When the right of removal of a cause from a state court to a
circuit court of the United States is denied by a state court, this
denial raises a federal question, within the jurisdiction of this
Court.
The circuit courts of the United States have no power to take
jurisdiction of a case by removal from a state court, when a
colorable assignment has been made to prevent such removal; but
resort can only be had to the state courts for protection against
the consequences of such an encroachment on the rights of a
defendant.
Provident Savings Society v. Ford, 114 U.
S. 635, affirmed.
This was a motion to dismiss accompanied by a motion to
affirm. The case 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 Iowa by Edward K.
Goodnow, a citizen of New York, against Elizabeth T. Oakley,
another citizen of the same state, to recover an amount claimed to
be due for taxes paid by the Iowa Homestead Company and the Dubuque
and Sioux City Railroad Company, both Iowa corporations, on lands
belonging to the defendant. Before the suit was begun the two
corporations assigned their respective claims to Goodnow, under an
agreement by which he was
"to use or exercise reasonable care or diligence to enforce said
claims, demands, or rights of action, and, after deducting all
costs and expenses in so doing, to hold the proceeds or amounts
collected in trust for the use and benefit of the parties
owning."
A copy of this agreement was annexed to the petition as an
exhibit.
On the 16th of December, 1880, which was in time, the defendant
presented her petition for a removal of the suit to the Circuit
Court of the United States for the District of Iowa, on
Page 118 U. S. 44
the ground that Goodnow
"is only a nominal party to said suit, and has no interest
therein whatsoever, but is prosecuting the same for the sole and
exclusive use and benefit of the Iowa Homestead Company and Dubuque
and Sioux City Railroad Company, which were at the commencement of
this suit, and still are, corporations created and existing under
and by virtue of the laws of the State of Iowa, each having its
principal place of business in said State of Iowa, which said
railroad and homestead companies directed the commencement of said
suit, employed counsel to prosecute the same, and are directing and
controlling its prosecution."
The state court proceeded with the suit notwithstanding the
petition for removal, and gave judgment against the defendant. This
judgment was affirmed by the supreme court of the state on an
appeal, that court being of opinion that the suit had not been
removed. To reverse that judgment this writ of error was brought,
and Goodnow now moves to dismiss for want of jurisdiction, and with
that he unites a motion to affirm.
The motion to dismiss must be denied, because a right of removal
under the Act of March 3, 1875, 18 Stat. 470, c. 137, was claimed
by the defendant, and the decision was against the right. This
presents a federal question, and gives us jurisdiction, but as the
decision was in accordance with our judgment in
Provident
Savings Society v. Ford, 114 U. S. 635,
114 U. S. 641,
the motion to affirm is granted. In that case, it was said:
"We know of no instance where the want of consideration in a
transfer, or a colorable transfer of a right of action from a
person against whom the defendant would have a right of removal to
a person against whom he would not have such a right has been held
a good ground for removing a cause from a state court to a federal
court. Where an assignment of a cause of action is colorably made
for the purpose of giving jurisdiction to the United States court,
§ 5 of the Act of Congress of March 3, 1875, . . . has now
given to the circuit courts power to dismiss or remand the cause at
any time when the fact is made to appear, and, by analogy to this
law, it may perhaps be a good defense to an action in a state court
to
Page 118 U. S. 45
show that a colorable assignment has been made to deprive the
United States court of jurisdiction; but, as before said, it would
be a defense to the action, and not a ground of removing that cause
into the federal court."
Our attention was called in the argument to the fact that in the
present case it appears that the assignee "is only a nominal party
to said suit," and that the assignor "directed the commencement of
the suit, employed counsel to prosecute the same, and is directing
and controlling its prosecution," while in the other it was only
alleged that the assignment was "merely colorable," and that the
plaintiff was "not the real party in interest;" but the opinion in
the other case, p.
114 U. S. 638,
shows that it was further alleged that the assignment "was made
without any consideration, and merely for the purpose of
prosecuting and collecting" the claim for the benefit of the
assignor, "and to avoid the necessity of" the assignor's
"giving security for costs as a nonresident of this state, and
to embarrass, and, if possible, prevent the transfer of this action
to the United States courts, and that the controversy . . . is in
reality and in substance between the defendant"
and the assignor, "who are citizens of different states." The
two cases are thus substantially alike, and this is clearly
governed by that. While, therefore, the courts of the United States
have, under the act of 1875, the power to dismiss or remand a case,
if it appears that a colorable assignment has been made for the
purpose of imposing on their jurisdiction, no authority has as yet
been given them to take jurisdiction of a case by removal from a
state court when a colorable assignment has been made to prevent
such a removal. Under the law as it now stands, resort can only be
had to the state courts for protection against the consequences of
such an encroachment on the rights of a defendant.
The motion to dismiss is denied, and that to affirm
granted.