259 Ind. 217 | Ind. | 1972
This is an original action in this Court for a writ of mandate against the Lake Superior Court, Eoom 3, presided over at the time by the Honorable Fred A. Egan, Judge.
The relator, Mary Lyons, is plaintiff in a wrongful death claim against the Northwest Engineering Company, first
“The Court having heretofore heard arguments of counsel on plaintiff’s motion for judgment by default, and having taken its ruling under advisement, now finds that this court is divested of jurisdiction of said cause and the said cause has been duly transferred to the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, Hammond Division.”
Relator in her petition for writ of mandate in this Court requests us to issue a mandate writ requiring the trial court “to accept jurisdiction and grant a default judgment in plaintiff’s favor.” After hearing we denied a temporary writ. We now deny the permanent writ.
It is relator’s claim in support of issuance of the writ that the defendant below did not successfully effectuate removal to the Federal District Court in that defendant failed to comply with 28 U.S.C. § 1446 (e), by failing to comply with TR. 5(E) and TR. 11, when filing a copy of the removal petition with the respondent trial court, and that as a consequence of this failure to comply with our State procedural rules, jurisdiction remained in the respondent court, and that the respondent court should have considered her default motion and granted it.
On September 11, 1970, the day after filing her motion for default judgment in the state trial court, relator filed a Motion to Remand with the Federal District Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1447. This motion was augmented on September 16,
At the time the state trial court denied relator’s motion for default, he had been made aware by the defendant’s Response to Notice of Motion for Judgment by Default that (1) the Motion for Remand had been denied by the Federal District Court, and (2) that the claim was already at issue in the Federal District Court, and (3) that a pre-trial conference had been set by the Federal District Court. Here the state trial court was well aware that there was an ongoing case before the Federal District Court. Under this posture of the case, there can be no doubt that the state trial court was correct in making the order here attacked.
For the purpose of this case, we need not determine the precise moment when state court jurisdiction terminated. It is sufficient here that Federal District Court’s order denying remand to the state court, conclusively demonstrated that as of the date of that order, removal in accordance with the provisions of the Act had occurred and state court jurisdiction terminated. We first recognized the binding nature of such a judicial determination by the federal courts on removal in State ex rel. Allis-Chalmers Mfg. et al. v. Boone Circuit Court, et al. (1949), 227 Ind. 327, 86 N. E. 2d 74. If relator is not satisfied with the Federal District Court’s denial of remand, he is afforded a remedy. That remedy however, is not in the courts of Indiana. It is by way of appeal
The permanent writ is denied.
Note.—Reported in 285 N. E. 2d 642.