Where the defect in service of process and in procedure in the
state court are waivable, and after removal there is presented to
the circuit court a controversy involving more than $2,000 and
between citizens of different states, that court has jurisdiction,
and the method of getting the case before the court cannot operate
to deprive it of jurisdiction.
Removal proceedings are in the nature of process to bring the
parties before the federal court.
The defendant may waive defects in removal proceeding if
jurisdiction actually exists, and if he does so, the court will not
of its own motion inquire into the regularity of the
proceedings.
The facts, which involve the validity of the removal of this
cause from the state to the federal court and the jurisdiction of
the latter thereover, are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE LAMAR delivered the opinion of the Court.
On December 8, 1908, the Uinta Development Company, a
corporation of the State of Wyoming, brought an action in a Wyoming
court against John C. Mackay, a resident and citizen of Utah, to
recover $1,950 damages
Page 229 U. S. 174
for a trespass upon land of the Development Company, situated in
Wyoming.
On January 8, 1909, Mackay duly filed his answer. On March 2,
the plaintiff, by leave of court, filed an amended petition, which
Mackay answered. On May 3, he filed an amended answer, which, in
addition to denying many of the allegations of the amended
petition, set up a counterclaim for $3,000 damages.
The claims of the parties were so related that either could have
been interposed as a counterclaim to the other, or they could have
been determined in different suits, subject to the provision that,
under the Wyoming statute, defendant who failed to set up his
counterclaim, and subsequently made it the subject of a separate
action, could not recover costs if he prevailed therein. No federal
question was presented in the plaintiff's suit or defendant's
original answer, but Mackay's amended answer, and counterclaims
were grounded upon certain statutes of the United States. This
counterclaim for $3,000 was filed after the expiration of the time
in which he was required to plead to the original petition.
But, notwithstanding the delay, Mackay, the nonresident, without
objection on the part of the Development Company, filed in the
state court a petition to removed the case to the United States
Circuit Court for the District of Wyoming. An order removing the
case was granted on the theory that the parties were citizens of
different states; that the construction of the federal statutes was
necessarily involved, and that the amount in dispute, as disclosed
by the counterclaim, exceeded $2,000. The transcript was duly filed
in the United States court. Both parties appeared. The plaintiff
filed in the United States court a reply to Mackay's counterclaim,
and the case, which was docketed as "
Uinta Development Co. v.
John C. Mackay," was submitted to the court for determination
without a jury.
Page 229 U. S. 175
Judgment was entered in favor of the Development Company, and
thereupon Mackay took the case to the circuit court of appeals,
assigning errors relating to rulings made in the course of the
trial, but neither party raised any question as to its power to
determine the cause. On these facts, the circuit court of appeals
certified to this Court various questions as to whether Mackay
could remove the case to the United States court, among them the
following:
"4. Assuming that the removal at the instance of Mackay was not
in conformity with the removal statute, and assuming that, as
respects his claim against the Development Company, all the
jurisdictional elements were present which were essential to enable
the circuit court to take cognizance thereof, if he had commenced
an action thereon in that court, and assuming that in such an
action the Development Company lawfully could have set up its claim
as a counterclaim, and thereby have entitled the court to take
cognizance thereof, did the parties, by appearing in the circuit
court and there litigating both claims to a final conclusion in a
single cause, without any objection to the jurisdiction of the
court or to the manner in which its jurisdiction was invoked,
enable that court to take cognizance of the controversy and to
proceed to a final judgment therein with like effect as if they had
invoked the jurisdiction of that court in the first instance
through an action commenced therein by Mackay upon his claim, and
through the interposition by the Development Company of its claim
as a counterclaim in that action?"
This question must be answered in the affirmative, and that fact
makes it unnecessary to consider the status of the parties in the
state court, and who was technical plaintiff and who technical
defendant, or whether Mackay, a nonresident defendant, sued in a
state court for $1,950, could, by filing a counterclaim for $3,000,
acquire the
Page 229 U. S. 176
right to remove the case to the United States court. The case
was removed in fact and, while the parties could not give
jurisdiction by consent, there was the requisite amount and the
diversity or citizenship necessary to give the United States
circuit court jurisdiction of the cause. The case therefore
resolves itself into an inquiry as to whether, if irregularly
removed, it could be lawfully tried and determined.
Removal proceedings are in the nature of process to bring the
parties before the United States court. As in other forms of
process, the litigant has the right to rely upon the statute, and
to insist that, in compliance with its terms, the case shall be
taken from the state to the federal court in the proper district,
on motion of the proper person at the proper time, and on giving
the proper bond. But these provisions are for the benefit of the
defendant, and intended to secure his appearance. When that result
is accomplished by his voluntary attendance, the court will not, of
its own motion, inquire as to the regularity of the issue or
service of the process, or, indeed, whether there was any process
at all, since it could be waived, in whole or in part, either
expressly or by failing seasonably to object.
Powers v. C.
& O. Ry., 169 U. S.
98.
What took place in the state court may therefore be disregarded
by the court because it was waived by the parties, and regardless
of the manner in which the case was brought or how the attendance
of the parties in the United States court was secured, there was
presented to the circuit court a controversy between citizens of
different states in which the amount claimed by one nonresident was
more than $2,000, exclusive of interest and costs. As the court had
jurisdiction of the subject matter, the parties could have been
realigned by making Mackay plaintiff and the Development Company
defendant, if that had been found proper. But if there was any
irregularity
Page 229 U. S. 177
in docketing the case or in the order of the pleadings, such an
irregularity was waivable, and neither it nor the method of getting
the parties before the court operated to deprive it of the power to
determine the cause.
The fourth question certified to us by the circuit court of
appeals is answered in the affirmative.