(after stating the facts as above).
Tо a preliminary suggestion of respondent that the law does not permit this appeal, we cannot accede. Admittedly no apрeal lies from an order of remand, because Judicial Code, § 28 (Comp. St. § 1010), specifically forbids one, and none from an order refusing remand, because it is not final under Judicial Code, § 128 (Comp. St. § 1120). Since no motion to remand was made herein, it is urged that this appeal from an injunction, which only enforces a removal of assumed validity, is an indirect way of appealing from a refusal to remand.
There is some force in this, fоr plainly the Supreme Court has vigorously disapproved of attempted indirect review of removal proceedings. In re Pennsylvania Cо.,
The objection to removal, which has been argued as if this were a motion to remand, is (1) that no separable controversy exists because a “joint” suit was brought; and (2) the power to remove a separable cоntroversy exists only when there is a plurality of defendants.' In the sense that this complaint shows a mechanical joinder in one pleading of several causes of action, the pleading is joint. But each cause of action is single, and just as singularly the property *282 of one plaintiff, as it would have been had sueh plaintiff sued singly.
This union of causes is of exactly the same kind as has long been common in admiralty, where the membеrs of a crew may unite in one libel to recover their several wages. No one has ever supposed that any joint cause of action was created by such joinder. Nor is this a class suit; there has been one such proceeding, i. e., Southern Pacific Co. v. Bogert, suprа; and whether there could be a second, under Supreme Tribe v. Cauble,
Further, the quoted portion of the New York Practice Act does not pretend to make joint causes of action previously seрarate and single. It permits a joinder only for convenience of trial, and if such union does not promote convenience severance will occur when and as often as convenience dictates. Therefore we find nothing in the form of pleading or nature of the 16 causes of action set forth to prevent a separation of controversies.
But, if it were shown that the Legislature of New York intended by this legislation to make something ealled a joint cause of action by permitting separate causes belonging to separate individuals to be united in one complaint, then such joinder cannot operate to destroy the jurisdiction of the courts of the United States over such of the separate controversies incorporated in one complaint as exist between citizens of different states. It is for Congress alone, under the Constitution, to declare that jurisdiction. Thus upon reason and authority we conclude that the causes of аction removed were not joint.
As to the contention that section 28 means that to remove a severable controversy there must be a plurality of defendants, we do not think it necessary to deal with all the decisions presented at bar. It is true that in State of Missouri v. Chicago, еtc., Co. (D. C.)
On the other hand, in State of Idaho v. American Surety Co. (D. C.)
The right of removal is substantial, and the present statute secures the right of trial in the national courts of a controversy that is separable in its naturе — not of a controversy only with a defendant who severs himself from other defendants. The controversy of each wage-claiming seaman in the admiralty suit we have instanced is in its nature separable from the demand of every other sea-man, and the right sought to be preserved by the statute is the right to a trial in the United States court of such a controversy. This is the doctrine set forth in Torrence v. Shedd,
Because then there is no effort in the state statute to produce more than a physically convenient joinder of aсtions, because the causes of action removed are in their nature separable, and because it is beyond the power of the state authority to limit, define or prevent the right of removal, the reason of the matter supports the removal procedure ithis сase. So far as the Missouri and Idaho eases, supra, are concerned, the quoted language from the Missouri case is but a die-tum, to whiеh we cannot agree. The point was squarely presented in the Idaho case, and with the result of that deeisiqn we agree. Being of oрinion that a series of separable and removable controversies exist, it is admitted that the defendant exercised the right recognized and asserted in Chesapeake & Ohio Co. v. McCabe,
*283 Once the right to issue the injunction be granted, there is nothing left of this appeal but a question of discretion. Considering the history of this litigation, we think the discretion was well exercised.
Order affirmed, with costs.
