delivered the opinion of the court.
This suit was brought in the District Court of Ramsey County, Minnesota, by Charles L. Dunn, a minor, to recover damages for personal injuries which he had received- while travelling as a passenger on the railroad of the .Burlington, Cedar Rapids and Northern Railway Company. The company answered the eomplaint in the. action, and then filed a petition under § 639 of the Revised Statues, verified by the oath of its president, for the removal of the suit to the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Minnesota, on the ground of prejudice and local influence. The petition was .accompanied by the necessary security. It set forth that the railway company was an Iowa corporation, and consequently, in law, a citizen of that state, and Dunn, the plaintiff, a citizen of Minnesota. Under § 639 a suit cannot be removed from a state court to a Circuit Court of the United States, except it be one between a citizen of the state in which the suit was brought and a citizen of another state, and then only by the citizen of the latter state. Immediately on the presentation of the petition .for removal, the attorney for the plaintiff filed a. counter affidavit to the effect that the plaintiff was not a citizen of Minnesota, but of the territory of Montana. No further proof being offered on this point, the court ruled that a case for removal had not been made out, and that the suit must be retained for trial. Accordingly a trial was afterwards had in the state court, which resulted in a judgment against the company. An appeal was then taken to the Supreme Court-of the state, where the judgment of the District Court was in all respects affirmed, including the rulings on the question of' removal. To reverse that judgment this writ of error was brought.
*515 The assignment of errors presents b.ut a single question, and that is whether, as after the petition for removal had been filed the record showed on its face that the state court ought to proceed no further, it was competent for that court to allow an issue of fact to be made upon the statements in the petition, and to retain the suit because on that issue the railway company had not shown by testimony that the plaintiff was actually a citizen of Minnésota.
It must be confessed thát previous to the cases of
Stone
v.
South Carolina,
The theory on which it rests is, that the record closes, so far as the question of removal is concerned, when the petition for removal is filed apd the necessary security furnished. It presents then to the state court a pure question of law, and that is, whether, admitting the facts stated in the petition for removal to be true, it appears on the face of the record, which includes the petition and the pleadings and proceedings down to that time, that the petitioner is entitled to a removal of the suit. That question the state court has the right to decide for itself, and if it errs in keeping the case, and the highest court of the state affirms its decision, this court has jurisdiction to correct the error, considering, for that purpose, only the part of the record which ends with the petition for removal.
Stone
v.
South
Carolina,
But even though the state court should refuse to stop proceedings, the petitioning party may enter a copy of the record of that court, as it stood on the filing of his petition, in the Circuit Court, and have the suit docketed there. If the Circuit Court errs in taking jurisdiction, the 'other side may bring the decision here for review, after final judgment or decree, if the value of the. matter in dispute is sufficient in amount.
Railroad Company
v. Koontz,
But,, inasmuch as the petitioning party has the right to enter the suit in the Circuit Gourt, notwithstanding the state court declines to stop proceedings, it is easy to see that if both courts can try the issues of fact which may be made on the petition for removal, the records from the two courts brought here for review will not necessarily always be the same. The testimony produced before one court may be entirely different from that in the other, and the decisions of both courts may be right upon the facts as presented to them respectively. Such a state of things should be avoided if possible, and this can only be done by making one court the exclusive judge of the facts. Upon-that question there ought not to be a divided jurisdiction. It must rest with one court alone, and that, in our opinion, is more properly the Circuit Court. 'The case can be docketed in that court on the first day of the next term, and the issue tried at once. If decided against the removal, the question is now, by the act of March 3, 1887, c. 373, 24 Stat. 552, put at rest, and the jurisdiction of the state court, established in the appropriate way. Under the act of March 3, 1875, c. 137, 18 Stat. 470, such an order could have been brought here for review by appeal or writ of error, and to expedite such hearings oúr Rule-32 was. adopted.
Upon this record as it now stands the state court was wrong in proceeding with the suit, and for that reason
The judgment of the Supreme Gourt is reversed, and the cause remcmded for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
