34 F. 228 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York | 1888
This suit was brought in the state court by a citizen , of Massachusetts against a corporation of Connecticut and a corporation of this state. It was removed upon the petition of the defendant, the Connecticut corporation, and the plaintiff has moved to remand.
. Although the suit presents a controversy to which upon s- very preposterous theory of legal right the corporation of this state is a necessary party as well as the removing defendant, it also presents a separable controversy between the plaintiff and the removing defendant, because the bill of complaint avers a cause of action, and prays for damages and an accounting as against that defendant alone, for failure to perform a contract. In this respect it is like the case of Boyd v. Gill, 21 Blatchf. 543, 19 Fed. Rep. 145. According to the act of March 3, 1887, inasmuch as the plaintiff and the removing defendant have a separable controversy, are citizens of different states, and the removing defendant was not sued in his own state, the case is removable under the act of March 3, 1887. Under the second section of that act any suit of a civil nature is removable by the defendant of which the circuit courts are given jurisdiction by the first section, and by the first section the circuit courts are given jurisdiction of controversies between citizens of different states in which the matter in dispute is of the requisite sum or value. The act is a slovenly piece of patch-work put upon the act of March 3, 1875; but, reading the original and amendatory acts side by side to discover what has been inserted in and what left out of the original act, the meaning of the changes and their effect seem tolerably plain. The first section of the amenda-tory act, like the first section of the original act, relates exclusively to the original jurisdiction of the circuit court; and the second section of the amendatory act, like the second section of the original act, relates ex