold that petitioner was entitled to removal of the case, and therefore that an order of removal should follow. Whatever- the earlier federal practice may have been permitting inquiry into facts by the state court before removal was had (Ladd v. Tudor, Fed. Cas. No. 7,975), and whatever the, opinions of certain state courts may have been to the same effect (Amy v. Manning, 144 Mass. 153, 10 N. E. 737, Kansas City, Ft. Scott, etc., Ry. Co. v. Daughtry, 88 Tenn. 721, 13 S. W. 698), the law is now settled by positive decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States that there is no authority in the state court to inquire into the truth of facts alleged in the petition for removal; and, from this, it logically follows that where, for instance, fraud is properly alleged against plaintiff, by charging facts showing that he is joining a defendant whom he has not served, and whom he does not intend to serve with summons, the case is one involving an inquiry into facts, and such inquiry can only be had in the circuit court of the United States.
Removal, therefore, being proper in such a case, the federal court,
In Kansas City Railroad v. Daughtry, 138 U. S. 298, 11 Sup. Ct. 306, 34 L. Ed. 963, I find a decisión which is very close to the case under consideration, and of unusual importance in its bearing upon questions of removal, such as are presented in this case. That was an action commenced in the state court of Tennessee by Daughtry, as administrator, against the Kansas City, Et. Scott, & Memphis Railroad Company, and the Kansas City, Memphis & Birmingham Railroad Company, for damages for the death of John W. Daughtry. The Kansas City, Ft. Scott & Memphis Railroad Company petitioned for a removal to the Circuit Court of the United States, alleging, among other things, that the controversy was between citizens of different states, the petitioner being a citizen of Missouri, while plaintiff was a citizen of Tennessee; that the suit involved a controversy wholly between the administrator and the petitioner, which could be fully determined as between them without the presence of petitioner’s co-defendant; that petitioner’s codefendant was a citizen of Tennessee,1 and that the acts alleged to have been done jointly by petitioner and its codefendant were, if done at all, done by petitioner alone; and that petitioner’s codefendant never owned, or controlled, or used the railroad track upon which the acts were alleged to have been done; and that the Kansas City, Memphis & Birmingham Railroad Company was joined as a nominal party defendant for the sole purpose of preventing 'the petitoner from removing the case to the Circuit Court of the United States. The administrator filed his affidavit in the state court, stating that he was a citizen of Arkansas, and that all the beneficiaries were citizens of Arkansas. The. state court was of the opinion that the petition and affidavit did not entitle the'petitioner to the order of removal prayed for, and removal was refused. Trial was had, a verdict was rendered for plaintiff, and the case was appealed to the Supreme Court of the state of Tennessee. That court affirmed the ruling of the lower court upon the question of removal, whereupon the cause was taken to the Supreme Court of the United States by writ of error. Chief Justice Fuller said:
“The Supreme Court of Tennessee was of opinion that it was competent for the state circuit court to pass upon the issue of fact made by the affidavit of Daughtry upon, the statement in the petition in regard to his citizenship, and to retain the suit, because on that issue the railroad company had not shown that he was a citizen of Tennessee; but it is thoroughly settled that issues of fact raised upon petitions for removal musf be tried in the Circuit Court of the United States. Crehore v. Ohio & Mississippi Railway, 131 U. S. 240, 9 Sup. Ct. 692, 33 L. Ed. 144; Burlington, Cedar Rapids, etc., Railway v. Dunn, 122 U. S. 513, 7 Sup. Ct. 1262, 30 L. Ed. 1159; Carson v. Hyatt, 118 U. S. 279, 6 Sup. Ct. 1050, 30 L. Ed. 167. In Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Wangelin, 132 U. S. 599, 10 Sup. Ct. 203, 33 L. Ed. 473, the case came before us on a writ of error, bringing under review the judgment of the Circuit Court" remanding the cause to the state court, and the language of the opinion has no relation to the action of the latter court.
“It is true that the petition was not .verified, contrary to good practice, and that Daughtry’s affidavit was explicit, so that if the record had been filed in*807 the Circuit Court, the cause would, as it then stood, have been remanded, but this would not justify the state court in acting upon the facts, though it arrived at the same result. If, however, the denial of the application was light as matter of law, the judgment should not be reversed.’’
It will be observed that the court cited the case of Burlington, etc, Railway v. Dunn, supra, and reiterated that issues of fact raised upon petitions for removal must be tried in the Circuit Court of the United States; the court even going so far as to hold that, although, upon the affidavit filed in the state court, remand would have been had by the Circuit Court of the United States, if filed there, yet, the state court was not justified in acting upon the facts as presented by the affidavit, even though the same result would have been arrived at by federal and state courts. I regard this case as explicitly determining that the state court is precluded from considering any facts, no matter what they may be, except as they may only present a pure question of law.
About a year after the decision of Railroad Company v. Daughtry, just cited, Judge Putnam, in Sinclair v. Pierce et al. (C. C.) 50 Fed. 851, held, upon the authority of the Daughtry Case, that a state court has no jurisdiction to determine questions of fact arising on petition for removal, and that if a motion to remand is made and heard in the United States Circuit Court, and by that court allowed, the decision of the federal court is conclusive in all courts, and terminates the controversy as to the right or regularity of removal. He cited In re Coe, 49 Fed. 481, 1 C. C. A. 326.
In Postal Telegraph Cable Company v. Southern Railway Company (C. C.) 88 Fed. 803, the Postal Telegraph Cable Company, by proceedings in a state court in North Carolina, sought to condemn a right along the right of way of the Southern Railway in that state. The Southern Railway Company petitioned for removal, relying upon two grounds — the diverse citizenship between it and the telegraph company, and that the matter in dispute exceeded in value $2,000, besides interest and costs. The state court refused to remove the case upon the sole ground that the matter in dispute was not of value exceeding $2,000. The Southern Railway Company then filed a transcript of the record in the Circuit Court of the United States, praying for an injunction. The controlling question considered by Judge Simonton was whether the state court could consider the facts as to the value of the matter in dispute. It was held that upon the truth of the facts depended the right of removal:
“Issue,” said the court, “was joined upon one of those facts, — the jurisdictional amount; and the superior court, inadvertently it is sure, passed upon that issue. It could be decided nowhere but in this court. This being the case, and the petition on its face stating the two essential facts for removal, the case was ipso facto removed, and the state court could proceed no further, upon the filing of the petition and the bond; that is, just so soon as they were filed. It is very clear, therefore, that the state court could have taken no other action in this cause from the date of the filing of the petition and bond, and that the efforts of the plaintiff in the state court to procure orders from that court were coram non judice, and very properly refused.”
I therefore hold that the action was properly removed by the state court, and that the record made there supplemented by the affidavits of
The basis of the grounds for the petition to remove the case from the state to the federal court may be placed under two heads: (1) That the controversy is a separable one, because under the facts, as set forth in the petition, the liability of the defendant company, if any, was founded upon contract, while that of the defendant Jackson, the motorman, was necessarily founded in tort; and (8) that Jackson is fraudulently and improperly made a codefendant, because he has never been served with process, and no effort has been made to bring him into court; because the plaintiff knew that the defendant company and Jackson did not jointly operate the car and receive the plaintiff as a passenger, and accept fare from him, but that the car was run and operated by the defendant company alone; because the statements made in the complaint are untrue, and were made for the sole and express purpose of defeating the jurisdiction of the United States Circuit Court; and because the defendant Jackson was and is financially irresponsible, and plaintiff has no expectation of recovery against him.
The plaintiff, by affidavit, sufficiently denies these averments of fact as well as of law. I find it unnecessary to discuss the question whether or not a joint cause of action is stated in plaintiff’s complaint. Plaintiff has framed his allegations so as to bring his case within the doctrine of the Alabama Southern decision, as .pronounced by the Supreme Court, 200 U. S. 206, 26 Sup. Ct. 161, 50 L. Ed. 441, and plainly there is no separable controversy stated in the complaint. So far, therefore, as the petition for removal is based on facts upon which defendant petitioner makes its averments, that there can not be a joint tort, because the liability of the master cannot be the same as that of the servant, the question involved is disposed of by saying that, .there being a joint cause of action stated against defendants, it can not be disregarded because traversed by the petition of the defendant company. Plaintiff has a right to select his own manner of bringing his suit. If he has improperly joined causes of action, he may .fail upon trial; the question may be raised by answer, and the rights of defendant adjudicated. But the question of removability, unless fraud is shown, must be determined by the complaint, which contains plaintiff’s case. I do not understand the learned counsel for petitioner to dispute that such is the law of the Alabama case cited; and I do not understand that his client would urge this court to refuse to remand the cause unless it has made a sufficient showing of fraudulent joinder.
As to the issue of fraud, the petitioner’s position may be stated this way. Inasmuch as it sets up denials and statements of fact which may show no joint liability on the servant’s part, and a knowledge of such facts by plaintiff, and that plaintiff’s only purpose in joining the servant was to defeat the right of removal, and that plaintiff does .not expect to pursue his remedy against the servant; therefore it contends there is a misjoinder which is necessarily fraudulent in law, and the federal court should retain the case. This brings us then directly to the question of fraud, as presented by the record now
As we have seen, the action might have been brought against one defendant; yet the controversy is not separable because two defendants are joined. None of the defendants who are joined can complain, unless fraud enters into the matter. It may be that it will turn out that one defendant is not liable, while the other is; but that goes to the very gist of the suit, and does not affect the jurisdiction, except in so far as the final issue may be that one defendant is not liable, or both may be; but, repeating what I have said, I hold that it is not for the federal court to try the question of negligence on a motion to remand. Plaintiff’s preSent motive, in the event of a recovery, may be to sue out execution against only one defendant, who is able to respond in damages ; but as he has the legal right to sue the two, and he is suing them, and apparently trying to bring them both into court, how can the federal court say that the mere opinion of the nonresident defendant that plaintiff is not going to proceed against its codefendant justifies the court in holding that the attempt to sue in the state court is with the fraudulent purpose of defeating federal jurisdiction,' and so depriving a party entitled to seek the federal court in protection of its rights’? Such an attack on the good faith of the action must fail, or the federal court must assume to deny the force of the rule that tests the controversy by examining the cause of action stated in the complaint.
It is impossible to lay down any exact line that will mark a distinction between a wrongful and a justifiable purpose in seeking the one jurisdiction rather than the other. The showing in each case must guide the court. Where it is strong enough to impress the mind of the judge with the belief that the plaintiff is improperly suing, and that he ought not and cannot prevail in the state court as against the two defendants, and that the purpose of joinder is to defeat the jurisdiction of the federal court, the federal court should not hesitate to retain jurisdiction ; but where plaintiff is following a legal right, and states a good cause of action against joint tort-feasors, and appears to be trying to bring both defendants before the state court, and where there is substantially nothing to impugn his good faith, except the alleged fact that the resident defendant is without means to respond in judgment in case it is had, and that on the merits the essential facts of the controversy are different from those alleged, then in my opinion, no real issue of fraud is proven, so that the federal court can find for petitioner. My understanding of the Alabama Southern Case, supra, is in accord with what I have just stated. Justice Day there said:
“The fact that by answer the defendant may show that the liability is several cannot change the character of the ease made by the plaintiff in his pleading, so as to affect the right of removal. It is to be remembered that we are not now dealing with joinders, Which are shown by the petition for removal, or otherwise, to be attempts to sue in the state courts with a view to defeat federal jurisdiction. In such cases entirely different questions arise, and the federal courts may and should take such action as will defeat attempts to wrongfully deprive parties entitled to sue in the federal courts of the protection of their rights in those tribunals.”
Thus far the case has been regarded without consideration of the defendant’s application to amend, and its effect upon the question of jurisdiction. As appears in the statement of facts included in this opinion, the nonresident defendant asks this court for leave to amend the petition so as to set forth that the defendant Jackson, whom it stated in its petition was a citizen of Montana, is really a citizen of Minnesota, and was such when this action was commenced. If such amendment is allowable, we have the case of a plaintiff, citizen of Montana, suing two nonresident defendants, one a citizen of West Virginia, the other of Minnesota. As we shall presently see, whether under such a state of facts one defendant could properly remove the case, is not now necessary to be passed upon, and decision upon that precise point is not made now. Let me say in passing, that Judge Sanborn has positively decided that removal can not be had in such a case (Thompson v. Chicago, St. P. & K. C. R. Co. [C. C.] 60 Fed. 773) ; so did Judge Brewer while he was a circuit judge (W. U. Tel. Co. v. Brown [C. C.] 32 Fed. 337); and such is the law as stated by Moon on Removal of Causes, § 150. But let me assume for the sake of the argument, without a concession of the accuracy of the proposition, that the controversy not being separable, failure of one of the defendants to join in the petition of removal is not fatal to the right of removal, and still we are confronted with this question, which it is necessary to decide, namely: Has the federal court authority to permit the defendant company to amend its petition by showing that its codefendant was not a citizen of Montana, but was a citizen of Minnesota? Inasmuch as the original petition for removal alleged that defendant Jackson was and is a citizen of Montana, the contemplated change of averment is a material conflict with what was laid before the state court. The two statements cannot be true — one or the other must fall.
If the fact is that Jackson was a resident of Montana, as petitioning defendant alleged in his petition to the state court, the jurisdiction of that court was complete and the allegations of fraud being inadequate, no cause for removal is shown; while, if Jackson was a citizen of Minnesota, we will assume removal could have been had without regard to questions of fraud. Thus we see that the proposed amendment is not one making more certain or specific a statement made in the petition filed in the state court, but defectively made, or to state more fully and distinctly facts stated, upon which ground of removal rests, but is a request to permit an amendment which is of substance. Indeed it is asking the federal court to allow an amendment which may bring the case within the jurisdiction of the federal court upon
Mindful of the fundamental principle that causes can be removed •from the state courts to the Circuit Courts of the United States only in such cases as the statutes of the United States prescribe, and that it is for the petitioner in the state court to show to that court in the first instance that the case is one which he is entitled to have removed, it is at once apparent that a showing of cause for removal must be made to the court which first has the case, and which need not surrender its control, until facts which compel it to do so are made to appear upon the record of its proceedings. In the absence of such a showing in the state court, the question is a fundamentally jurisdictional one, and no appeal to the discretion of the federal court can have consideration, for discretion cannot confer jurisdiction to retain the case, if it does not exist. The courts of the state have cognizance of suits brought by citizens of the state against citizens of other states. In the extension of the power of the federal courts to suits instituted by citizens of the state against citizens of other states, there was no divestiture of the jurisdiction of the courts of the state to hear and determine cases brought in the. state courts. The right of removal by a defendant may be invoked, but of itself that right in no way lessens the authority of the state court; that is to say, unless motion is had in the state court, the existence of the right of removal in ho way restricts the power of the state courts to proceed with the case, arid to bring the parties before it. Plaquemines Fruit Company v. Henderson, 170 U. S. 511, 18 Sup. Ct. 685, 42 L. Ed. 1126.
As was held in Manley v. Olney (C. C.) 32 Fed. 708, the right of removal is not strictly a. constitutional one, but is a privilege to have the case tried in some other than the state tribunals. “The right of removal is statutory,” said Chief Justice Waite, in Insurance Company v. Pechner, 95 U. S. 183, 24 L. Ed. 427. “Before a party can avail himself of it, he must show upon the record that his is a case which comes within the provisions of the statute.”
In harmony with these general views, the federal courts have recognized that the statutes of removal should be construed not in a way to authorize. the exercise of jurisdiction where the question is doubtful, but rather to refuse to keep a case where the jurisdiction is seriously disputable. “It is the safer and wiser course to send a cause for trial to a court of unquestionable jurisdiction, rather than retain it here, and go through all the forms of trial when the jurisdiction is doubtful.” Fitzgerald v. Missouri Pac. Railway Co. (C. C.) 45 Fed. 812. From many decisions bearing upon the question of jurisdiction where amendment is sought after removal, I have collected a few which are pertinent to the present case. In Fitzgerald v. Missouri Pacific Rail
In Grand Trunk Railway Company v. Twitchell, 59 Fed. 727, 8 C. C. A. 237, the Circuit Court of Appeals for the First Circuit laid down this proposition:
“That there can he jurisdiction in the circuit court only when, at the time of the application for removal, the record shows on its face that the action is removable, and consequently that the parties cannot now be permitted to amend this record so as to show the requisite diversity of citizenship.”
The court approved the decision in Crehore v. Railway Company, 131 U. S. 240, 9 Sup. Ct. 797, 33 L. Ed. 218, by saying that that case never has been doubted so far as the court was advised.
Murphy v. Payette Alluvial Gold Company (C. C.) 98 Fed. 333, was a case that arose in the Ninth circuit. The plaintiff brought the action upon several causes — one of which arose in his own favor,-and four of which were assigned to him by others. The amount involved in the first cause was not sufficient to confer jurisdiction, but the sum of all the demands exceeded $3,000. A petition for removal was filed, alleging that plaintiff was a citizen of Oregon, and that defendant was a British corporation. The plaintiff had set forth the facts concerning the four assigned causes of action, and the names of the respective assignors, but the complaint and petition failed to aver what the citizenship of the assignors was. On motion to remand, application was made by defendant for leave to file an amended petition showing that the citizenship of the assignors of the assigned claims was such that the case was one for removal. Judge Gilbert cited Parker v. Ormsby, 141 U. S. 81, 11 Sup. Ct. 912, 35 L. Ed. 654, to show that it must affirmatively appear that the citizenship of the assignors of the assigned claims was diverse from that of the defendant, or that they were not aliens. Passing, then, to the question of the right of assignment, he reviewed the decisions of the Supreme Court, including the case of Powers v. Railway Company, 169 U. S. 92, 18 Sup. Ct. 264, 42 L. Ed. 673. He said:
“But it is contended that inasmuch as, in fact, the citizenship of the assignors was such that the case was properly removable, their citizenship can now be shown by an amended petition filed in this court. This contention leads to the inquiry, what is the power of this court to permit amendments to the petition for removal after the cause has been docketed herein? In Crehore v. Railway Co., 131 U. S. 240, 9 Sup. Ct. 692, 83 L. Ed. 144, the right of the Circuit Court to amend the petition was denied in a cause which had been removed on the ground of diverse citizenship, on a petition which alleged the citizenship of the parties at the time when it was filed only, and not at the time of the commencement of the action. The court said: ‘For the only mode provided in the act of Congress by which the jurisdiction of the state court of a controversy between citizens of different states can be devest-ed is by presenting a petition and bond in that court showing, in connection with the record, a case that is removable. The present motion, in effect, is that such amendment of the record may be made in the Circuit Court as will show that this case might have been removed from the state court — not that, in. law, it has ever been so removed.’
“In Jackson v. Allen, 132 U. S. 27, 10 Sup. Ct. 9, 33 L. Ed. 249, the court affirmed the rule of Crehore v. Railway Co.; and in Graves v. Corbin, 132 U. S. 572, 590, 10 Sup. Ct. 202, 33 L. Ed. 469, it referred to that case as one in*814 which it had been held that where a suit is entered upon the docket of a Circuit Court as removed on the ground of the diverse citizenship of the parties, and was never in law removed, no amendment of the record made in the circuit court can affect the jurisdiction of the state court, or put the case rightfully on the docket of the Circuit Court as of the date when it was so docketed.’
“In Martin’s Adm’r v. Railroad Co., 151 U. S. 673, 691, 14 Sup. Ct. 540, 38 L. Ed. 318, the court defined the limit of the power of the Circuit Court to permit amendments to the petition, and said: ‘Such amendments may be allowed when,; and only when, the petition, as presented to the state court, shows upon its face sufficient ground for removal.’
“In Powers v. Railway, 169 U. S. 92, 101, 18 Sup. Ct. 267, 42 L. Ed. 676, may be found the latest expression of the views of the court upon that subject. The court there said: ‘A petition for removál, when presented to the state court, becomes part of the record of that court, and must doubtless show, taken in connection, with the other matters on that record, the jurisdictional facts upon which the right of removal depends, because, if those facts are not made to appear upon the record of that court, is it not bound or authorized to surrender its jurisdiction; and if it does, the Circuit Court of the United States cannot allow an amendment of the petition, but must remand the case.’ The court then proceeded to say: ‘But if, upon the face of the petition, and of the whole record of the state court, sufficient grounds for removal are shown, the petition may be amended in the Circuit Court of the United States, by leave of that court; by stating more fully and distinctly the facts which support those grounds.’ ”
In Fife et al. v. Whittell (C. C.) 102 Fed. 537, Judge Morrow denied an application made by the defendant for leave to amend a record so as to show that the defendant was a nonresident of California, saying;
“The court has no jurisdiction to allow such an amendment. Where a petition for removal in connection with the record in the cause fails to disclose grounds for removal, the docketing of the cause in the Circuit Court of the United States does not deprive the state court of jurisdiction, and the federal court has no power to grant leave to amend the petition by stating facts that show that the cause .was in fact removable.”
Dalton v. Milwaukee Mechanics’ Insurance Company (C. C.) 118 Fed. 876, was considered on a motion to remand to the state court, and on application by the defendant for leave to file an amendment to the petition for removal. The suit there was brought by a citizen of Iowa against a citizen of Wisconsin. The defendant filed a petition for removal in the state court, alleging that the cause was a controversy which was wholly between citizens of different states; the petitioner being a citizen of Wisconsin, and plaintiff a citizen of Iowa. The transcript of removal was filed in the Circuit Court of the United States, whereupon plaintiff moved for an order remanding the case, on the ground that the circuit court had no jurisdiction, for the reason that the jurisdictional facts authorizing a removal did not appear upon the record. Thereupon defendant asked leave to amend the petition for removal, by averring that the amount in controversy exceeded the value of $2,000, exclusive of interest and costs, and that the defendant was a corporation organized and existing under the laws of Wisconsin. Judge Shiras held that the averment that the corporation was a citizen of Wisconsin was not the equivalent of the averment that it was created and existed under the laws of Wisconsin, and that jurisdiction was not shown upon the face of the record.
The discussion by Judge Shiras is quite elaborate and learned. The court was asked to adopt a different rule from that just stated, upon the strength of Powers v. Railway Company, supra, Martin v. Railroad Company, 151 U. S. 690, 14 Sup. Ct. 533, 38 L. Ed. 311, and other decisions of the Supreme Court, but Judge Shiras demonstrates that none of the cases cited sustain the contention that an amendment may be made in the Circuit Court of the United States to uphold its jurisdiction in a removal case, where the record, as it exists in the state court, fails to show the facts necessary to terminate the jurisdiction of that court.
In Cameron v. Hodges, 127 U. S. 322, 8 Sup. Ct. 1154, 32 L. Ed. 132, the Supreme Court said that there was no precedent known to it, which authorized an amendment to be made even in the Circuit Court, by which grounds of jurisdiction may be made to appear, which were not presented to the state court on the motion for removal.
In Crehore v. Ohio & Mississippi Railway Company, 131 U. S. 240, 9 Sup. Ct. 692, 33 L. Ed. 144, it was decided that where a case involves a controversy between citizens of different states, it is not removable, unless, at the time the application for removal is made, the record upon its face shows it to be one that is removable. “We say upon its face, because the state court is only at liberty to inquire whether on the face of the record a case has been made, which requires it to proceed
“A petition for removal, when presented to the state court, becomes part of the record of that court, and must doubtless show, taken in connection with the other matters on that record, the jurisdictional facts upon which the right of removal depends; because, if those facts are not made to appear upon the record: of that court, it is not bound or authorized to surrender its jurisdiction, and if it does, the Circuit Court of the United States cannot allow an amendment of the petition, but must remand the ease. But if, upon the face of the petition, and of the whole record of the state court, sufficient grounds for removal are shown, the petition may be amended in the Circuit Court of the United States by leave of that court, by stating more fully and distinctly the facts which support those grounds.”
Moon, on the Removal of Causes, § 165, states that amendments of form, but not of substance, may be made to a petition for removal in the federal court. From this exposition of the law, the duty of the federal court is not a discretionary one, where an amendment is sought which presents a material ground for retention of jurisdiction, that was not presented or even fairly suggested, as within the scope of the grounds included in the petition presented to the state court.
Kinney v. Columbia Savings & Loan Association, 191 U. S. 78, 24 Sup. Ct. 30, 48 L. Ed. 103, is not in conflict with the earlier cases of the Supreme Court cited. The petition there alleged that the controversy was between citizens of different states, and that petitioner defendant was at the time of the commencement of the suit, and still was a resident and citizen of Colorado. The cross-complaint filed in the federal court alleged that defendant was a citizen of Colorado, and that complainants were citizens of Utah. Leave to amend was sought by adding to the petition to remove allegations that plaintiffs were citizens of Utah. The Circuit Court denied the motion to remand and granted leave to amend. Justice Brewer said, “the right to remove existed, 'but the petition for removal was defective,” the question being, was it so defective as to be incurable. The power of the Circuit Court was recognized to permit amendments of pleadings to show diverse citizenship, or of removal proceedings, where there is a technical defect, and there are averments sufficient to show jurisdiction;, but the court stated that, there was a general averment in the petition that it was a case of diverse citizenship, and therefore one in which, by the statute, the party was entitled to removal. To like effect is Flynn v. Fidelity, etc., Co. (C. C.) 145 Fed. 265. These cases are at once distinguishable as the very point.wherein the record in this case fails is that it not only contained no intimation of Jackson being a citizen of any state other than Montana, but did contain a positive statement that he. was a citizen of that state.
The motion to remand is granted.