A case arising under the Federal Employers' Liability Act
between citizens of different states is not removable from a state
to a federal district court on either ground.
In the absence of a fraudulent purpose to defeat removal, the
status, with respect to removability, of a case alleged to be one
arising under the Federal Employers' Liability Act depends not upon
what the defendant may allege or prove or what the court may, after
hearing
Page 246 U. S. 277
upon the merits,
in invitum order, but solely upon the
form which the plaintiff voluntarily gives to his pleading
initially and as the case progressed.
Therefore, where the complaint states a cause under the Federal
Act, the failure of the plaintiff to prove that the employee was
engaged in interstate commerce when injured will not leave the case
removable because of diverse citizenship appearing in the
complaint. A contention to the contrary is not a claim of federal
right of sufficient substance to afford this Court jurisdiction to
review a state court's judgment.
Writ of error to review 51 Mont. 565 dismissed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE CLARKE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents for decision the question whether the
nonremovable case stated in the complaint became one subject to
removal when the plaintiff rested his case, and, as the defendant
claimed, it became apparent that the allegation of the complaint
that the deceased was employed in interstate commerce when killed
was not sustained by the evidence.
We shall designate the parties as they were in the trial court,
the defendant in error as plaintiff, and the plaintiff in error as
defendant.
The suit was commenced in a district court of Montana, and is
one to recover damages for wrongful death. The plaintiff was a
citizen of Montana when the case was commenced, and he alleges in
his complaint that the defendant was an interstate carrier,
organized under the laws of the State of Minnesota at the time the
accident occurred; that the deceased was a conductor employed
by
Page 246 U. S. 278
the defendant in interstate commerce at the time he was killed,
and that the proximate cause of the accident was the failure of
defendant to fence its line, which resulted in the derailing of the
car on which plaintiff's decedent was employed, causing his instant
death.
The defense is a denial that deceased was employed in interstate
commerce when injured, and a denial of negligence in the failure to
fence, with a plea of assumption of risk.
When the plaintiff rested his case, the defendant
"moved for a judgment of nonsuit and dismissal upon the merits,
. . . based upon the complaint of the plaintiff and upon the
testimony adduced."
This motion asserted in various forms that the evidence
introduced failed to show any actionable negligence on the part of
the defendant, and concluded with a fifth paragraph alleging, in
substance, as follows:
That there was a fatal variance, amounting to failure of proof,
between the allegation of the complaint that the deceased was
employed in interstate commerce at the time he was injured and the
evidence introduced; that this variance is substantial in that,
with the complaint charging that the deceased was killed while
engaged in interstate commerce, the defendant could not remove said
case to the federal court, whereas, if the case as made by the
proof had been made, to-wit, an intrastate case, it could have been
removed, and hence the failure to recognize the variance would
operate to deny to the defendant a right under a statute or law of
the United States, to-wit, the right to remove such a case properly
pleaded to the federal court.
The trial court having overruled this motion, the defendant
introduced its evidence in defense, and, after the plaintiff's
rebuttal was concluded, renewed its motion, which was again denied,
the defendant reserving its exception, and thereupon the case was
submitted to the jury
Page 246 U. S. 279
and judgment was entered on the verdict in favor of the
plaintiff.
On review, the Supreme Court of Montana held that the trial
court had erred, and should have ruled that, on the evidence
adduced, the deceased was not employed in interstate commerce when
injured, but, holding that the defendant had waived its right to
remove by failing to file a petition for removal, as required by
law, the court went forward and held that a case of negligence at
common law was stated in the complaint and that the evidence
introduced justified the trial court in submitting the case to the
jury, and that the judgment must be affirmed.
In disposing of the question presented by this motion for
"nonsuit and dismissal" which we are considering, the Supreme Court
of Montana said:
"We recall but one respect in which a defendant can be seriously
prejudiced in such a situation, and that is where, by reason of
diverse citizenship, removal of the cause to the federal court
might be in order. In such a situation, however, the defendant must
assert its right, under penalty of waiver, by filing a petition to
remove at the first opportunity. . . . This the appellant did not
do; instead, and with the knowledge of its right to have the cause
removed, it submitted to the jurisdiction of the state court in
which the trial occurred by seeking a dismissal for variance as
well as for failure to show the breach by it of any legal duty to
the decedent under either state or federal law."
No claim is made that the allegation that the plaintiff's
decedent was employed in interstate commerce was incorporated into
the complaint fraudulently or in bad faith, for the purpose of
defeating the right of the defendant to remove the case to the
federal court.
The claim now made in this Court by the defendant is that the
state supreme court correctly held that the evidence introduced
failed to show that the deceased was
Page 246 U. S. 280
employed in interstate commerce when he was injured, but that it
committed reversible error and denied to the defendant the federal
right to remove the case when it held that the right to remove had
been waived, and affirmed the judgment instead of reversing and
remanding the case to the lower court for further proceedings.
The plaintiff replies to this claim with the contention that the
Court is without jurisdiction to review the decision of the state
supreme court for the reason that no federal right was denied to
the plaintiff in error at any stage of the proceeding in the state
court.
It is, of course, familiar law that, the right of removal being
statutory, a suit commenced in a state court must remain there
until cause is shown for its transfer under some act of Congress.
Gold Washing & Water Co. v. Keyes, 96 U. S.
199.
The allegation of the complaint that the deceased was employed
in interstate commerce when injured brought the case within the
scope of the Federal Employers' Liability Act, and it would have
been removable either for diversity of citizenship or as a case
arising under a law of the United States except for the prohibition
against removal contained in the amendment to the act, approved
April 5, 1910, 36 Stat. L. 291. But this allegation rendered the
case, at the time it was commenced, clearly not removable on either
ground.
Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v. Leslie,
238 U. S. 599;
Southern R. Co. v. Lloyd, 239 U.
S. 496.
The removal provisions of the Judicial Code, Chapter 3,
§§ 28 and 39, inclusive, in effect when this case was
tried, were substantially the same as they have been since the
Removal Act of 1888 was passed, and that a case not removable when
commenced may afterwards become removable is settled by
Ayers
v. Watson, 113 U. S. 594;
Martin's Administrator v. Baltimore & Ohio R. Co.,
151 U. S. 673,
151 U. S. 688,
151 U. S. 691;
Powers v. Chesapeake
& Ohio Ry. Co.,
Page 246 U. S. 281
169 U. S. 92, and
Fritzlen v. Boatmen's Bank, 212 U.
S. 364. Under the doctrine of these cases, the
defendant, admitting the nonremovable character of the case at bar
when it was commenced, argues that the failure of the plaintiff to
prove his allegation that the deceased was employed in interstate
commerce when he was injured left the complaint as if the
allegation had not been incorporated into it, and that therefore
the case became removable for diversity of citizenship when the
plaintiff rested his case.
But, unfortunately for the validity of this contention, it has
been frequently decided by this Court that whether a case arising,
as this one does, under a law of the United States is removable or
not when it is commenced (there being no claim of fraudulent
attempt to evade removal) is to be determined by the allegations of
the complaint or petition, and that, if the case is not then
removable, it cannot be made removable by any statement in the
petition for removal or in subsequent pleadings by the defendant.
Tennessee v. Union & Planters' Bank, 152 U.
S. 454;
Chappell v. Waterworth, 155 U.
S. 102;
Texas & Pacific Ry. Co. v. Cody,
166 U. S. 606;
Taylor v. Anderson, 234 U. S. 74.
It is also settled that a case, arising under the laws of the
United States, nonremovable on the complaint when commenced cannot
be converted into a removable one by evidence of the defendant or
by an order of the court upon any issue tried upon the merits, but
that such conversion can only be accomplished by the voluntary
amendment of his pleadings by the plaintiff, or, where the case is
not removable because of joinder of defendants, by the voluntary
dismissal or nonsuit by him of a party or of parties defendant.
Kansas City, etc., Ry. Co. v. Herman, 187 U. S.
63;
Alabama Great Southern Ry. Co. v. Thompson,
200 U. S. 206;
Lathrop, Shea & Henwood Co. v. Interior Construction
Co., 215 U. S. 246;
American Car & Foundry Co. v. Kettlehake, 236 U.
S. 311.
Page 246 U. S. 282
The obvious principle of these decisions is that, in the absence
of a fraudulent purpose to defeat removal, the plaintiff may, by
the allegations of his complaint, determine the status with respect
to removability of a case, arising under a law of the United
States, when it is commenced, and that this power to determine the
removability of his case continues with the plaintiff throughout
the litigation, so that whether such a case nonremovable when
commenced shall afterwards become removable depends not upon what
the defendant may allege or prove or what the court may, after
hearing upon the merits,
in invitum, order, but solely
upon the form which the plaintiff. by his voluntary action. shall
give to the pleadings in the case as it progresses towards a
conclusion.
The result of the application of this principle to the case at
bar is not doubtful.
The plaintiff did not at any time admit that he had failed to
prove the allegation that the deceased was employed in interstate
commerce when injured, and he did not amend his complaint, but, on
the contrary, he has contended at every stage of the case, and in
his brief in this Court still contends, that the allegation was
supported by the evidence. The first holding to the contrary was by
the state supreme court, and the most that can be said of that
decision is that the defendant prevailed in a matter of defense
which he had pleaded; but, as we have seen, this does not convert a
nonremovable case into a removable one in the absence of voluntary
action on the part of the plaintiff, and it therefore results that
the defendant did not at any time have the right to remove the case
to the federal court, which it claims was denied to it, and that
therefore, there being no substance in the claim of denial of
federal right, this Court is without jurisdiction to review the
decision of the Supreme Court of Montana, and the writ of error
must be
Dismissed.