MEMORANDUM AND ORDER DENYING PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO REMAND
Plaintiff Chase Manhattan Bank (“Chase”) moves to remand this removed case to the New York Supreme Court, alleging that the district court lacks subject matter jurisdiction. Chase argues that since its lawsuit to require defendant Motorola, Inc. (“Motorola”) to honor a $300 million Guarantee was brought for the benefit of a 24-bank consortium, the citizenship of each bank must be considered in a determination of jurisdiction. Because not every bank in the consortium is diverse with Motorola, Chase argues for remand. Motorola disagrees, contending that under the agreements at issue only the citizenship of Chase is material.
I deny Chase’s motion. The relevant agreements give only Chase the right to require Motorola to honor its Guarantee, and a judgment for or against Chase would bind the entire bank consortium. The federal courts are a constitutionally appropriate forum to hear and resolve such suits between parties оf diverse citizenship. See 28 U.S.C. § 1332.
Facts
In December 1998, Chase and twenty-three other banks lent approximately $800 million to Iridium Operating LLC, a satellite telecommunications company that was developing a first-of-its-kind worldwide wireless satellite telecommunications service. Motorola originated the project in the mid-1980’s. In 1991, Motorola formed Iridium, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary. After others invested, Iridium, Inc. was merged in 1996 into a newly created Delaware limited liability company, Iridium LLC., and, in Deсember 1997, Iridium LLC’s assets were transferred to Iridium Operating LLC [“Iridium”], 1 a Delaware limited liability company wholly owned by Iridium LLC. In August 1999, involuntary petitions of bankruptcy were filed against Iridium Operating and Iridium LLC in the Bankruptcy Court of the Southern District of New York. The entities then filed voluntary petitions in the Bankruptcy Court of the District of Delaware. The proceedings are pending, apparently in both courts but perhaps more actively in the Delaware court. A suit is also pending in the District of Delaware, The Chase Manhattan Bank v. Indium Africa Corp. et al., Civ. Action No. 00-564, and there may perhaps be other suits as well.
In the action before me, Chase brought suit as administrative and collateral agent for the syndicate, to enforce Motorola’s agreement to execute and deliver its Guarantee. In its complaint, filed in the New York Supreme Court June 9, 2000, Chase alleged that the action arose from Motorola’s breach of an unconditional and irrevocable commitment to provide a $300 mil
The Agreements
The loan underlying the disputed guarantee in question was made pursuant to a package of agreements. Simplified, each of the 24 banks agreed to lend a pоrtion of the total $800 million commitment to Iridium, and Iridium agreed to repay each lender and to execute a note in favor of any lender so requesting. Motorola’s Guarantee of $300 million was collateral for the $800 million loan to Iridium by the bank consortium. Motorola agreed to execute and deliver its Guarantee, initially to Iridium and then, by assignment, to Chase as collateral agent and administrative agent on behalf of the consortium. The Guarantee was deliverable upon demand by Chase following the occurrence of a triggering Event of Default, and guaranteed each lender prompt payment of principal and interest in full, proportionally to the extent of the Guarantee. See Credit Agreement § 8.09; Guarantee Agreement § 2.01; Security Agreement, Article III(e)(vii); Motorola Consent § 3.08(a). The Agreements thus gave Chase the right to sue Motorola if, notwithstanding Chase’s demand, Motorola refused to execute and deliver its Guarantee as required by the operative agreements. Once the Guarantee was executed and delivered, any lender, Chase included, was given the right thereafter to sue Motorola for repayment of remaining load indebtedness, and to utilize the Accelerated Judgment procedure in lieu of complaint, as provided by New York C.P.L.R. § 3213.
The Senior Secured Credit Agreement provides the terms and conditions of the loan to Iridium: the cоmmitments of the lending banks, the conditions of funding, the terms of repayment, Iridium’s representations and warranties, etc. Section 8.09 of the agreement provides for Motorola, upon Iridium’s demand following a Trigger Event (i.e., an event of default), to execute and deliver its -Guarantee Obligation in favor of Chase for the benefit of the lending banks. Section 8.09 provides:
Not later than seven Business Days after the occurrence of any Trigger Event, [Iridium] will require Motorola to рerform the Motorola Guarantee Obligation (to the extent of a maximum amount of $300,000,000), such performance to include the execution and delivery by Motorola of its guarantee, ... in favor of the Administrative Agent [Chase] for the benefit of the Lenders in respect of the Borrower’s obligations under this Agreement in a maximum amount of $300,000,000 ....
Credit Agreement § 8.09(d). Article VIII then provides when and under what conditions the obligation terminates or Motorola is otherwise releasеd from its commitments pursuant to the Guarantee. The specific events of default are provided in Article IX.
Chase’s powers and duties as administrative. agent are provided in Article X. The lending banks each appoint Chase administrative agent and collateral agent,
The terms of Motorola’s Guaranty are also set out in a Pledge and Security Agreement (“Security Agreement”) among Iridium, various Iridium affiliates (referred to аs the Subsidiary Guarantors), and Chase as collateral agent for the lenders. Like the Credit'Agreement, the Security Agreement provides that Chase as collateral agent has the right, upon a triggering event, to demand execution and delivery by Motorola of its $300 million Guarantee as security for the lending banks’ $800 million loan. Further to confirm and implement the Security Agreement, Motorola executed a Consent Agreement in favor of Iridium and Chase as administrative agеnt and collateral agent, pursuant to which it consented to Iridium’s assignment to Chase of Motorola’s Guaranty Obligation and acknowledged that Chase as collateral agent had the right “to exercise any and all rights of Iridium,” that Motorola would “comply in all respects with such exercise” by Chase, and that Chase had “full right and power” to enforce Motorola’s obligations “directly against Motorola.” Consent Agreement §§ 3.01-3.02.
Discussion
Motorola timely removed the аction to this court, alleging that since only Chase was given the right to demand that Motorola execute and deliver its Guarantee and bring suit to compel Motorola to do so, complete diversity existed between it and Chase.
3
Chase followed by moving to remand to New York Supreme Court. Since the court’s jurisdiction to act should precede consideration of the merits,
see Curley v. Brignoli, Curley & Roberts Assocs.,
The jurisdiction of the United States district courts is limited by Constitution and statute. Where the diverse citizenship of the parties is the basis of jurisdiction, the citizenship of all plaintiffs must be diverse from those of all defendants.
See E.R. Squibb & Sons, Inc. v. Accident & Cas. Ins. Co.,
The question is not without nuanced answers, supplied by the various courts to have considered the issue in varying con
In
Snyder v. Harris,
Under current doctrine, if one member of a class is of diverse citizenship from the class’ opponent, and no nondiverse members are named parties, the suit may be brought in federal court even though all other members of the class are citizens of the same State as the defendant....
Id.
at 340,
In the
Squibb
lawsuit, plaintiff had sued an underwriter at Lloyd’s who, with an underwriting group, had insurеd plaintiff against loss from sales of the drug diethyl-stilbestrol (DES). The Court of Appeals, distinguishing its earlier decision
(“Squibb I”)
and taking note of a change in the particular individual defendant who was the substituted party-defendant, held that only the citizenship of the defendant had to be considered. A judgment for or against defendant personally, because of the contracts between that defendant and all the “names” in the Lloyd’s underwriting group, bound each and all those “names.”
E.R. Squibb & Sons, Inc. v. Lloyd’s & Companies,
At the outset of the lawsuit, plaintiff had named as defendant a different lead underwriter, naming him “as a representative underwriter representing certain underwriters at Lloyd’s” (i.e., the subscribing syndicate, those who had subscribed to the insurance policy that indemnified plaintiff). The defendant appeared in both his indi
Plaintiffs amended lawsuit in
Squibb II,
against the substituted lead underwriter personally, and not as representative, presented significant juridical distinctiоns. A judgment against the representative potentially bound the syndicate members as if they were actual parties, avoiding collection problems pursuant to a judgment. This was because the contracts in force at Lloyd’s provided that each member, severally, had agreed to “abide by the final decision” of a court against the lead member. However, a judgment against only the lead underwriter in his personal capacity would have required a second lawsuit against syndicate members to enforce their several contracts with the lead.
See Squibb I,
In contrast, the agent in
Airlines Reporting Corp. v. S and N Travel, Inc.,
In contrast, also, non-juridical business organizations may not arrogate to themselves the several citizenships of their members. Thus, regardless whether they pass the real-party-in-interest test of parties,
see
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 17, and regardless how their states of creation or recognition treat them, federal law does not regard such non-juridical business organizations as having a citizenship different from those of its members.
See C.T. Carden v. Arkoma Assoc.,
The agreements in the case before me give Chase, and not the other banks in the syndicate, the right to require Motoro
The relationships within a bank syndicate are often fractious in the event of a borrower’s default and, frequently, in the anticipation of such an event. The lead bank is often at the mercy of banks holding smallеr positions, and precipitous actions of a minority can often dominate the majority will and induce disfavored action by the lead bank. Thus, there is sound commercial purpose for a guarantor like Motorola to require centralized decision-making by the lead bank in connection with the guarantor’s obligation to execute and deliver a significant guarantee. Thus, Chase, as lead bank, was given the right and power to determine if triggering events werе sufficiently significant, and if there was sound commercial purpose to cause it to demand that Motorola execute and deliver its Guarantee. Thus, the Chase Complaint, in suing upon Motorola’s alleged breach of contract in failing to execute and deliver its Guarantee, describes the dispute as between itself and Motorola — that Motorola breached its contractual duties “to Chase,” and that Chase has the “exclusive right to enforce the Motorola Guarantee on behalf of the Lenders.”
By refusing to execute and deliver the Motorola Guarantee to Chase, Motorola deprived Chase of the right to receive the benefits of the Motorola Guarantee, thereby breaching its contractual duties to Chase under the Loan Agreements to deal fairly and in good faith with Chase.
Complaint at ¶ 63;
see also
Complaint at ¶¶ 7, 8. The complaint makes no mention of the other lenders as either having the right to demand and sue upon the Guarantee, or as being the parties aggrieved by Motorola’s failure and refusal to execute and deliver its guaranty. That right to make demand and bring suit was given to Chase as collateral and administrative agent, in control of the collateral in the form of the Motorola Guaranty for the lending banks in the syndicate, and thus the real party in interest for the purpose of diversity.
See
Consent Agreement § 3.08;
Navarro Savings Ass’n,
The rules defining diversity of citizenship, although perhaps “technical, precedent-bound, and unresponsive to policy considerations raised by the changing realities of business organizations,”
Carden v. Arkoma Assoc.,
Federal district court jurisdiction based on diversity is constitutionally authorized and was originally provided, decades before federal courts gained consistent and general jurisdiction to hear cases arising from the laws and constitution of the United States. See U.S. Const., Art. III, § 2; Jud. Act 1789, § 11, 1 Stat. 79; Hart & Wechsler’s The Federal Courts and the Federal System, (4th ed.1996), compare notes at 878-883 (federal question jurisdiction), with notes at 1521-1524 (diversity jurisdiction). In a constitutional schemе of checks and balances, the right of out-of-state litigants to sue in, or remove to, the federal courts was considered a necessary counter-balance to the full faith and credit to be given to state court judgments; both were considered necessary components of our federalist structure.
The contemporary regard for the federal courts in interstate and foreign transactions matches the respect that was had at our nation’s birth. Even though there can be no difference of substantive law,
see Erie R.R. v. Tompkins,
However true the fact may be, that the tribunals of the states will administer justice as impartially as those of the nation, to parties of every description, it is not less true that the constitution itself either entertains apprehensions on this subject, or views with such indulgence the possible fears and apprehensions of suitors, that it has established national tribunals for the decision of controversies between aliens and a citizen, or between citizens of different states.
Bank of the United States v. Deveaux,
The case at bar presents a substantial and complicated interstate financing transaction. If there is diversity of citizenship, the parties should have the right to opt for the federal court, and the federal courts should not shirk the responsibility that the parties seek to impose on it. Federal jurisdiction to hear and decide, responsively, fairly and intelligently, and thereby to advance commerce among the states and
Motorola provided the Guarantee at issue here to Iridium, and Iridium assigned its rights and abilities to enforce that Guarantee to Chase. This case presents a dispute between Chase and Motorola, with Chase having been given the exclusive right to demand execution and delivery of the Guarantee for the benefit of the banks in the lending group. For the reasons shown, only the citizеnship of Chase and Motorola is relevant in determining whether or not diversity' of citizenship exists. Since diversity clearly exists, subject matter jurisdiction exists. Accordingly, Chase’s motion to remand to the New York Supreme Court is denied.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. For the purpose of this opinion, even though there are several Iridium entities, I will refer to all as Iridium, without distinguishing among them. I do not find it necessary in this decision to consider the potential differences among the entities.
. Although each lending bank was givеn the right to make its own decisions following Motorola’s execution and delivery of its Guarantee to Iridium or its assignee Chase, only Chase could enforce Motorola's obligations to execute and deliver the Guarantee. See, e.g., Consent Agreement §§ 3.01-3.02.
. Motorola also moved to dismiss a portion of the complaint pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. That motion awaits my decision on jurisdiction.
. If, in a
Carden, Bouligny,
or
Chapman
fact pattern, a representative of a numerous сlass of parties, laborers or investors sued as a class representative, it is possible that only the citizenship of the class representative, and not those of the members of the class, would have been considered.
See Snyder v. Harris,
. The attempt to confine ideas to a preformed mold, derived from the mythological robber-host who stretched his victims or cut off their legs to fit them to his bed; thus, "must we attempt to confine the Platonic dialogue on the Procrustean bed of a single idea?" Oxford English Dictionary, II 271 (1971) (quoting 1875 JOWETT Plato).
