82 F. 15 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of West Virginia | 1897
This case is now heard upon a motion to remand it to the court from which it was removed, and that is the only question now to he considered. It appears from the record that a summons issued from the clerk’s office of the circuit court of Jefferson county, W. Ya., against the defendants, on the 27th day of October, 1893, requiring them “to answer on the first Monday in next month a bill in chancery to be exhibited against them” by the plaintiffs in this action. It does not appear from the record when the bill was filed, except from a statement in the petition that it was filed at the following (November rules. When the bill was filed, the plaintiffs were entitled to a rule to plead or reply as the case then stood (chapter 125, § 5, Code W. Ya.); but the record does not disclose that the plaintiffs took any such rule, nor does it appear that any step was taken by the plaintiffs to mature their «action for hearing beyond the mere filing of their bill at (November rules. The statute of West Virginia provides that, after the suit has been brought, “that if the defendant fails to appear at the rule day at which the process against him is returned executed, * * * the plaintiff, if he has filed his declaration or bill, may have a conditional judgment or
It will be noticed that the act requires any party Avho desires to remove a case from the state court to the federal court to file his petition in the case “at the time, or any time before, the defendant is required by the laws of the state or the rule of the state court in which suit is brought to answer or plead to the declaration or complaint of the plaintiff.” 24 Stat. 554. Under the decision of Martin’s Adm’r v. Railroad Co., it is claimed that the petition must be filed at the rules to which the summons is returnable, which is the first rule day. If such is the conclusion of the court in that case, with great deference I think it is a misconception of the act. As I have said before, I do not understand that I am bound by its reasoning, and I trust that I will be excused if I venture to differ with the learned judge who delivered the opinion of the court. It will be observed that the act requires the party to file his petition “when, bv the laws of the state, or a rule of the court in which the suit is brought,” he is required to
It is a universal rule of construction that the courts should endeavor, if possible, to ascertain the intention of the legislative power in passing an act, and, if possible, give effect to that intention, unless the language is so clear that it admits of but one meaning, leaving no room for construction. When we look to the purpose of congress in enacting this statute, we must conclude that it was only to furnish a national tribunal in which citizens of different states could litigate their rights, removed as far as practicable from local prejudice. If is almost impossible to believe that it was the intention of the legislative power, in passing this act, to confer upon citizens of different states the right to litigate in the courts of the United States, and yet to so limit the time of removal of cases brought in the courts of the states as to amount almost to a denial to this class of litigants of the right to be heard in the courts of the United States. If this construction has been given to the act by the supreme court, and is to be followed as a rule of conduct by the inferior courts, it puts it in the power of a litigant in this state to bring his suit on the first rule day .of any month, and have a process issued and served on that day on the agent of the defendant, a nonresident corporation; the result being that, before the chief officers and counsel of such defendant have been informed of such proceedings, the rules have been closed, and it is deprived of the right of removal. Spragins v. Railway Co., 35 W. Va. 139, 13 S. E. 45. I submit that such could not have been the intention of congress in the passage of this act. We must presume that congress intended to furnish a right to remove within a reasonable time, and at the same time a remedy to protect the nonresident defendant against local prejudice. If such was the inten