16 F. 1 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1882
The motion to remand this case to the state court from which it was removed here is based on these grounds: (1) That the persons who filed the petition and bond for removal were not parties to the suit, because they were not necessary parties, and were not made parties, and their petition to intervene had been rejected and denied by the court; (2) that the application to remove was not made before or at the term at which the cause could he first tried;
The record shows that Stepath et al., by petition filed in .the court showing that they were lienholders against the defendant railroad company, applied to the court for leave to intervene and litigate their alleged rights, and were refused by the court, and that thereafter, on the next day, without leave, they filed their petition asserting their claims aga inst the defendant company, and contesting the lien and alleged priority of the plaintiffs in the suit.
The question is whether an order of court was necessary before they could be parties to the suit. We are referred to no provision of the Texas Code' which makes it necessary for the court to grant leave before a party can intervene in a suit. We take it there is no such provision. We are referred to 28 Tex. 501, (Smith v. Allen,) wljere it is said that “it is believed that the practice has been to intervene on leave of the court;” and referring to Eccles v. Hill, 13 Tex. 65-68. The court also said: “In a proper case the right of intervention, if denied in the court below, will be secured and enforced in this court.” These rulings are undoubtedly with reference to the general practice in matters of intervention. But we understand that this case stands upon a clear statutory right to intervene, without any leave of court first had and obtained. The statute of the state which gives the plaintiffs .the lien they are seeking to enforce provides that, “in all suits of this kind,” — that is, suits to enforce the laborer’s lien against railroad companies, — “it shall not be necessary for the plaintiff to make other lienholders defendants thereto, but such lien-holders may intervene and become parties thereto, and have their respective rights adjusted and determined by the court.” Acts 1879, c. 12, p. 8.
Under this provision it seems to us that any lienholder would have the right to intervene in such'a suit as the plaintiffs instituted without any leave of court; as much so as a defendant, when cited in an ordinary suit, has to answer without leave of the court. But, however this may be, we have authority for holding that interven-ors were proper parties to the litigation, and that as they had done all they could to become parties, and had been wrongfully refused the right by the state court, they were parties sufficient for the purpose of removing the case, if otherwise they had the right to remove the case. See Acts 1879, c. 12, supra, and two cases decided by Justice Davis, in Dill. Rem. Causes, 41, 42, note.
The case as made by the record shows a controversy between inter-venors and the defendant’s railroad company for the foreclosure of the lien claimed by intervenors, and a controversy between the inter-venors and the original plaintiffs as to which party is entitled to priority of lien against the defendant company. All the intervenors are citizens of other states than Texas; all of the plaintiffs and the defendants are citizens of Texas; there is no question but that these controversies can be fully determined as between the respective parties to them. We then have a controversy between citizens of different states; a controversy between citizens of a state and citizens of other states; and a controversy which»is wholly between citizens of different states, and which can be fully determined as between them.
For the purpose of removal of a cause, the matter in dispute may be ascertained, and according to the facts the parties arranged on opposite sides of that dispute. If in such an arrangement it appears that those on one side, being all citizens of different states from those on the other, desire a removal, the suit may be removed. Removal Cases, 100 U. S. 457.
When, in any suit mentioned in the second section of the act of March 3, 1875, there is a controversy wholly between citizens of different states, which can be fully determined as between them, then either one or more of the defendants or plaintiffs actually interested in said controversy may, on complying with the requirements of the statute, remove the entire suit. See Barney v. Latham, 103 U. S. 205.
The motion to remand in this case is denied.