1. A railroad company engaged in interstate commerce cannot be
subjected to an action in a state court entailing a burden upon or
an obstruction of its interstate commerce, brought under the
Federal Employers' Liability Act without its consent in a state
where the cause of action did not arise and where the company has
no railroad and where it has not been admitted to do business and
transacts none other than the soliciting of freight for
transportation in interstate commerce over its lines in other
states. P.
278 U. S.
494.
2. The mere fact that the plaintiff acquired a residence in the
suit after the cause of action arose and before commencing the
action does not take the case out of this rule. P.
278 U. S.
495.
Page 278 U. S. 493
3. The railroad company cannot be constrained to try such an
action by a rule of local practice making its motion to quash the
summons equivalent to a general appearance. P.
278 U. S.
495.
4. Filing a petition to remove from state to federal court is
not a general appearance.
Id.
Reversed.
Certiorari, 277 U.S. 581, to a judgment of the Supreme Court of
Missouri denying an application of the Railroad Company praying for
a writ of prohibition to enjoin the judges of a lower court from
trying an action against the Company brought under the Federal
Employers' Liability Act.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Thomas Doyle, a switchman employed by the Michigan Central
Railroad, was killed in Michigan in the performance of his duties.
He was then a resident of Lansing in that state, and there his wife
Augusta lived with him until his death. Shortly after, she removed
to Missouri, was appointed administratrix of his estate at St.
Louis, and, as such, brought in the circuit court of that city an
action for damages against the railroad under the Federal Safety
Appliance Act and the Federal Employers' Liability Act . The
railroad is a Michigan corporation. No part of its line runs into
Missouri. It has not consented to be sued there, has never been
admitted to do business there, and has never done any business
there, except soliciting freight for transportation in interstate
commerce over its lines in other states. For this limited purpose,
it
Page 278 U. S. 494
maintains an office at St. Louis. Upon its agent in charge of
that office, the sheriff made service of the summons.
The railroad, appearing specially, filed a petition for removal
of the cause to the federal court. This the state court denied.
Thereupon the railroad filed a transcript of the record in the
federal court and moved there to quash the summons. Upon objection
of the administratrix, that court declined to pass on the motion,
and remanded the case to the state court. It did so apparently on
the ground that the suit was one under the Federal Employers'
Liability Act. The railroad, again appearing specially, pressed in
the state court the motion to quash. It was denied on the authority
of
State ex rel. Texas Portland Cement Co. v. Sale, 232
Mo. 166, and
Davis v. Jacksonville Southeastern Line, 126
Mo. 69, which hold that service upon a soliciting freight agent
confers jurisdiction and that a petition to remove to the federal
court is equivalent to a general appearance. After denial of the
motion to quash the summons, this application for a writ of
prohibition was filed by the railroad, in the highest court of the
state, in accordance with what appears to be the appropriate local
practice. It prays that the judges of the circuit court be enjoined
from acting in the suit commenced by Mrs. Doyle. The application
for the writ of prohibition was denied without an opinion. That
judgment is final within the meaning of § 237(a) of the
Judicial Code.
Missouri ex rel. St. Louis, Brownsville &
Mexico Ry. Co. v. Taylor, 266 U. S. 200.
This Court granted a writ of certiorari. 277 U.S. 581.
The railroad claims that it was not subject to suit in Missouri,
among other reasons, because to maintain it would violate the
commerce clause. In order to show that trial of the action for
damages in Missouri would entail a heavy burden upon, and
unreasonably obstruct, interstate commerce, it set forth facts
substantially identical with those held sufficient for that purpose
in
Davis v.
Farmers'
Page 278 U. S. 495
Cooperative Co., 262 U. S. 312, and
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. Wells,
265 U. S. 101.
From those cases, that here involved differs only in this: there,
the plaintiff was a nonresident. Here, the plaintiff had become a
resident in Missouri after the injury complained of, but before
instituting the action. For aught that appears, her removal to St.
Louis shortly after the accident was solely for the purpose of
bringing the suit, and because she was advised that her chances of
recovery would be better there than they would be in Michigan. The
mere fact that she had acquired a residence within Missouri before
commencing the action does not make reasonable the imposition upon
interstate commerce of the heavy burden which would be entailed in
trying the cause in a state remote from that in which the accident
occurred and in which both parties resided at the time.
The case is unlike others in which the jurisdiction was
sustained against a nonresident railroad. In
Missouri ex rel.
St. Louis, Brownsville & Mexico Ry. Co. v. Taylor,
266 U. S. 200, it
appeared that the shipment out of which the cause of action arose
was of goods deliverable in Missouri, and also that the negligent
acts complained of may have occurred within the state. In
Hoffman v. Missouri ex rel. Foraker, 274 U. S.
21, the railroad was organized under the laws of the
state, and operated a part of its line in the county in which the
action was brought.
The contention that filing the petition for removal to the
federal court was equivalent to the entry of a general appearance
is obviously unsound.
General Investment Co. v. Lake Shore Ry.
Co., 260 U. S. 261,
260 U. S.
268-269;
Hassler v. Shaw, 271 U.
S. 195. There is also a suggestion that the motion to
quash the summons made by the railroad in the state court after the
remand operated, under the Missouri practice, as a general
appearance,
York v. Texas, 137 U. S.
15, and that this precluded it from objecting to a trial
of the cause within that state. We have no occasion
Page 278 U. S. 496
to inquire into the local practice. The constitutional claim
sustained in
Davis v. Farmers' Cooperative Co.,
262 U. S. 312, was
not that under the Fourteenth Amendment, as in
Rosenberg Bros.
& Co. v. Curtis Brown Co., 260 U.
S. 516. It was assumed that the carrier had been found
within the state. The judgment was reversed on the ground that to
compel it to try the cause there would burden interstate commerce,
and hence would violate the commerce clause. No local rule of
practice can prevent the carrier from laying the appropriate
foundation for the enforcement of its constitutional right by
making a seasonable motion.
Compare Sioux Remedy Co. v.
Cope, 235 U. S. 197;
Yazzo & Mississippi Valley R. Co. v. Mullins,
249 U. S. 531;
Davis v. Wechsler, 263 U. S. 22,
263 U. S.
24.
Reversed.