North Carolina Public Service Co. v. Southern Power Co.
North Carolina Public Service Co. v. Southern Power Co.
Opinion of the Court
Tbe motion to remove tbis cause to tbe Federal Court is based upon tbe contention tbat tbis proceeding, while denominated a petition for a writ of mandamus, is in fact a “suit of a civil nature at common law or in equity,” of wbicb tbe Federal Court bas jurisdiction.
It seems to be well settled tbat a proceeding for a writ of mandamus in a State court is not a suit of a civil nature at law or in equity wbicb can be removed from tbe State to tbe Federal Courts. 18 R. C. L., see. 6. Tbis is tbe decision of tbe Supreme Court of tbe United States in Rosenbaum v. Bauer, 30 Law Ed., p. 744. Tbe question, then, to be considered is, Is tbis in fact a mandamus proceeding ?
Tbe record discloses tbat tbis is not an ordinary action returnable to term time in tbe manner prescribed by law for civil action. It seems to bave been brought by law in strict accordance with tbe provisions of tbe statute regulating proceedings in mandamus. Pell’s Eevisal, secs. 822-824.
An examination of tbe complaint discloses tbat tbe cause of action is one for tbe enforcement of wbicb mandamus bas been held to be tbe proper remedy. Briefly stated, tbe plaintiffs allege substantially tbat tbe defendant is under legal obligations to furnish them electric current as a public-service corporation engaged in furnishing electric current to tbe public.
Tbe reciprocal rights and duties, liabilities and allegations between tbe North Carolina Public Service Corporation and tbe Southern Power Company are set out in tbe opinion of tbis Court in 179 N. C., 19, and in tbe opinion of tbe Court upon a rehearing of tbe same case, 179 N. C., 30. It is not necessary to go into tbat matter now as tbe allegations of tbe petition, for writ of mandamus must be taken to be true so far as tbis matter for removal is concerned. Tbe substance of tbis petition is tbat tbe defendant is now furnishing plaintiff with electric current, but bas notified plaintiffs tbat it will cease to do so on and after 1 January, 1921. Plaintiffs aver tbat it is tbe legal duty of tbe defendant to continue to furnish tbe said current after 1 January, and upon such reasonable terms and rates as may be fixed by tbe Corporation Commission in case tbe parties fail to agree among themselves. Plaintiffs aver tbat tbis duty wbicb tbe defendant bas assumed, a public-service corporation under tbe laws of North Carolina, is a continuous duty, and that tbe defendant may be compelled to perform it by writ of mandamus-. Tbe prayer of tbe petition is as follows:
“Wherefore, plaintiffs pray for a writ of mandamus against tbe defendant power company to compel it to continue to furnish electric current and power to tbe public-service company through its substations at Greensboro and High Point, to operate tbe street car lines in both said cities, and for tbe use and benefit of tbe municipalities and tbe
It is well settled under the decisions of this Court that mandamus is a proper remedy to compel a public-service corporation to perform its duties for the benefit of the public. In Tel. Co. v. Tel. Co., 159 N. C., 17, the difference between a mandamus and a mandatory injunction is clearly stated as follows:
“In regard to the form of remedy available, where, as in this State, the same court is vested with both legal and equitable jurisdiction, there is very little difference in its practical results between proceedings in mandamus and by mandatory injunction, the former being permissible when the action is to enforce performance of duties existent for the benefit of the public, and the latter being confined usually to causes of an equitable nature and in the enforcement of rights which solely concern individuals. High on Injunctions (4 ed.), sec. 2. Owing to the public interests involved, in controversies of this character, it is generally held that mandamus may be properly resorted to, Godwin v. Tel. Co., supra; Commercial Union v. Tel. Co., supra; Mahan v. Tel. Co., 132 Md., 242; Yancy v. Tel. Co., 81 Ark., 486.”
In Walls v. Strickland, 174 N. C., 298, it is said by Justice Allen: “It was then held that the telephone companies serving the public must discharge their duties impartially and without discrimination, and that the right of mandamus issued by the courts was the proper remedy to enforce the performance of the duty.”
It is contended, however, by the defendant that a writ of mandamus can only issue against a public-service corporation to secure the performance of a duty which it has failed to perform and will not lie to compel the performance of a continuous duty. It is insisted that there has been no actual default, and that there will not be at best until the first of January, 1921, and that the question involved is at best a moot question-
¥e admit that the general rule is that mandamus will not ordinarily lie in anticipation of a supposed omission of duty, and that in this case the omission of duty will not occur until 1 January.
Referring to this precise question, after stating the general rule, it is said in 18 R. C. L., p. 132, sec. 36, that, “This, however, is a general rule merely, and while mandamus will not ordinarily be available in advance of the time when the duty is to be performed,' it is also recognized that extreme cases may well arise demanding the use of mandamus to control the performance of prospective duties.”
The defendant contends that while it has notified the city and the plaintiff that it owed it no duty to continue to furnish light and power, and would discontinue same on 1 January next, that still for the pur
“Neither do we see any good reason for saying that relief should not be afforded by mandamus because the duty to sprinkle is a continuous one. If the legal duty on the part of the appellant is clear, the relator should not be denied an appropriate remedy because the right sought to be enforced is not of a temporary nature. There can be no more objection to a court of law granting permanent relief by mandamus in an appropriate action than there is to a court of equity granting relief in a proper case by a mandatory injunction. That mandamus will lie to enforce the performance of a continuous legal duty has been decided at least by inference in this Court. S. v. Janesville St. R. Co., 87 Wis., 72. Such is the general current of authority elsewhere.” (Citing numerous authorities.) “The contention that the case presents only a moot question we do not take seriously.”
See, also, Morrison v. Wrightson, N. J., 22 L. R. A., p. 561. To the same effect is the decision of the Supreme Court of Colorado, 110 Pac., 197, in the case of Berkey v. Commissioners, citing City of Austin v. Cahill, 99 Tex., 172. This question was considered by the Supreme Court of Massachusetts in Attorney-General v. Boston, 123 Mass., 466. In that case the Court says: • “Applications for writs of mandamus being addressed to the sound judicial discretion of the court, the circumstances of each case must be considered in determining whether a writ of mandamus shall be granted; and the court will not grant the writ unless satisfied that it is necessary to do so in order to secure the execution of the laws. But when the person or corporation against whom the writ is demanded has clearly manifested a determination to disobey the laws, the court is not obliged to wait until the evil is done before issuing the writ.”
The case of Missouri P. & R. Co. v. Larabie Flour Mill Co., 53 U. S. Law Ed., p. 359, involved a mandamus proceeding before the Supreme Court of Kansas, compelling the railroad company to transfer cars from another railroad company without discriminating in favor of other
“While no one can be compelled to engage in the business of a common carrier, yet when he does so certain duties are imposed which can be enforced by mandamus or other suitable remedy. The Missouri Pacific engaged in the business of transferring cars from the Sante Ee track to industries located at Stafford, and continued to do so for all jiarties except the mill company. So long as it engaged in such transfer it was bound to treat all industries at Stafford alike, and could not refuse to do for one that which it was doing for others. No legislative enactment, no special mandate from any commission or advisory board was necessary, for the duty arose from the fact that it was a common carrier. This was at the foundation of the law of common carriers. Whenever one engages in that business the obligation of equal services to all arises, and that obligation, irrespective of legislative action or special mandate, can be enforced by the courts. Indeed, all of these questions are disposed of by one established proposition, and that is, that a party engaging in the'business of a common carrier is bound to treat all shippers alike, and can be compelled to do so by mandamus or other proper writ.”
From a careful examination of the authorities, and of this Court’s rulings in the past, we are satisfied that the defendant power company’s contention that this jtroceeding should be construed to be a mandatory injunction and not a mandamus is untenable. The uniform procedure and practice of our courts has recognized the writ of mandamus as the proper and appropriate remedy in actions of this character, and it makes no difference that the duty which defendants owe the plaintiff is being denied today or unmistakably proposed to be denied tomorrow. Aside from the adjudicated cases and the procedure of our courts the defendant, by its letter of 8 January, 1920, to-the plaintiff public-service company precludes it from controverting the fact that it has already denied and withdrawn any and all services to the plaintiffs as a public-service corporation. It clearly asserts that the current which it is now furnishing may be cut off at any time, and that it is only furnished as a matter of .accommodation, and not in the performance of a public duty.
Thus it clearly appears that the defendant power company, while designating 1 January next as the time at which it will sever all connections and service to the plaintiffs, it has in fact asserted its present withdrawal from all obligations and duties owned as a public-service company to the plaintiff.
The current which is now being furnished is not furnished as a matter of right, but as a matter of accommodation. This we hold to be not only a denial but a present withdrawal of its public-service obligations to the plaintiff, and that this mandamus proceeding is properly instituted to obtain and enforce plaintiff’s rights.
Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting: Tbis is an appeal by tbe defendant from tbe order of bis Honor, Judge Ray, refusing to remove tbis case to tbe United States District Court for tbe "Western District of North Carolina. His Honor found, as stated in tbe order, tbat tbe petition and bond for removal were in due form and in every respect legally sufficient, and tbat due notice of tbe petition and bond bad been given tbe plaintiffs. Tbe sole ground upon wbicb bis Honor refused to grant tbe petition is as stated in tbe order, “Tbat tbe complaint filed herein by tbe plaintiffs states a case in wbicb a writ of mandamus may properly issue and tbe United States District Court has therefore no original jurisdiction of such a case, and could not entertain jurisdiction of tbe action as set forth in tbe complaint by its removal from tbe State court, and tbat, therefore, tbis court has jurisdiction.”
Tbe action of tbe plaintiffs against tbe defendant is based upon two letters, each dated 8 January, 1920, from tbe defendant to tbe plaintiff, North Carolina Public Service Company,, wbicb appear on pages 24 and 27 of tbe record, and in wbicb tbe defendant notified tbe plaintiff, North Carolina Public Service Company, tbat after 1 January, 1921, it would discontinue furnishing electricity to said North Carolina Public Service Company, for resale at Greensboro and High Point, offering in tbe meantime to let tbe public-service company have electricity at cost, tbe twelve months notice being given in order to afford tbe public-service company ample opportunity to equip itself in order to provide its own supply of electricity.
Tbe complaint expressly alleges tbat tbe defendant is now discharging its public duty, as tbe same is alleged by tbe plaintiffs to exist, by selling current to tbe public-service company at wholesale for tbe benefit of said municipalities and their citizens.
Tbe object and a purpose of tbe action is, as stated in the complaint, to prevent tbe defendant from cutting off and discontinuing service to tbe public-service company at Greensboro and High Point, after 1 January, 1921'; to prevent tbe defendant from leaving both cities in darkness, and to prevent tbe stopping of tbe street car service, and to protect tbe valuable property rights wbicb tbe two cities bold under existing contracts, wbicb they now have with their coplaintiff for lighting their streets and other places, and in every way possible to protect tbe citizens against loss and damages from such an action.
Tbe grounds upon wbicb tbe relief sought is claimed is as stated in tbe complaint, tbat if tbe defendant power company is permitted to cut off its current and discontinue furnishing tbe same to tbe public-service company for tbe operation of its street cars and for lighting tbe streets of Greensboro and High Point untold and irreparable damage will result to tbe plaintiffs and tbe inhabitants 'of said cities, and paraly
The plaintiffs contend that this is a proceeding for a writ of mandamus, and that, the United States District Court having no original jurisdiction of a proceedings for a writ of mandamus, the case cannot be removed to that Court; and, as will appear from his Honor’s order, it was upon this ground alone that his Honor refused to remove the case to the United States District Court.
It is conceded by the defendant that the United States District Court has. no original jurisdiction of a proceeding for a writ of mandamus, and if this be such. a proceeding, and nothing else, the order refusing to remove the case was properly made, and this appeal must fail.
Bath County v. Amy, 13 Wall., 244; 20 L. Ed., 539, is probably the leading ease holding that the Federal Courts have no original jurisdiction of a proceeding for a writ of mandamus. The reason of the ruling as there stated by Mr. Justice Strong was, that mandamus does not fairly come within the words of the Judiciary Act of 1789 (1 Stat. at Large, 73), conferring jurisdiction upon the Federal Court, which are, “All suits of a civil nature at common law, or in equity,” etc., because it was not at common law a private remedy to enforce simple common-law rights between individuals, but was a high prerogative writ issuing in the King’s name only from the Court of King’s Bench, requiring the performance of some act or duty which it had previously determined to be consonant with right and justice. It is admitted that the power to issue such writs was given by sec. 14, with the restriction that they should be necessary to the exercise of the jurisdiction already given. If the Federal Courts have jurisdiction to issue the writ of mandamus, and we treat this case as an application for the same, it would be removable without a doubt, and this would necessarily follow from the plaintiff’s own contention, but they have no such jurisdiction (Rosenbaum v. Bauer, 120 U. S., 450), and, if they had, the writ could not issue in a case like this one, as we will see hereafter, when there is no present or existing failure by defendant to perform its duty to the public, or to the plaintiffs.
The action of the plaintiffs is not a proceeding for a writ of mandamus but, on the contrary, is a suit for a mandatory injunction to compel the defendant to continue to furnish electricity to the plaintiffs, for the purpose stated in the complaint, and being such a suit, the United States District Court clearly has jurisdiction of it, and his Honor erred in refusing to grant the petition to remove.
In Tapping on Handamus, marginal page 10, it is said: “A mandamus will not be granted in anticipation of a defect of duty or error of conduct.”
In Spelling on Injunctions and Other Extraordinary Eemedies, sec. 1385: "Mandamus cannot be given effect prospectively. A relator is not entitled to tbe writ unless be can show a legal duty then due at tbe bands of tbe respondent; and until tbe time arrives when tbe duty should be performed, no threats or predetermination not to perform 'it can take tbe place of such default. Tbe law does not contemplate such a degree of diligence as tbe performance of a duty not yet due. Tbe general rule is tbat tbe writ will not be granted in anticipation of a supposed omission of duty, however strong tbe presumption may be tbat tbe person sought to be coerced by tbe writ will refuse performance at tbe proper time. An important reason for refusing tbe writ in such cases is tbat, until tbe duty is due, no practical question can be presented to tbe court, but simply a supposed case.” In Ex parte Cutting, 94 U. S., p. 14, Chief Justice Waite said: “Tbe office of a mandamus is to compel tbe performance of a plain and positive duty. It is issued upon tbe application of one who has a clear right to demand such performance, and who has no other adequate remedy. It is never granted in anticipation of an omission of duty, but only after actual default.”
In Board of Liquidation v. McComb, 92 U. S., 531, Mr. Justice Bradley very clearly stated tbe distinction between a mandamus and an injunction, as follows: “It has been well settled tbat when an official duty, requiring no exercise of discretion, is to be performed, and performance is refused, any person who will sustain personal injury by such refusal may have a mandamus to compel its performance; and' when such a duty is threatened to be violated by some positive official act, any person who will sustain personal injury thereby for which
In the case cited the action was brought in the Circuit Court of the United States for a perpetual injunction to restrain the Board of Liquidation of the State of Louisiana from using the bonds, known as consolidated bonds' of the State, for the liquidation of certain debts claimed to be due from the State to the Louisiana Levee Company, or from using any other State bonds in payment of said pretended debt, and the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court over the action was sustained. In Lyon v. Comrs., 120 N. C., 243, it is said: "Mandamus is a proceeding to compel a defendant to perform a duty which is owing to the plaintiff, and can be maintained only on the ground that the relator has a present clear, legal right to the thing claimed, and that it is a duty of the defendants to render it to him. Brown v. Turner, 70 N. C., 93.”
In Scott v. Singleton, 171 Ky., 117; 188 S. W., 302, the Court held: “Mandatory injunction is the.only available and proper remedy for requiring the county clerk to prepare for a municipal primary election, the duty not devolving on him under Ky. St., sec. 3235-c, subsec. 6, till ten days before the election, mandamus not being grantable in anticipation of an omission of duty, but only after actual default.” The Court then advances conclusive reasons why the contention of the defendant there, and the plaintiff here, should not prevail.
In Board of Education v. Hunter, Treasurer, 87 N. W., p. 485, the proceeding was a mandarrias to compel the city treasurer to set aside school taxes immediately after paying the city tax and before setting aside any sums for other purposes. In denying the relief prayed, because there had been no actual default on the part of defendant, the Supreme Court of Wisconsin, through Mr. Justice Winslow, said: “The general principle is frequently- stated that mandamus will not lie to compel performance of an act by a public officer unless the act be due, that is actually due from the officer at the time of the application. Until the time arrives when the duty should be performed, there is no default of duty; and mere threats not to perform the duty will not take the place of default. The writ is not granted to take effect prospectively. Spell. Extr. Remedies, sec. 1385; High, Extra. Rem. (3 ed.), secs. 12, 36; Tapp., Mand., p. 10; Wood Mand. (2 ed.), p. 51; 14 Am. and Eng. Law (1 ed.), p. 105.”
This so clearly and emphatically conforms to what seems to be the universal rule, as we -have stated it, that it would add nothing to the strength of our position should we continue to quote from many other decisions of Federal and State Courts. We will therefore content ourselves with merely citing some of the authorities upon this feature of the
We now proceed, in the full development of the argument, to consider as nest in order the proposition that the courts of equity have jurisdiction to enforce performance of the duties of public-service corporations, by means of mandatory injunctions, and where there has been no actual default, but only a threatened omission of duty, mandatory injunction is the only available remedy and, under this head of equity jurisdiction, the Federal Courts of equity have repeatedly exercised jurisdiction of suits of the character here presented. The Federal Judicial Code of 1911, see. 24, confers jurisdiction upon the District Courts, as follows: “The District Courts shall have original jurisdiction ... of all
In Ex parte Lennon, 166 U. S., 549; 41 L. Ed., 1110, suit was brought by the Toledo, etc., Railway Company against the Ann Arbor Central Railroad Company, and other companies, to enjoin the defendants from discontinuing the interchange of traffic and freight with the plaintiff railway company, as the same had theretofore been interchanged, the defendant companies having threatened to discontinue such interchanging. Upon the question of jurisdiction, the case is on all fours with the case presented upon this appeal. The case cited was to prevent the discontinuance of the interchange of freight and traffic. The case at bar is to prevent the discontinuance of the interchange of electricity.
The question of the original jurisdiction of the Circuit Court over the ease was presented to the Supreme Court of the United States upon a petition to relieve Lennon from custody for contempt in disobeying the injunction which the Circuit Court had granted. In sustaining the original jurisdiction of the Circuit Court, the Supreme Court of the United States said: “There could be no doubt of the power of the Court to grant this injunction, which bore solely upon the relations of the railway companies to each other. It was alleged in the bill to have been a part of the regular business of the defendant roads to interchange traffic with the Ann Arbor road, and the injunction was sought to prevent an arbitrary discontinuance of this custom. Perhaps, to a certain extent, the injunction may be termed mandatory, although its object was to continue the existing state of things, and to prevent an arbitrary breaking off of the current business connections between the roads. But
Hines v. Heneghan (C. C. A., 4th Circuit), recently decided by tbe Circuit Court of Appeals of this circuit, and reported in tbe advance sheets of tbe Federal Keporter for 9 September, 1920, wbicb has become available since tbe decision of Judge Eay, is also upon tbe question of jurisdiction, closely analogous to tbe case at bar. Tbe nature of tbe case will appear from tbe following quotation from Judge Pritchard’s opinion: “This suit was instituted in tbe District Court of tbe United States for tbe Northern District of West Virginia. It arose upon a bill in equity by Henegan & Hanlon, appellees, to restrain tbe threatened action of Walker D. Hines, Director General of Eailroads, and tbe Baltimore & Ohio Eailroad Company, to discontinue service to and from the siding at tbe plant of Henegan & Hanlon at Cornwallis, West Virginia.” Tbe Court held that it clearly bad jurisdiction of tbe suit, and tbe injunction sought was granted, subject to certain limitations.
In Coe v. L. & N. Railroad Co., 3 Federal Reporter, p. 775, tbe defendant railroad company bad notified tbe complairiant that after a' date named it would discontinue tbe delivery of livestock at tbe complainant’s stockyard in Nashville, and tbe suit was a bill in equity by complainant to restrain this threatened action on tbe part of tbe defendant. Tbe jurisdiction'of tbe Court to grant tbe injunction was sustained and tbe opinion of tbe Court is in part as follows: But defendant, protesting that tbe proposed discrimination in favor of tbe Union Stockyard Company, if executed, constitutes no wrong of wbicb complainants ought justly to complain, contends: First, that complainants, even supposing tbe law to be otherwise, have an adequate remedy at law, and therefore .cannot have any relief from a court of chancery; and second, that if a chancery court may entertain jurisdiction, no relief in tbe nature of a mandatory order to compel defendant to continue accommodations to tbe complainants ought to be made until tbe final bearing. If such is tbe law it must be so administered. But we do not concur in this interpretation of tbe adjudications. Those cited in argument are not, we think, applicable to tbe facts of this case. It was there said, in tbe opinion of tbe Court, that there was no adequate remedy at law, and to avoid a multiplicity of suits for damage, wbicb might be ruinous to tbe plaintiff, tbe Federal Court, on its equity side, would proceed by mandatory injunction to award tbe proper relief. It also fully
The "Express cases ,” 117 U. S., p. 1; 29 L. Ed., 791, which is probably tbe most famous litigation of tbe character presented by this action, arose upon a bill in equity by tbe express companies against tbe railroad companies, filed in tbe Federal Court, to restrain tbe railroad companies from discontinuing service to tbe express companies. Chief Justice Waite’s opinion opens with a description of tbe case, as follows: “These suits present substantially tbe same questions, and may be considered together. They were each brought by an express company against .a railway company to restrain tbe railway company from interfering with or disturbing in any manner tbe facilities theretofore afforded tbe express company for doing its business on tbe railway of tbe railway company.” Tbe Court disapproved tbe bills on their merits (or rather their demerits), but never for a moment questioned tbe jurisdiction of tbe Court to grant tbe relief prayed, if it could be founded on any recognized equity. It ruled that without a statute, or a contract to that effect, tbe express companies could not demand of tbe railroad companies tbe facilities for carrying their packages on tbe latter’s cars. Neither tbe Chief Justice nor tbe dissenting Justices (Miller and Field) ever suggested a want of jurisdiction, and tbe Chief Justice, at page 27, virtually conceded tbe same.
If, as contended, tbe real nature of this action is equitable, i. e., one for mandatory injunction instead of a proceeding for a writ of mam damus, as tbe distinction was recognized at common law, in tbe light of which tbe terms of the acts of Congress conferring jurisdiction upon tbe Federal Courts must be construed, then even conceding that tbe State Court might, under tbe State practice, disregard tbe distinction between a mandamus and a mandatory injunction and award tbe plaintiffs tbe relief sought in an action in tbe form of, or described as mandamus, tbe Federal Court cannot, for this reason or upon this ground, be deprived of jurisdiction of this action, if in fact jurisdiction exists under tbe acts
In Harrison v. St. Louis & S. F. R. Co., 232 U. S., 318, Chief Justice White said: “It may not be doubted that the judicial power of the United States, as created by the Constitution and provided for by Congress pursuant to its constitutional authority, is a power wholly independent of State action, and which therefore the several States may not by any exertion of authority in any form, directly or indirectly, destroy, abridge, limit, or render inefficacious. The doctrine is so elementary as to require no citation .of authority to sustain it.” But nevertheless he cites many cases decided in the United States Supreme Court.
The case which seems to be the most destructive of the plaintiffs’ contention, in this part of the discussion, is Be the Jarnecke Ditch, 69 Fed. Rep., 161, it being manifestly in line with all the cases in the highest Federal Court, The Court said there: “But the Legislature of the State cannot, by making special provisions for the trial of particular controversies,' nor by declaring such controversies to be special proceedings and not civil suits at law or in equity, deprive the Federal Courts of jurisdiction, nor prevent a removal. A State Legislature, if the Constitution of the State does not forbid it, may provide for the trial of airy cause in some special way unknown to the methods of procedure at law or in equity. But, whatever the method of procedure, it would be none the less a trial if conducted by a tribunal having power to determine
We need hardly consider the question as to the amount in controversy being sufficient to authorize the removal of the case to the United States District Court. This was not contested, nor was the sufficiency of the bond, the only matter in controversy being whether the Federal Court had jurisdiction in actions of mandamus, and the question as to the amount in controversy cannot be raised in the State Court, but belongs solely to the Federal Ooui;t. His Honor did not decline to remove the case upon the ground that the necessary jurisdictional amount was not involved, but, as stated in the order, solely upon the ground that in a proceeding for a mandamus the Federal Court has no original jurisdiction of the case. The petition for removal expressly alleges that the amount in controversy exceeds, exclusive of interest and cost, the sum of three thousand dollars ($3,000).- If the plaintiffs desire to controvert this allegation, they can of course do so only in the Federal Court, upon a motion to remand. Hyder v. R. R., 167 N. C., 587; C. & C. Railroad Co. v. McCabe, 213 U. S., 207 (53 L. Ed., 765).
There can be no doubt that the necessary jurisdictional amount is involved in this action. Montgomery’s Manual of Federal Procedure (2 ed., sec. 174); Bitterman v. L. & N. Railroad Co., 207 U. S., 204; Gleenwood L. & W. Co. v. Mutual L. H. & P. Co., 239 U. S., 121. It being-admitted that this case has been duly docketed in the Federal Court, and is now pending for trial in that Court, comity between the Federal and State Courts strongly suggests that this Court reverse the order made by his Honor, Judge Eay, refusing to remove the case to the Federal Court, and leave the question of jurisdiction here presented to be determined by the Federal Court upon a motion to remand the case to the State Court, especially since the only question presented is the Federal question, as to whether the Federal Court has jurisdiction of this action, which is a question primarily and peculiarly proper to be
In Hollifield v. Tel. Co., 172 N. C., 720, the Court said: “We have uniformly decided in this Court that, when a verified petition contains facts sufficient under the law to entitle the applicant to a removal is filed, and is accompanied by a proper bond, the jurisdiction of the State Court is at an end, and that the issues of fact, if properly raised by the petition and papers in the cause, are to be tried and determined by the Federal Court and not by the State Court in which the action was brought. Herrick v. R. R., 158 N. C., 307; Lloyd v. R. R., 162 N. C., 485; R. R. v. McCabe, 213 U. S., 207; Wecker v. National Enameling Co., 204 U. S., 176.” In Hyder v. R. R., 167 N. C., 587, the Court said: “The fact that the plaintiff alleged in his complaint that the Southern Railway Company wab a domestic corporation, and also alleged the facts out of which he contends such corporate existence arose, makes this a different case from th,e Hurst case or the Ice and Coal Co. case above referred to; but even if that were not true, and if plaintiff had alleged directly, without stating the facts, that the Southern Railway Company was a domestic corporation and a citizen and resident of the State of North Carolina, when the defendant appeared, filed its petition to remove, and alleged that it was a citizen and resident of the State of Virginia, then a question arose which was determinable only by the United States Court. Herrick v. R. R., 158 N. C., 310, and also the several cases cited in Hurst v. R. R., 162 N. C., 368.” Justice Allen
We bave discussed tbis case somewhat at length because of tbe great importance of tbe question at issue between tbe parties. We bave made our citations to tbe decisions of tbe Federal Court of last resort, which must finally decide tbe matter, and to which we owe submission, under tbe Constitution of tbe United States, and under our own. Art I, sec. 5. When an application of removal of bis case to tbe proper Federal Court complies with tbe formalities required by tbe act of Congress, be is entitled to bave it transferred to tbat Court for trial, and tbe jurisdiction of tbe State Court, when it is pending thereunder, immediately ceases, and it has no right to proceed further in it unless for tbe purpose of granting tbe main relief or any ancillary remedy, as it has lost entirely all jurisdiction of it. When tbe highest Federal Court has decided similar cases and beld tbat they are within tbe Federal jurisdiction, tbe State Court should tbe more readily and agreeably yield its possession of, tbe case. We bave shown tbat cases precisely similar, and nearly tbe same in legal contemplation, bave been so decided. It was, therefore, tbe duty of tbe court below to remove tbe case and give up its control over it.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- NORTH CAROLINA PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY, CITY OF GREENSBORO, and CITY OF HIGH POINT v. SOUTHERN POWER COMPANY
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- 3 cases
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