Hurst v. Southern Railway Co.

AlleN, J.

Tbe plaintiff bas followed tbe allegations of tbe complaint in Ice Co. v. R. R., 144 N. C., 732, and tbe allegations in tbe. petition for removal are substantially as those made in a similar petition filed in tbat case.

Tbe question now presented is not, therefore, a new one, but was fully considered in tbe case referred to, in a learned and exhaustive opinion by Justice Connor, concurred in by all tbe members of tbe Court, and decided in favor of tbe contention of tbe appellant, and we have no disposition to disturb tbat decision.

It is alleged'in tbe complaint tbat tbe defendant became tbe purchaser of tbe Western North Carolina Railroad Company *369under foreclosure proceedings, and the conclusion reached by the Court in the coal company case was: “A suit cannot be removed from the State to the Federal court upon the ground of diversity of citizenship by a corporation of another State which became the purchaser of a corporation of' this State under a sale made pursuant to a deed of trust or mortgage, by virtue of The Code, sec. 679, providing, upon the conveyance being made to The purchaser, the said corporation shall ipso facto be dissolved and the said purchaser shall forthwith be a new corporation, by any name which may- be set forth in the conveyance,’ etc.”

The case of Herrick v. R. R., 158 N. C., 310, is not in conflict with this view.

It was there held that “all issues of fact made upon the petition for removal must be tried in the Circuit Court, but the State court is at liberty to determine for itself whether, on the face of the record, a removal has been effected,” and that the theory on which the rule as to removals rests is “that the record closes, so far as the question of removal is concerned, when the petition for removal is filed and the necessary security furnished. It presents, then, to the State court a pure, question of law, and that is, whether, admitting the facts stated in the petition for removal to be true, it appears on the face of the record, which includes the petition and the pleadings and proceedings down to that time, that the petitioner is entitled to a 'removal of the suit. That question the State court has the right to decide for itself.”

Applying-this rule to the record before us, it appears that there is no dispute as to the facts, and that the real controversy is whether, upon these facts, the defendant is, as matter of law, a North Carolina corporation under our statutes, by reason of its purchase of the Western North Carolina Railroad Company, and this question the State courts can decide.

Reversed.