108 F. 693 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Kentucky | 1901
On July 2, 1909, S. C. Bailey, a citizen of Kentucky, brought an equitable action in the Campbell circuit court against the Cincinnati Leaf Tobacco Warehouse Company, a Kentucky corporation, as sole defendant, in which the plaintiff sought to have the affairs of the corporation wound up, and its assets distributed among the persons entitled thereto. Soon afterwards James C. Ernst was appointed the court’s receiver in the action, and subsequently the case was referred to the master commissioner, who was directed to take proof and ascertain and report the claims against the defendant. Under this reference, H. H. Hoffman and Henry Felt-rnan, among others, proved before the master their claims against
But, however all this may be, nothing in the record could justify the rendition of the judgment of October 27, 1900. As the claims filed by Hoffman were admitted to be just, thus closing the receiver’s case as to them, and as there were new and distinct claims stated and. set up in the so-called answer and set-off of the receiver, which had no connection with Hoffman’s claims, due process of law manifestly required that actual notice, in the way of the service of a summons, should be given to Hoffman, in order to bring him before the court upon that pleading. The necessity for this is especially emphasized by the fact that, under the Civil Code of Practice (subsections 1, 2, § 96), the matter thus pleaded was neither a counterclaim nor a set-off, and could not be made a set-off by erroneously so misnaming it in the pleading. The new matter might possibly' have been embraced in a cross petition if the receiver had been, or if he became, a defendant to the suit (subsection 8, § 96), but that would have required the issual and service of a summons (sections 97, 39). Under these conditions, and notwithstanding the very abbreviated notices published in the bulletin, the court must hold that the judgment of October 27, 1900, was coram non judice, so far, at least, as it may stand in the way of Hoffman’s right to remove the action. Hoffman , not having been then before the court at all, so far as the new matters stated in the answer and set-off were concerned, and having appeared specially only when he subsequently moved to vacate and set aside that judgment, and not having entered a general appearance in the cause, with. respect, at least, to the pleading of the receiver, the time for answering that pleading had never-arrived, and did not arrive previous to the voluntary filing at the same time of Hoffman’s pleading to the merits, and his petition for the removal of the cause. In other words, the receiver, merely as such, was never a party to the suit, unless the filing of the answer and so-called set-off made him a defendant without an express order of the court to that effect, which I doubt; and certainly the receiver, as such, was not entitled ex officio to plead therein any set-off against Hoffman, who was, at most, only a quasi party to certain
“Sec. 96. (1) A counter-claim is a cause of action in favor of. a defendant against a plaintiff or against him and another, which arises out of the contract, or transaction, stated in the petiLion as the foundation of the plaintiff’s claim, or which is connected with the subject of the action. (2) A set-off is a cause of action arising upon a contract, judgment, or award, in favor of a defendant against a plaintiff, or against him and another; and it cannot he* pleaded except In an action upon a contract, judgment or award. (8) A cross-petition is the commencement of an action by a defendant against a co-defendant. or a person who is not a party to the action, or against both; or, by a plaintiff against a co-plaintiff, or a person who is not a party to the action, or against both; and is not allowed to a defendant, except upon a cause of action which affects, or is affected hy the original cause of action; nor to a plaintiff, except upon a cause of action which affects, or is affected by, a set-off or counter-claim.”
The receiver's pleading, as filed, did not conform to these provisions, and his calling it a “set off” did not and conld not make it such, nor oblige anybody to so treat it; and Hoffman, particularly, was not so bound, as he was In no sense a plaintiff to the action. The receiver therefore had no right to a judgment at all, and manifestly none without the service of a summons. The attempt by the receiver, while admitting the justice of Hoffman’s claims, in respect to which alone he had become a quasi party to the equity suit, to make Hoffman’s assertion of those claims before the commissioner the jurisdictional basis of an attempt to bring in that suit what is, in substance and effect, a new and independent action at law by the receiver against Hoffman upon a cause of action supposed to have accrued to the corporation defendant, is certainly most irregular; and the mere effort thus to superimpose a new suit upon an old one under the guise, or, rather, the disguise, of a pleading entitled in the old action, and misnamed an '‘answer,” instead of a “petition,” should not succeed so as to defeat the right of removal. But an irregularity in merely modal matters, however gross it may be, can be waived, though the waiver of such irregularity in form does not and cannot change the substance and essential characteristics of the proceeding in this case, nor make it in reality anything except a new suit upon a different cause of action between the receiver, on the one side, and Hoffman, on the other. Such a waiver applies merely to the form of proceeding, and not to the substance of it; and even this irregularity of mode was not waived by Hoffman until he filed his response to the receiver’s pleading, at which time he also filed his petition for the removal of the cause to this court. If I am right in these views, Hoffman’s waiver only extended to the objection that the new suit should have been separate from the old one, instead of being unwarrantably and irregularly entitled in it, and also to the objection that the new suit should have been by a petition, rather than in the form of an answer.
Hoffman appears, therefore, to have been in time in his application for a removal, and he was certainly so if we are authorized to treat the proceeding of the receiver as one which should be regarded as a suit which is separate and distinct from the original action, so
We have not overlooked Judge Barr’s opinion in the case of Fidelity Trust & Safety-Vault Co. v. Newport News & M. V. Co. (C. C.) 70 Fed. 403; but it seems to have no special bearing upon the questions now to be determined, though much pressed upon the attention of the court at the argument. In that case there had been an attempt to serve a summons upon the defendant. In order to test the validity of that service, the defendant entered its special appearance in the state court, and under cover thereof flled a plea in abatement, insisting that the service was not valid. To this plea a demurrer was flled, and at the hearing the state court sustained the demurrer. While Judge Barr’s opinion does not so state in terms, we may assume that this determination of the state court proceeded upon the idea that the service upon the. defendant was sufficient in law, and that the defendant was, by virtue thereof, actually before the court when it attempted to enter only a special appearance. In Judge Barr’s opinion much more than the time for answering fixed by the state law and the rule of the state court had been' consumed in the proceedings in the case, and for that reason he held that the petition for a removal came too late. This statement of that case will show how entirely it differs from this, where there was the very reverse of an attempt to
This leaves only the question whether there is a separable controversy disclosed in the so-called answer and set-off pleaded a,gainst H. H. llofl'inan and Henry Feltman, and wjiich must be regarded as the initial pleading in this particular litigation, and which should always be so considered. A careful examination of that pleading, and treating it, in substance and effect, as a petition, instead of an answer, leaves no doubt in my mind that the causes of action therein stated against Hoffman, a citizen of Ohio, one officer, and Feltman, a citizen of Kentucky, another officer, are entirely separate, and in no sense joint. The obligations of each officer, if any, which may arise upon the averments of the pleading, are several and separate, particularly as no conspiracy is charged. The duties of each to their employer, the corporai ion, were separate and distinct. Their liabilities are therefore equally separate and several, and the proper judgment upon that pleading must necessarily he against each of them separately. And it may he added that neither one of them is a necessary, proper party to an action upon the obligation of the other.
The petition for a removal having been filed in time in the state court, and the cause of action against Hoffman alleged hv the receiver being clearly separable from that alleged against Feltman, the court:, after some hesitation, has reached the opinion that the motion to remand this action to the state court should be, and it is, overruled.