delivered tbe following opinion:
The question comes up whether the case has been properly *208removed and whether there is any ground for remanding it. It is governed by § 29 of the Judicial Code of the United States [36 Stat. at L. 1095, chap. 231, Comp. Stat. 1916, §. 1011] and subsequent sections, providing for remands in proper cases.
As I understand the facts, the petition or original pleading in this case was filed May 15, and, under the law, the defendant would have until May 29 to answer. On May 26, before the time expired, a stipulation was entered into, as follows:
Come now the plaintiff by his attorneys Fernandez Garcia and Marcos Morales, and the defendant by his attorney Juan Hernandez Lopez, and set forth:
That the plaintiff and the defendant have agreed to ash this Honorable Court to adjourn the hearing of the above-entitled cause, and the injunction filed by the plaintiff in connection therewith, for further setting.
It has been further agreed between the defendant and the plaintiff, that whatever rights the defendant might exercise against the said plaintiff, on account of the adjournment of both cases, are hereby waived, and that the same shall be proceeded with just the same as if no such adjournment had been made.
The plaintiff and the defendant submit the above stipulation for the approval of the court.
Cayey, P. K., May 26, 1916.
Signed: Juan Hernandez Lopez,
Attorney for the plaintiff.
Fernandez Garcia & Marcos Morales,
By Miguel Marcos Morales,
Attorneys for the plaintiff.
*209The hearing of the case was adjourned by the following order:—
Guayama, P. R., May 29, 1916.
In view of the foregoing motion, the hearings set for this day on the suit to recover possession and the order to show cause are adjourned until June 20,1916, at 9 a. m., and let the parties be notified for their knowledge and compliance, the restraining order to remain in the meantime in full force and effect.
Signed: J. A. Lopez Acosta, District Judge.
On June 13, that is, within the period of extension, there was filed the motion to remove from the local court to the Federal court. The motion was filed and at the same time the bond was given which is provided for in § 29. In point of fact, the transcript was not filed in this court until several weeks after the thirty which are provided for. These are substantially, I think, the facts. The question is, What is the proper procedure of the court upon these facts ?.
1. It is probably unnecessary to determine the contention made on the words of the stipulation, that is, that it amounted to a submission to the jurisdiction of the local court for all purposes. This may be so, but it is not clearly an argument that there could be no recourse had to the Federal court in a proper way. What would be the effect if the parties agreed to a continuance on the distinct understanding that the case was to be tried in the original court, and that there should be no removal, need not now be decided. Whether counsel can waive the rights of clients to this extent is not before us. It is unquestionably true that the legislature could not do this for litigants. A law providing that a defendant corporation seeking *210to remove a case to tbe Federal court thereby forfeits its charter has been held to be uuconstitutional. Donald v. Philadelphia & R. Coal & I. Co. 241 U. S. 329, 60 L. ed. 1027, 36 Sup. Ct. Rep. 563. This would be as illegal as to> tax au agency of the United States for state purposes, as held in M’Culloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316, 4 L. ed. 579. In the case at bar, however, there arises only a construction of an agreement, and it is only necessary to say that its phraseology cannot be held to mean that either party waived any right of recourse to the Federal court.
2. It is contended that the time for removal cannot be extended by a stipulation, and to this effect is cited Prado v. Central San Cristobal, 5 Porto Rico Fed. Rep. 600, decided by Judge Eodey, long the judge' of this court. The same view is taken in Martin v. Carter, 48 Fed. 596, and see also Schipper v. Consumer Cordage Co. 72 Fed. 803, a New York case. The decision in the latter case, however, has been changed in the New York district court in consequence of a change in the wording of the rule, as noted by Judge Lacombe in Mayer v. Ft. Worth & D. C. R. Co. 93 Fed. 601.
The statute says that the removal must be within such time as the statute or rule of court allows for answer; and this depends, therefore, to some extent upon the wording of the local rule. The principle is given in Kansas City, Ft. S. & M. R. Co. v. Daughtry, 138 U. S. 298, 34 L. ed. 963, 11 Sup. Ct. Rep. 306, as being that the removal can be had up to the time that the answer is due. In the case at bar the point is not whether the stipulation can extend the time. In point of fact, the time was extended by an order of court, and there is nothing to show that this order was not in accordance with the rules of court. Indeed not only is it the presumption that it was under *211a rule, but tbe universal practice is for the court to grant sucb extensions on proper showing. It has been held that the court cannot extend the time for removal upon a stipulation. Daugherty v. Western U. Teleg. Co. 61 Fed. 138, 139. But this case seems to stand alone. To the contrary are Simonson v. Jordon, 39 Fed. 721, from New York; Lockhart v. Memphis & L. R. Co. 38 Fed. 274, from Tennessee; Rycroft v. Green, 49 Fed. 177, from New York; People’s Bank v. Ætna Ins. Co. 53 Fed. 161, from South Carolina; Turner v. Illinois C. R. Co. 55 Fed. 689, from Tennessee; Chiatovich v. Hanchett, 78 Fed. 193, from Nevada. The time is extended by not taking a default in Tennessee. Lockhart v. Memphis & L. R. Co. 38 Fed. 274.
It is not necessary, therefore, to pass upon the point decided by Judge Eodey; that is, that a stipulation by itself cannot extend the time. The case at bar is one of extension by an order of court, and it is the law that the time is extended in such case.
3. The third point is that the transcript was not filed within thirty days after the petition for removal, as is provided in § 29, and that therefore the case should be remanded. As to that, the suggestion I made in the argument still seems to be persuasive, if.not conclusive. It is this: When a party seeks a removal he is required at the same time to file a bond, a part of the condition of which is that he will file a transcript within thirty days. A bond is for something. It is not simply an ornamental piece of paper; and it must mean that, if the removing party does not file it within thirty days, the aggrieved party may sue on the bond, laying damages, because the rule has not been complied with. If the law meant that the nonfiling of' the transcript within thirty days remanded the case, there would! *212be no use of tbe bond. Tbe case would go right back. It would be functus officio in tbe Federal court. St. Paul & C. R. Co. v. McLean, 108 U. S. 212, 27 L. ed. 703, 2 Sup. Ct. Rep. 498, seems to say that it is discretionary with tbe,court to remand if tbe transcript has not been filed within thirty days. If that be so, and it would seem to be so, tbe discretion of this court would be exercised not to remand, but to say that tbe party who has been in default must be responsible for some costs. Tbe cost of tbe transcript does not become a part of tbe costs of tbe case. I suppose tbe defendant has paid for it to start with, and tbe order of tbe court will be that tbe case remain here and tbe party who failed to file tbe transcript within thirty days must pay $10 for bis default in not filing it in time, tbe $10 to go to tbe other side.