Where the circuit court refuses to remand, and on the
plaintiff's declining to recognize its jurisdiction or proceed,
dismisses the case and renders judgment that plaintiff take nothing
thereby and defendant go hence without day and recover his costs,
the judgment is final, so far as that suit is concerned, and the
question of jurisdiction can be certified to this Court under
§ 5 of the Act of March 3, 1891, 26 Stat. 827.
The right of a nonresident defendant, sued in the state court by
an employee for damages, to remove the case to the federal court
cannot be defeated by the fraudulent joinder as codefendant of
another employee, resident of plaintiff's state, who has no
relation to the plaintiff, rendering him liable for the injuries,
and the circuit court can determine the question of fraudulent
joinder on affidavits annexed to the nonresident defendant's
petition for removal to the consideration whereof plaintiff does
not object, but submits affidavits counter thereto.
Alabama
Great Southern Railway Co. v. Thompson, 200 U.
S. 206, distinguished.
Page 204 U. S. 177
Where the direct issue of fraud is involved, knowledge may be
imputed to one willfully closing his eyes to information within
reach.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case is certified here from the Circuit Court of the United
States for the Eastern District of Missouri under section 5 of the
Court of Appeals Act of March 3, 1891, 26 Stat. 827, upon a
question of jurisdiction.
Page 204 U. S. 178
Conrad Wecker, the plaintiff below, brought his action in the
Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, State of Missouri, against
the National Enameling & Stamping Company, Harry Schenck, and
George Wettengel, undertaking to recover jointly against the
National Enameling & Stamping Company, a corporation of the
State of New Jersey, and Schenck and Wettengel, residents of the
City of St. Louis, State of Missouri. The substance of the
complaint is that defendant is a corporation employing the
plaintiff in the work of firing, filling, stirring, emptying, and
attending certain metal pots used in the melting of grease and
lubricant matter in the plant of the defendant corporation; that
the grease and lubricant matter was delivered by the corporation to
the plaintiff in barrels of great weight -- about six hundred
pounds each -- and it was the plaintiff's duty in the course of his
employment to hoist the same to the top surface of the furnace
structure, into which the pots were set, and then to dump the
grease and lubricant matter into the pots.
The negligence charged against the defendant corporation
consisted in allowing the pots, which were constantly filled with
hot and boiling lubricants, to remain open and exposed, without
covering, railing, device, or means of any character to protect the
plaintiff from accidentally slipping or falling into the same while
engaged in the service of the corporation in the performance of his
duties, and negligently failing to provide and properly place safe
and sufficient hoisting apparatus for the use of the plaintiff in
his employment in lifting said massed of grease and lubricant to
the top of the furnace, and for failing to give the plaintiff
instructions as to the proper manner of performing his duty, and
thereby unreasonably endangering his safety in said employment.
Plaintiff alleges that, by reason of this negligence, while engaged
in the performance of his duties on the twelfth of November, 1902,
on the top of the furnace, he lost his balance and fell into one of
the open, unguarded, and unprotected pots containing hot and
boiling grease and lubricant, receiving thereby great and painful
injuries.
Page 204 U. S. 179
Plaintiff below further charged that Schenck and Wettengel were
employed by the corporation and charged by it with the
superintendence and oversight of the plaintiff in the performance
of his duty, and were employed and charged by the corporation with
the duty of superintending and properly planning the construction
of a furnace, and with the duty of providing for said pots
reasonably safe and suitable covering, railing, or other device,
and with the duty of providing and properly placing reasonably safe
and sufficient hoisting apparatus for lifting the masses of grease
and lubricant to the top of the furnace, and were further charged
by the corporation with the duty of instructing the plaintiff as to
the manner of performing his duties, and charges negligence of
Schenck and Wettengel in planning and directing the construction of
the furnace structure and providing suitable covers or railings as
aforesaid, and providing and placing reasonably safe and sufficient
hoisting apparatus, and in giving instructions as to the manner of
performing plaintiff's duties, by reason whereof the plaintiff lost
his balance and fell into one of the pots as aforesaid, to his
great injury, and the complaint charges the joint negligence of the
corporation and the defendants Schenck and Wettengel, and avers
that his injuries were the result thereof, and prays judgment for
damages jointly against the three defendants.
The defendant company filed its petition for a removal of the
cause to the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern
District of Missouri, which petition contained the usual averments
as to the character of the suit and the right of removal and
diversity of citizenship between the defendant corporation and the
plaintiff, and averred that Schenck, one of the codefendants, was
also a nonresident of the State of Missouri and a citizen of the
State of Illinois, and not served with process; also stated that
Wettengel was, at the time of the commencement of the suit and
since, a citizen of the State of Missouri; averred a separable
controversy between it and the plaintiff as to the alleged
negligence and as to the assumption
Page 204 U. S. 180
of the risk upon the part of the plaintiff. As to Wettengel, the
citizen of Missouri, it was alleged in the removal petition that he
was not at the time of the accident or prior thereto, charged with
the superintendence and oversight of the plaintiff, or with the
duty of superintending and properly planning the construction of
the furnace or providing a reasonably safe and suitable furnace and
pots and railings or other device to protect the plaintiff, and was
not charged with the duty of placing reasonably safe and sufficient
hoisting apparatus, nor with the duty of instructing the petitioner
in respect to his duties, as charged in the complaint, and, after
stating that Schenck, like the defendant corporation, was a
nonresident of Missouri and a citizen of another state, charged
that Wettengel had been improperly and fraudulently joined as a
defendant for the purpose of fraudulently and improperly
preventing, or attempting to prevent, the defendant from removing
the cause to the United States circuit court, and that the
plaintiff well knew at the time of the beginning of the suit that
Wettengel was not charged with the duties aforesaid, and that he
was joined as a party defendant to prevent the removal of the
cause, and not in good faith.
After removal, plaintiff filed his motion to remand the case to
the state court on the ground that there was not in the case a
controversy between citizens of different states, and no separable
controversy between the plaintiff and the company within the
meaning of the removal act. The court, upon hearing the motion,
refused to remand the cause, and afterward, plaintiff electing to
stand upon his motion to remand, and refusing to recognize the
jurisdiction of the United States court or to proceed with the
prosecution of his case therein, upon motion of the defendant, the
court ordered the case to be dismissed, and rendered judgment that
the plaintiff take nothing by the suit, and that the defendants go
hence without day and recover their costs against the plaintiff. A
bill of exceptions was allowed, and the court also certified that
the only question decided by the court in the cause was that the
joining
Page 204 U. S. 181
of Wettengel as a codefendant with the company was palpably
groundless and fictitious, and for the purpose of unlawfully
depriving the defendant company of its right to remove the cause to
the federal court for trial; that, for this reason, the motion to
remand was denied; that, in deciding the motion, the court took
into consideration not only the complaint and petition for removal,
but also the affidavits filed in support and opposition to the
motion to remand; that the plaintiff refused to submit to the
jurisdiction of the court and suffered a dismissal of the suit for
the want of prosecution; that the question is whether the court had
jurisdiction of the action.
In the first ruling upon the motion to remand, the court, in a
written opinion, based its refusal upon the ground that the
petition of plaintiff clearly showed that there was no joint cause
of action against the company and the defendant Wettengel.
Subsequently, the judge filed an opinion in which he said that in
his former opinion he made no allusion to the affidavits tending to
show the fictitious and fraudulent joining of Wettengel, and that,
in his opinion, the same inevitably showed that the inferences
drawn from the allegations of the petition were correct, and that
he might properly consider these affidavits in determining the
question of removal.
It is urged by counsel for defendants in error that the writ of
error should be dismissed because there was no final judgment, and
only in a case where a final judgment has been rendered can the
question of jurisdiction be certified from a circuit court under
section 5 of the Court of Appeals Act.
McLish v. Roff,
141 U. S. 661, is
relied upon, in which it was held that a writ of error could only
be taken out after final judgment.
It is true that, after the circuit court of the United States
maintained its jurisdiction, the plaintiff could have gone on and
tried the case on its merits, and, after judgment, had there been
reason for doing so, taken the case to the circuit court of
appeals; but, upon refusing to recognize the jurisdiction of
Page 204 U. S. 182
the circuit court, final judgment in the action was rendered,
that the plaintiff take nothing by the suit and that the defendants
go hence without day, and recover their costs against the
plaintiff. Whether this judgment would be a bar to another action
is not now before us; it is final, so far as the case is concerned,
and terminated the action.
Section 5 of the Court of Appeals Act provides that only the
question of jurisdiction shall be brought to this Court from the
circuit court, and that is all that is now before us.
It is contended that this case should have been remanded upon
the authority of
Alabama Great Southern Railway Co. v.
Thompson, 200 U. S. 206,
decided at the last term of this Court. In that case, it was held
that, upon a question of removal, where a plaintiff, in good faith,
prosecuted his suit as upon a joint cause of action, and the
removal was sought when the complaint was the only pleading in the
case, the action as therein stated was the test of removability,
and if that was joint in character, and there was no showing of a
want of good faith of the plaintiff, no separable controversy was
presented with a nonresident defendant, joined with a citizen of
the state; in other words, if the plaintiff had, in good faith,
elected to make a joint cause of action, the question of proper
joinder is not to be tried in the removal proceedings, and that,
however that might turn out upon the merits, for the purpose of
removal, the case must be held to be that which the plaintiff has
stated in setting forth his cause of action. And in that case it
was said:
"The fact that, by answer, the defendant may show that the
liability is several cannot change the character of the case made
by the plaintiff in his pleading so as to affect the right of
removal. It is to be remembered that we are not now dealing with
joinders which are shown, by the petition for removal or otherwise,
to be attempts to sue in the state courts with a view to defeat
federal jurisdiction. In such cases, entirely different questions
arise, and the federal courts may, and should, take such action as
will defeat attempts to wrongfully
Page 204 U. S. 183
deprive parties entitled to sue in the federal courts of the
protection of their rights in those tribunals."
And it was further stated in the court's opinion that there was
nothing in that case to suggest an attempt to commit a fraud upon
the jurisdiction of the federal court.
Much discussion is had in this case as to whether the alleged
cause of action is joint or several in its character, and whether
the corporation and Wettengel could be jointly held responsible to
the plaintiff upon the allegations of the complaint, but we do not
deem it necessary to determine that question.
Upon the authority of
Alabama Great Southern case,
supra, and the preceding cases in this Court which are
cited and applied in the opinion in that case, if the complaint is
filed in good faith, the cause of action, for the purposes of
removal, may be deemed to be that which the plaintiff has
undertaken to make it; but in this case, both parties filed
affidavits upon the motion to remand, for and against the right to
remove.
The petition for removal was sworn to by an agent of the
company, and defendant corporation filed the affidavit of one
George Eisenmayer, who testified that he was the chief engineer of
the company, charged with the planning of new apparatus and the
construction and repair thereof for the company, and that Wettengel
was employed in the office as a draftsman, with several other
persons in a similar capacity; that the sole work of Wettengel was
as such draftsman, and that he had nothing to do with selecting
plans or approving the same, but took the plans and ideas furnished
him and made the necessary drawings for the use of mechanics, and
that he had no authority to employ or discharge men or superintend
work or give instructions to any of the men as to how they should
perform their work. Wettengel's affidavit was also filed, in which
he stated that for ten years he had been employed as a draftsman by
the defendant company; that his work was performed in the office of
the company; that he had no duties outside of the office or with
the plaintiff; that he had
Page 204 U. S. 184
no duty of superintendence in connection with him; that he was
not charged with any duty of planning or constructing the apparatus
which was used in the defendant's plant; that the designing and
selection thereof was made by other persons, and that his sole duty
was to attend to the mechanical work of drafting, based upon the
ideas and plans of others; that he had no discretion whatever as to
the sort of apparatus to be used in any part of defendant's plant,
nor as to the structures mentioned in plaintiff's petition; that he
had nothing to do with the planning of the pots, no right to
determine what they should be, or whether a railing should be used,
nor what sort of hoisting apparatus should be used in connection
therewith; that he had no duty in connection with the plaintiff as
to how or when he should do his work, and no authority to give him
instructions -- in short, that his position was merely clerical,
and his duties confined to the making of drawings to enable
mechanics to construct work from plans furnished by others in the
employ of the defendant, and that he did not know the plaintiff by
name, and did not know what sort of work he was doing or in what
portion of defendant's plant he was engaged.
To these affidavits, Wecker, the plaintiff, filed a
counteraffidavit admitting that Eisenmayer was charged with the
general supervision of the work and business of the company at the
place plaintiff was employed and received his injury, and stating
that, just prior to the construction of the furnace structure, he
heard Eisenmayer direct Wettengel to prepare plans for a furnace to
be erected where the one was built shortly after, upon which the
plaintiff was at work when he received his injuries, and states his
belief that the defendant Wettengel planned and directed the
construction of the furnace.
Upon these affidavits, the court reached the conclusion that,
considered with the complaint, they showed conclusively an attempt
to defeat the jurisdiction of the federal court by wrongfully
joining Wettengel.
The consideration of these affidavits clearly shows that
Wettengel's employment was not that of a superior or
superintendent,
Page 204 U. S. 185
or one charged with furnishing designs, for it is not
contradicted that he was employed as a draftsman, receiving his
instructions from others; nor is there the slightest attempt to
sustain the allegations of the petition that Wettengel was a
superintendent over the plaintiff, or had any authority to direct
his work or to give him instructions as to the manner in which his
duty should be performed. The testimony certainly shows no basis
for these charges. The affidavit of Wecker, except as to the
statement of his belief, admits that Eisenmayer was superintendent,
and claims that he heard him direct Wettengel to prepare plans for
a furnace structure. This is not inconsistent with the undisputed
testimony as to the nature and character of Wettengel's employment
in the subordinate capacity of a draftsman.
In view of this testimony and the apparent want of basis for the
allegations of the petition as to Wettengel's relations to the
plaintiff, and the uncontradicted evidence as to his real
connection with the company, we think the court was right in
reaching the conclusion that he was joined for the purpose of
defeating the right of the corporation to remove the case to the
federal court.
It is objected that there was no proof that Wecker knew of
Wettengel's true relation to the defendant, and consequently he
could not be guilty of fraud in joining him; but even in cases
where the direct issue of fraud is involved, knowledge may be
imputed where one willfully closes his eyes to information within
his reach.
It is further objected that the court should not have heard the
matter upon affidavits, and should have required testimony, with
the privilege to cross-examine; but the plaintiff made no objection
to the consideration of affidavits in support of the petition for
the removal, and himself filed a counteraffidavit. In this state of
the record, there certainly can be no valid objection to the manner
in which the court heard and considered the testimony.
While the plaintiff, in good faith, may proceed in the state
Page 204 U. S. 186
courts upon a cause of action which he alleges to be joint, it
is equally true that the federal courts should not sanction devices
intended to prevent a removal to a federal court where one has that
right, and should be equally vigilant to protect the right to
proceed in the federal court as to permit the state courts, in
proper cases, to retain their own jurisdiction.
Reaching the conclusion that the court did not err in holding
upon the testimony in this case that the real purpose in joining
Wettengel was to prevent the exercise of the right of removal by
the nonresident defendant, we affirm the action of the Circuit
Court in refusing to remand the case.
Judgment affirmed.