Court Opinion

ID: 6436083
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:12:36.517233+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:23.699745
License: Public Domain

Rugg, C. J.
The right of the defendant to remove this action to the District Court of the United States is presented by this report. No point is raised as to the form of the petition for removal, sufficiency of the bond, removability of the cause, or diversity of citizenship of the parties. The single question is whether petition for removal was filed within the time prescribed by the federal statutes.
On a petition for removal, all controverted questions of fact must be tried in the federal court on a motion to remand. Whether a cause for removal is made out as matter of law on the face of the record is a question which the State court must consider and adjudicate subject to review by the Supreme Court of the United States. Stone v. Sargent, 129 Mass. 503, 508. Duff v. Hildreth, 183 Mass. 440, 442. Long v. Quinn Brothers, Inc. 215 Mass. 85, 87. Munnss v. American Agricultural Chemical Co. 216 Mass. 423, 425. Dunbar v. Rosenbloom, 230 Mass. 176. Powers v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway, 169 U. S. 92, 101. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway v. Cockrell, 232 U. S. 146, 152, 154. Commissioners *28of Road Improvement v. St. Louis Southwestern Railway, 257 U. S. 547, 557, 558.
There is no disputed question of fact on this record. The issue to be decided is purely one of law. It is within the jurisdiction and therefore it is the duty of the State court to decide that question of law.
The material facts are that this is an action of contract by plaintiffs resident within this Commonwealth begun by writ with damages laid at $150,000, dated July 22, 1921, and returnable into our Superior Court on the first Monday of September, 1921. The writ commanded the attachment of goods or estate “that were of Edward F. Searles, deceased, late of Methuen in the County of Essex and Commonwealth aforesaid and which are now in the possession ” of Arthur T. Walker of the City, County and State of New York, “as he is executor under the will of the said Edward F. Searles,” and that the said defendant be summoned to appear. The terms of the summons and of the return of the officer, while not exactly following the writ, need not be recited. Service was made upon a resident agent of the defendant appointed as required by G. L. c. 195, § 8. The writ was seasonably entered in court. The plaintiffs’ declaration alleged that they were attorneys at law in partnership, and that the defendant was the duly appointed executor of the will of Searles, who left a large estate. The declaration was in two counts, the first alleging that the plaintiffs were retained by the defendant after the death of the testator to perform services in connection with a contest of his will, and the second alleging that they were retained by the defendant to secure an abatement of taxes assessed against the estate of the testator; that in their employment in respect to both matters they had rendered valuable services, wherefore the defendant owed them. The defendant as executor filed a general denial on September 20, 1921, which was within the time allowed by law. The effect of filing the answer was a general appearance by the defendant. The parties thus were at issue. In February, 1922, before the case came on for trial, the plaintiffs filed a motion to strike out from their writ the words heretofore quoted and italicized. That amendment was allowed. The effect of the allowance of the amendment was to substitute Walker as an individual in place of Walker as executor of the will of Searles as the defendant.
*29The allowance of the amendment, assuming that it brought in an entirely new party defendant in place of the one first named, was within the power of the court provided it was found by the court, as it must have been in order to allow the amendment, G. L. c. 231, § 138, Regan v. Keyes, 204 Mass. 294, 305, that its purpose was to enable the plaintiffs to sustain the action for the cause for which it was intended to be brought. G. L. c. 231, § 51. Under our liberal practice as to amendments that is too well settled now to admit of discussion. Hutchinson v. Tucker, 124 Mass. 240. McLaughlin v. West End Street Railway, 186 Mass. 150. Genga v. Director General of Railroads, 243 Mass. 101, and cases there collected.
The removal of an action to the federal courts is controlled by the Constitution and laws of the United States. Art. 3, § 2, of U. S. Constitution. The Judicial Code, §§ 28, 29, Act of Congress of March 3, 1911, c. 231. 36 U. S. Sts. at Large, 1094, 1095. No contention is made that the present action is not of a nature removable to the United States District Court under § 28 of the Judicial Code on the ground of diversity of citizenship. The defendant is a non-resident of this Commonwealth and the controversy raised is wholly between citizens of different States and of the requisite jurisdictional amount. The defendant being a non-resident of this Commonwealth, and the plaintiffs and the defendant being citizens of different States, the defendant, if he seasonably availed himself of his rights, might have removed the action to the federal court. The contention is that the application for removal was not made “ at the time, or any time before the defendant is required by the laws of the State or the rule of the State court in which such suit is brought to answer or plead to the declaration . . . ,” as required by § 29 of the Judicial Code.
Manifestly the defendant did not act betimes to secure the removal of the action against him as executor. He does not so contend.
The defendant contends that by the amendment to the writ he was brought into court for the first time individually as a party defendant and as the sole party defendant, and that therefore he was then for the first time entitled as an individual to remove the action. If he was then entitled to a removal, his petition for re*30moval indubitably was filed within the time required by § 29 of the Judicial Code. This presents the single question of law to be decided.
The writ is the foundation of the action. That is the process by which the defendant is brought into court. It and it alone describes the defendant. Resort must be had to the writ to ascertain the parties. Confessedly the original writ was in form proper in an action against the estate of the testator. R. L. c. 172, § 5, now G. L. c. 230, § 6. Yarrington v. Robinson, 141 Mass. 450. Jenkins v. Wood, 140 Mass. 66. It was not in proper form to bring to court Walker as an individual.
The declaration was not amended at any time, but stands now as originally filed. It alleged only individual liability of Walker, for the reason that the alleged promise of the defendant to pay the plaintiffs for their services as therein set forth bound him personally alone and not the estate of the testator. Sumner v. Williams, 8 Mass. 162. Kingman v. Soule, 132 Mass. 285. Tuttle v. First National Bank of Greenfield, 187 Mass. 533. Rosenthal v. Schwartz, 214 Mass. 371. As the record stood up to the time the amendment to the writ was allowed, the writ and not the declaration controlled the record and determined who were the parties to the action. Bean v. Green, 4 Cush. 279. By the amendment the writ was made to conform to the declaration. The dominant document of the record thus was changed. After the amendment to the writ was allowed, the writ was in proper form to bring in the defendant Walker as an individual alone, divested completely of all capacity as executor. Manning v. Osgood, 151 Mass. 148.
The plaintiffs concede that the defendant as executor, when summoned into court by the writ on the first Monday of September, 1921, might seasonably have exercised his right of removal to the federal court. Chappedelaine v. Dechenaux, 4 Cranch, 306, 308. Childress v. Emory, 8 Wheat. 642, 669. Rice v. Houston, 13 Wall. 66. Amory v. Amory, 95 U. S. 186.
The amendment to the writ allowed in February, 1922, made Walker the individual in place of Walker the executor a party -defendant. When the amendment to the writ was allowed, making Walker the defendant in his own proper person instead of the defendant in his fiduciary office of executor of the Searles will, he became defendant in a different capacity with altered rights and *31liabilities to those theretofore existing. The two named defendants were not in truth the same person. Although bearing the same name, he was in fact a different person in law when sued in one capacity from the person sued in the other capacity. There are numerous instances where the distinction between the same person suing or being sued in different capacities is recognized and applied. Limitations, burdens, restrictions and rights attaching to him in one capacity fall away from him when in court in the other capacity. For example, merger by judgment, Frost v. Thompson, 219 Mass. 360, 368, and res judicata, Troxell v. Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad, 227 U. S. 434, 443, are doctrines held not to be applicable to the same person suing or sued in different capacities. Probably it would not be contended that a corporation sole, suing or being sued in his corporate capacity, was the same person in law as the individual suing or being sued in his private capacity. This subject was examined at length with a review of numerous authorities in McCarthy v. William H. Wood Lumber Co. 219 Mass. 566. It there was held that a judgment against the plaintiff, suing in his capacity as administrator for personal injuries received by his intestate, was no bar to a second suit against the same defendant by the same person suing as plaintiff as administrator of the same intestate to recover compensation for death flowing from the same injury as did the cause of action in the earlier action. The principle there established and the authorities there reviewed are decisive of the point here raised. It is not necessary to go over the ground again. That principle is that a party to a cause of action in his capacity as executor or administrator is a different person in law from the same individual when party to a cause of action in his private capacity. His identity is not the same. The different capacities create a, diversity of personality with separate legal qualities. Wall v. Massachusetts Northeastern Street Railway, 229 Mass. 506. Eldridge v. Barton, 232 Mass. 183, 186. Noyes v. Noyes, 233 Mass. 55, 62. Leach v. Leach, 238 Mass. 100, 103.
The statement in Houston & Texas Central Railway v. Shirley, 111 U. S. 358, at page 361, that it was decided “in Cable v. Ellis, 110 U. S. 389, that a substituted party comes into a suit subject to all the disabilities of him whose place he takes, so far as the right of removal is concerned,” was made with reference to privies and *32it seems to us was not intended to apply to one in truth a stranger both in form and substance to the original action brought into it as a substituted party under an exceedingly liberal statute as to amendments. The cases of Wichita National Bank v. Smith, 19 C. C. A. 42; 72 Fed. Rep. 568, and Speckert v. German National Bank, 38 C. C. A. 682; 98 Fed. Rep. 151, Grand Trunk Railway v. Twitchell, 59 Fed. Rep. 727; 8 C. C. A. 237, and similar cases appear to us to stand on the same footing as the Shirley case.
Walker in his individual capacity is not brought into this action as defendant in the same right or for the same interest as that for which as executor of the Searles will he was made party defendant. He does not come in as an individual by succession or by substitution to official relations. As an individual he is not a privy in estate, in blood, in representation or in law with himself as executor. He does not individually occupy mutual or successive relationship to the same rights of property with the executor of the Searles will. Old Dominion Copper Mining & Smelting Co. v. Bigelow, 203 Mass. 159, 217, 218. The bringing of Walker as an individual defendant into the action by way of substitution was not ancillary nor incidental to the prosecution of the original cause of action. It was in essence an independent proceeding although permitted by our practice. It was an essential element. Without it the plaintiffs were doomed to defeat on their cause of action as alleged. He did not come voluntarily into pending litigation. After the allowance of the amendment he did not appear generally but filed special pleadings sufficient to show that the proceeding was in inmtum as to bim individually.
The plaintiffs have cited a large number of cases which need not be here analyzed, because most of them relate to the allowance of amendments in jurisdictions where doubtless the practice in that particular is less liberal and elastic than in this Commonwealth and the language was used with reference to that point. The results reached in most of them appear to be in harmony with Hutchinson v. Tucker, 124 Mass. 240. Words, expressions and reasoning used in judicial opinions with reference to the single question actually before the court cannot be wrested from their context and applied authoritatively to the determination of other questions. Swan v. Justices of the Superior Court, 222 Mass. 542, and cases collected at page 545.
*33The result appears to us inevitable that Walker, by failing to ■file the petition for removal within the time allowed after he was summoned into court as executor of the Searles will, was not prevented from filing such removal petition in his own behalf within the time allowed after he was made a personal defendant. The statutory limitation as to time for removal did not begin to run against him as the sole individual defendant until he had been made sole individual defendant as distinguished from the executor of the Searles will. This conclusion is supported by Relfe v. Rundle, 103 U. S. 222, Powers v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway, 169 U. S. 92, Northern Pacific Railroad v. Austin, 135 U. S. 315, Jones v. Mosher, 46 C. C. A. 471; 107 Fed. Rep. 561. See in this connection, Green v. Valley, 101 Fed. Rep. 882; Chase v. Beech Creek Co. 144 Fed. Rep. 571; Evans v. Dillingham, 43 Fed. Rep. 177; Robert v. Pineland Club, 139 Fed. Rep. 1001; Bedell v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, 245 Fed. Rep. 788.

Order to be entered accepting petition and bond for removal.