Where, in a suit in a state court for the recovery of lands and
damages for the detention of them, the whole controversy, so far as
the title to them is concerned, is between the plaintiff, a citizen
of the state where the suit is brought and such of the defendants
as are citizens of that state, and the case of the other defendants
is a mere adjunct of the principal dispute, the pleadings
presenting no separate claim or question,
held that under
the Act of March 3, 1875, c. 137, the case is not removable to the
circuit court.
The case is fully stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 105 U. S. 577
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a suit begun in a state court of New York by the Van
Brunts, defendants in error, citizens of New York, against Corbin,
Dow, and Burnap, also citizens of New York, the New York and
Manhattan Beach Railway Company, a New York corporation, Keefer, a
citizen of Ohio, and McKinnie, a citizen of Indiana, to recover the
possession of certain lands and damages for the detention thereof.
The complaint alleges title in the Van Brunts and an unlawful
withholding of possession by all the defendants, who are now
plaintiffs in error. Each of the defendants answered separately.
The answer of Dow is a general denial of all the allegations of the
complaint. The other defendants deny the title of the Van Brunts,
and allege that the railway company is in possession. The railway
company, Keefer, McKinnie, and Burnap set up title and seisin in
fee in the company and deny explicitly that either Keefer,
McKinnie, or Burnap is in possession. After the answers were all
in, the defendants united in a petition for the removal of the suit
to the circuit court of the United states for the proper district
on the ground "that there is a controversy herein which is wholly
between citizens of different states, and which can be fully
determined as between them."
The suit having been docketed in the circuit court, the Van
Brunts moved to remand. The motion was granted, and from the order
to that effect this writ of error was brought.
The real controversy is about the right to the possession of the
land in dispute. So far as the title is concerned, it is apparent
from the pleadings that citizens of New York are the only parties
interested. They occupy both sides of that part of the controversy.
The citizen of Ohio and the citizen of Indiana claim for themselves
neither title nor possession. It is true that, as the case stands,
if the Van Brunts establish their title against the other
defendants and it appears that Keefer and McKinnie were actually in
possession and wrongfully kept the rightful owners out, there may
be a recovery against them jointly with the railway company of
damages for the detention. But there can be none separately,
because the company admits a possession which, if the Van Brunts
have title, cannot be maintained. There is neither in the complaint
nor the answers
Page 105 U. S. 578
any claim of separate right, either to the possession or the
property. The whole case depends on the question of title between
the Van Brunts, on one side, and the New York defendants, on the
other. This controversy was not removable. That of the other
defendants is a mere adjunct of the principal dispute. It cannot
exist separately.
The case is therefore within the principle of
Removal
Cases, 100 U. S. 457,
decided after the order now under review was made,
Blake v.
McKim, 103 U. S. 336, and
Hyde v. Ruble, 104 U. S. 407. In
no just sense can it be said that the pleadings present separate
controversies, such as admit of separate and distinct trials. If
they do not, there could be no removal under the second clause of
the Act of March 3, 1875, c. 137, any more than under the
first.
The order to remand is
Affirmed.