This is аn appeal from a judgment entered in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York on May 15, 1970, dismissing the complaint and the аmended complaint which sought to enjoin the named state agencies from allegedly violating appellants’ constitutional rights to equal protection of the laws and due process under the Fourteenth Amendment through alleged police and othеr official interference with appellants’ business by harassment and intimidation of its patrons. Jurisdiction is founded on 28 U.S.C. § 1331(a).
Appellant Matherson is President of appellant The Oak Beach Inn Corp. and is the proprietor of The Oak Beach Inn (Inn), an appаrently successful, perhaps too successful, young adult night spot located at Oak Beach in the town of Babylon, Suffolk County, New Yоrk. Appellee Long Island State Park Commission (Commission) is a commission within the Division of Parks of the New York State Conservation Department, N.Y. Conserv.Law §§ 770-781 (McKinney 1967). Appellee Jones Beach State Parkway Authority (Authority) is a public benefit corporation whose members are the Commissioners of the Commission. N.Y.Pub.Auth.Law §§ 150-165 (McKinney 1970).
FACTS
In reviewing this case on appellees’ motion to dismiss, we incorporate Mr. Matherson’s verified “Petition” into the complaint and amended complaint, Studebaker Corp. v. Gittlin,
On April 23, 1970, Matherson advised his attorneys that the above-recited pattern of official harassment of patrons would be reinstituted on the following evening, a Friday. His counsel prepаred and filed in the district court for the Eastern District an order to show cause seeking, inter alia, a temporary restraining order enjoining appellees generally from interfering with the lawful opera *568 tion of appellants’ business and specifically from harassing the Inn’s patrons in the above-described manner. The restraining order was issued the afternoon of April 24; a hearing on the order to show сause was scheduled to be heard the morning of April 30. On April 29, appellants’ counsel was served with a notice of motion datеd April 27, under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1),(2) and (6) moving to dismiss the complaint on jurisdictional grounds and for failure to state a claim for which relief may be granted. The district court “waived” the notice requirement of Fed.R.Civ.P. 6(d) and entertained arguments on the motion to dismiss rather than proceeding to a hearing on the merits. On April 30, after argument on the motion to dismiss, appellants filed an amended complaint. By an order datеd May 15, 1970, the complaint and amended complaint were dismissed and the restraining order vacated on the grounds that the complaints together did not state sufficiently particularized facts to entitle appellants to relief under Fed.R.Civ. P. 8(a) and that apрellees are immune from federal court suit under the doctrine of “sovereign immunity.”
IMMUNITY FROM SUIT
Appellees strenuously argue that the doctrine of “sovereign immunity” under the Eleventh Amendment bars this suit. We disagree. With respect to the Authority, we find the doctrine of “sovereign immunity” inappliсable because as a matter of federal law this New York public benefit corporation is not an “alter ego” of thе State. See Zeidner v. Wulforst,
With respect to the Commission, as such, thе doctrine might be applicable, but the entire complaint should not have been dismissed on the merits for this reason. See Ex Partе Young,
We find that appellants, in squarely grounding their claim on the Fourteenth Amendmеnt, have stated a nonfrivolous claim “arising under” the Constitution over which the district court might have had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331(a). Bell v. Hood,
Accordingly, we reverse as to the Authority on the ground that it is not immunе from suit and remand to the district court with instructions that the dismissal of the complaint be without prejudice to appellants’ privilegе to re-plead provided there be allegations of the necessary jurisdictional amount in controversy and the specification of facts concerning allegedly unconstitutional acts of official harassment.
