19 F. 145 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1883
These cases and the case of Langdon v. Fogg,
There are some immaterial differences in the allegations of the bills of complaint in the several cases, but the bill in each may be fairly treated as one brought by a stockholder in a mining corporation to enforce a cause of action which exists in favor of the corporation against the directors for a fraudulent appropriation of its assets, but which the corporation does not assert because it is controlled by the unfaithful directors, and the directors and corporation are consequently joined as defendants. The relief sought is that the individual defendants account jointly and severally concerning the profits they have made by the misappropriation of the corporate property, and be adjudged to pay the amount found due to the corporation into court for the benefit of the stockholders. This being the cause of action disclosed by the bill, it will be treated as one upon which a separate action could be maintained as between the plaintiff and the non-resident defendant. The rule may now be deemed established that where a ' cestui que trust seeks in equity to charge trustees with personal liability for their fraudulent acts, he may join all who have participated, or proceed against one or more of them severally at his election. The right of action in such a, ease arises ex delicto, and in equity as well as at law the tort may be treated as several as well as joint. Heath v. Erie Ry. Co. 8 Blatchf. 347; May v. Selby, 1 Younge & C. Ch. 235; Franco v. Franco, 3 Ves. 75; Wilkinson v. Parry, 4 Russ. 272; Atty. Gen. v. Wilson, 4 Lond. Jur. 1174. A proceeding against trustees for a fraudulent breach of trust is an exception to the rule that in a suit against trustees all of them must be made parties. Cunningham v. Pell, 5 Paige, 607. The reason is obvious. A trustee may insist that his co-trustees be joined, when he is sued for a breach of duty in which the other trustees are involved, because he is entitled to contribution. In cases of breach of trust not involving actual fraud, contribution may be enforced by trustees, as between themselves,—Hill, Trust. 814 and'notes, (4th Amer. Ed.;)—but no right of contribution exists where the demand sought to be enforced is ex delicto. Ellis v. Peck, 2 Johns. Ch. 131; Miller v. Fenton, 11 Paige, 18. The cause of action disclosed by the bill is therefore one capable of being determined as between the plaintiff and the non-resident defendant without the presence of the other defendants. The plaintiff, at his election, can dismiss his bill as against all the other defendants at any stage of the action and proceed against the non-resident defendant alone, and obtain against him the complete relief to which he would be entitled if the other defendants were joined.
The question, then, is whether the act of 1875 gives the right of removal whenever there is a cause of action in the suit between a
It is urged that, since tho decisions in this circuit referred to, the supreme court has considered the construction of the second clause of the second section of the act of March 3,1875, and in the light of its decision in Barney v. Latham, 103 U. S. 205, the former judgments of this court should be reconsidered, and it should now be decided that whenever in a suit between a resident plaintiff and several defendants,
“To entitle a party to removal under (this clause there roust exist in the suit a separate and distinct cause of action, in respect to which all the necessary parties on one side are citizens of different states from those on the other. Thus, in Barney v. Latham, two separate and distinct controversies were directly involved,—one, as to the lands held by the Winona & St. Peter Land Company, in respect to which the land company was the'"only necessary party on one side, and the plaintiff on the other; and the second, as to the moneys collected from the sales of lands before the land company was formed, as to which only the natural persons named as defendants were the necessary party on the one side and the plaintiffs on the other; one was a controversy about the land, and the other about the money. Separate suits, each distinct in itself, might have been properly brought on these two separate causes of ac tion, and complete relief afforded in such suit as to the particular controversy involved. In that about the land the land company wmuld have been the only necessary defendant, and in that about the money the natural persons need only have been brought in. In that about the land there could not have been a removal because the parties on both sides would have been citizens of the same state; while in that about the money there could have been! as the plaintiffs would all be citizens of one state, while the defendants would all be citizens of another.”
It does not necessarily follow that a controversy is wholly between a plaintiff and each one of several defendants, and can be fully determined as between them, merely because such a controversy might have been presented if the plaintiff had elected to present it in that form. The controversy in a suit is the one which is actually presented, not the one that might have been. It is not wholly between the plaintiff and one of the defendants because it might have been if the plaintiff had so elected. Nor can a controversy be fully deter
It remains to consider whether, under the bill hero, which seeks a decree that the defendants account severally concerning the gains and profits received by each through the fraudulent acts complained of, there is not a controversy which is separate as between the plaintiff and each defendant, and which can be fully determined as between them. If tho defendant has elected to pursue each defendant sepa- ■ rately, and the cause of action disclosed by the bill justifies him in doing so, it would seem that the suit presents a separate controversy as to that defendant notwithstanding there is also a controversy between tho plaintiff and all the defendants jointly. If this separate controversy can he fully determined between the plaintiff and defendant without the presence of tlie other defendants, the language of the removal act is satisfied. That it can be thus determined has already been shown, because the other trustees are not necessary parties to a suit brought against one for a fraudulent breach of trust. There is, therefore, a distinct controversy here between the plaintiff and each defendant. Some of the transactions assailed by tho bill are not joint transactions on the part of tho defendants. All of the defendants may not be liable to the same extent. The prayer as to this branch of the bill is against each defendant for a several accounting, and that is only necessary upon the theory that some of them are liable for a different amount than others.
It is no answer to the suggestion that the suit presents a separate and distinct controversy as between the plaintiff and each defendant, to assert that the decree obtained will be a single decree as to all the defendants. The same thing may be said of every decree in suits in equity, and could have been said in Barney v. Latham. For these reasons the actions were properly removed.
Tn the case of Nott v. Clews the additional point is made that the petition for removal was not filed by tho removing defendant before the trial of the cause. As to four of the defendants separate demurrers were interposed and brought to a hearing. The demurrers were overruled, but leave was given to the defendants to answer upon payment of costs of the demurrers within 20 days. As the removal was
Brown, J., concurs in the results.
18 Fed. Rep. 5.