When a cause commenced in a state court and removed to a circuit
court is brought to this Court and it does not appear on the face
of the record that
Page 112 U. S. 230
the citizenship of the parties was such as to give the circuit
court jurisdiction on removal, the judgment below will be reversed
without inquiry into the merits and the cause sent back with
instructions to remand it to the state court from which it was
improperly removed.
Mansfield, Coldwater & Lake Michigan
Railway v. Swan, 111 U. S. 379,
affirmed.
In so remanding the cause, this Court will make such order as to
costs as is just.
This cause was argued by counsel on the merits. The
jurisdictional question raised by the pleadings is stated in the
opinion of the Court.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought in a state court of Louisiana on the 25th
of November, 1876, by Edward C. Hancock, a citizen of Louisiana,
against Eliza Jane Holbrook, George W. Nicholson, R. W. Holbrook,
and Chas. T. Howard, all of the City of New Orleans, as stated in
the petition, to establish an alleged title of Holbrook to 20/51
parts of all the property, rights, assets, and goodwill of the "New
Orleans Picayune Newspaper and Printing Establishment," then in the
possession of the defendants at New Orleans. All the defendants
were served with process by the Sheriff of the Parish of
Orleans.
On the 13th of December, 1876, Nicholson filed in the state
court a petition for the removal of the suit to the Circuit Court
of the United States for the District of Louisiana. In this
petition he stated that he was a citizen of the State of
Mississippi and Hancock a citizen of the State of Louisiana. No
mention was made of the citizenship of the other defendants, and no
other ground of removal was given than that Hancock and Nicholson
were citizens of different states. It does not appear that this
petition was ever formally presented to the state court. The
transcript only shows that it was filed. On the 19th of December,
1876, after the date of the filing of the petition for removal, the
petition in the suit was amended by adding
Page 112 U. S. 231
the name of Richard Fitzgerald, a citizen of Louisiana, as a
defendant, and a summons was thereupon issued to bring this new
defendant into court.
On the 11th of December, 1877, nearly a year after the petition
for removal was filed, the clerk of the state court made a
transcript of the record and proceedings in that court, and annexed
his certificate of its correctness. On the same day, the attorney
of Hancock endorsed on the transcript the following:
"I consent, on behalf of plaintiff, that this shall be
considered a correct transcript of the record of the suit of E. C.
Hancock v. Mrs. E. J. Holbrook, No. 23,653, Third District Court,
Parish of Orleans, the same to be filed in the United States
circuit court in accordance with the order to transfer."
The transcript thus certified and endorsed was filed in the
circuit court of the United States on the 13th of December, 1877.
No motion was ever made to remand the cause, and on the 10h of
January, 1878, proceedings were begun in the circuit court at the
instance of the attorney for the plaintiff. Answers were afterwards
filed by the defendants and testimony taken, upon which the parties
went to a hearing, which resulted in a decree, on the 13th of
March, 1881, dismissing the bill. From this decree Hancock
appealed.
It was decided at the last term in
Mansfield, Coldwater
& Lake Michigan Railway Co. v. Swan, 111 U.
S. 379, that when a suit which has been removed from a
state court is brought here by appeal or writ of error and it does
not appear on the face of the record that the citizenship of the
parties was such as to give the circuit court jurisdiction upon the
removal, the judgment or decree of the circuit court will be
reversed without inquiry into the merits, and the cause sent back
with instructions to remand it to the state court from which it was
improperly removed. This is such a case. All the defendants except
one were citizens of the same state with the plaintiff, and there
is no pretense of a separable controversy. Under these
circumstances, the cause was not removable,
Removal Cases,
100 U. S. 457, and
the circuit court consequently had no jurisdiction. In the same
case it was also decided that upon such a reversal
Page 112 U. S. 232
this court may make such order in respect to costs of the appeal
or writ of error as justice and right shall seem to require. In
that case, the removal was made on the application of the
appellant, and although a judgment of reversal was entered, costs
were given against him. It appeared there, however, that the
appellee, after the case got to the circuit court, moved that it be
remanded to the state court, and only remained in the circuit court
because his motion was overruled. He submitted to the jurisdiction
of the circuit court upon compulsion.
Here, the appellee petitioned for the removal. The cause was
not, however, docketed in the circuit court until a year after the
petition for removal had been filed in the state court, and it
nowhere appears that any action was taken in the latter court in
reference to its own jurisdiction. Neither does it appear by which
party the case was docketed in the circuit court. It does appear,
however, that the appellant consented to the docketing, and that he
made no effort whatever to have the case remanded. He was the first
to move in the circuit court, and there is nothing to show that he
remained in that court against his will. We are strongly inclined
to the opinion that the removal was effected with the consent of
both parties, and without the attention of either of the courts
having been called to the jurisdictional facts. Under these
circumstances, each party should pay one-half the costs in this
Court.
The decree of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause
returned to that court with instructions to remand it to the state
court from which it was improperly removed, and with liberty to
make such order as to costs accruing in the circuit court after the
removal as equity and justice may require. A judgment will be
entered against the appellees for one-half the costs in this
Court.