95 F. Supp. 733 | S.D.N.Y. | 1951
On January 19, 1950 the Supreme Court of the State of New York, County of New York, entered an order granting the petitioner, Chase National Bank of the City of New York, (hereinafter referred to as Chase) leave to issue a summons against and serve a complaint upon Directorate General of Postal Remittances & Savings Bank, and seventeen other defendants.
Pursuant thereto, a complaint against said defendants was issued and, together with a summons and, in accordance with an order made on the 23rd of January, 1950, was served by publication upon said defendants.
The complaint alleges that the plaintiff is a national banking association; that the defendants Directorate General of Postal Remittances & Savings Bank and Chinese Postal Remittances & Savings Bank are commercial banking institutions organized under the laws of the Republic of China; that the plaintiff, at its branch at 18 Pine Street, holds in two deposit accounts, to the credit of defendant Directorate General of Postal Remittances & Savings Bank $532,829.68 and $200,000.00 respectively; that the plaintiff, at its same branch, holds in a deposit account to the credit of defendant, Chinese Postal Remittances & Savings Bank, $58,293.67. It further alleges that, according to the plaintiff's records, five of the defendants
On January 24th an order was made in the State court directing the plaintiff to retain to the credit of the action until final judgment, the three deposit balances. That order provided “upon the entry of this order plaintiff shall be and is hereby discharged from any and all liability to any of the parties to this action with respect to all of said deposit balances * * * ”
On April 21st a motion was made, returnable at Special Term, Part III of the New York County Supreme Court, jointly by Nordlinger, R. & B., as attorneys for the defendants Republic of China and Wellington Koo, and Burke & B., as attorneys for thirteen of the remaining sixteen defendants, namely, all except Su Yu Nung “Director General of Postos”, “John Doe” and “Richard Roe”, seeking an order striking out an appearance by Wolf, P. R. & W., as attorneys for the defendants Directorate General of Postal Remittances & Savings Bank, Chinese Postal Remittances & Savings Bank and Su Yu Nung “Director General of Postos” and for a further order dropping Su Yu Nung “Director General of Postos” as a defendant in the action.
On May 3rd the motion was submitted, without argument, to Mr. Justice Edward R. Koch of the New York Supreme Court. The movants urged that the application be granted; Wolf, P. R. & W. requested an adjournment of ninety days. The Department of State of the United States delivered to the court a letter stating that the United States Government recognized the Nationalist Government as the Government of China; recognized Dr. Wellington Koo, the Chinese Ambassador to the United States, as the accredited representative of the Government of 'China in the United States and as the only person authorized to speak here for the Chinese Government. The Court took the motion under advisement.
While the motion was pending and before a decision thereof by Mr. Justice Koch, certain other papers were filed. The movants by Burke & B. submitted an affidavit sworn to May 12, 1950 indicating that the plaintiff, Chase National Bank had received a certificate under § 25(b) par. 4 of the Federal Reserve Act, 12 U.S.C.A. § 632, relative to the individuals having authority to sign with respect to the three accounts in question and accepting those accounts as belonging to the Directorate General of Postal Remittances & Savings Bank, an instrumentality of the National
Ultimately, and on June 6, 1950, Mr. Justice Koch signed a short form order which was received from him (according to the stamp on its face) by the Clerk of Special Term, Part III on June 7, 1950.' The short form order had attached to it the numbered papers submitted ‘ originally on the motion, the numbers of which appeared on the short form order and also, a stamped legend “Memorandum Only”. The affidavits submitted subsequent to the submission of the motion and prior to the date of the short form order, were neither numbered, referred to in, nor attached to the short form order. The typed portion of the short form order reads: “This is a motion to drop party claiming to be director of inter-pleaded banks, and to strike out appearance by him for said banks. The party whose appearance is questioned obtained his authority from the regime now in control of China. This regime has not been recognized by the United States as the Government of China; therefore, that regime and those claiming to. be authorized by it are without capacity to sue in this court. Russian Socialist Federated Soviet Republic v. Cibrario, 235 N.Y. 255, 139 N.E. 259. Motion is granted. Settle order.”
On June 10, 1950, four days after the short form order was signed by Mr. Justice Koch, Wolf, P. R. & W., on behalf of defendants Directorate General of Postal Remittances & Savings Bank, Chinese Postal Remittances & Savings Bank and Su Yu Nung, Director General of Postos, had the cause removed from the Supreme Court, New York County, to this court where it received Clerk’s Number Civil 58-346. Simultaneously, the same firm of attorneys, ’but representing the defendant H. C. Doong (see marginal notes 3 and 6, supra), also had the case removed frpm the Supreme Court, New York County, to this Court, where the matter received Clerk’s Number Civil 58-345. Thus, we now have pending in this district two causes, severally filed, emanating from one proceeding in the state court.
On June. 15th Wolf, P. R. & W. obtained from one of the judges of this court an ex parte order, extending the time of the defendants Directorate General of Postal Remittances & Savings Bank, Chinese Postal Remittances & Savings Bank, Su Yu Nung, H. C. Doong, K. C. Tseng, Y. F. Loh, Fu Hsu-Ken and Y. W. Chan to answer or move with respect to the complaint until such time as would be fixed in an order to be entered on a motion returnable June 27, 1950 for an extension of time to plead.
On June 21, 1950 the same firm of Wolf, P. R. & W. filed in both pending matters in this court their notice of appearance as attorneys for Wen Hseuh Hung and Pan Shao Chung, individually and on behalf of all insurance policy holders similarly situated, Chen Wen Piao, individually and on behalf of all passbook savings depositors similarly situated and W. F. Wenli, individually and on behalf of all wartime savings certificate holders similarly situated, said defendants allegedly being described in the complaint as the fictitious “John Doe and Richard Roe”.
On June 22, 1950 Mr. Justice Koch signed a long form order in the New York Supreme Court providing that Su Yu Nung, “Director General of Postos” be dropped as a party defendant and that the notices of appearance of Wolf, P. R. & W. as attorneys for the defendants Directorate General of Postal Remittances & Savings Bank, Chinese Postal Remittances & Savings Bank and Su Yu Nung “Director General of Postos” be stricken. This long form order recited the papers referred to in the short form order and also the affidavits submitted while the motion was pending before Mr. Justice Koch which, as above indicated, were neither numbered nor referred to in the short form order of June 6, 1950. It was not until June 22, 1950 that all of the papers were filed in the New York County Clerk’s office. From that order of June 22, 1950 Wolf, P. R. & W. filed a notice of appeal to- the Appellate Division, First Department, on July 21, 1950.
After the removal of the cause to this court, certain motions were made 'by the parties, in both suits now here pending, which are the basis of the instant determination. Wolf, P. R. & W. moved in one motion for threefold relief: (a) for a hearing under Rule 43(e), Fed.Rules Civ. Proc. 28 U.S.C.A.; (b) for extension of time to plead (see Note 8 supra) ; and (c) to strike the appearances of Burke & B. on behalf of the defendants H. C. Doong, K. C. Tseng, Y. F. Loh, Fu Hsu-Ken and Y. W. Ch-an (see Note 8 supra). Wolf, P. R. & W. also moved by a companion motion, to amend the title of the proceedings by substituting Wen Hseuh Hung, Pan Shao Chung, Chen Wen Piao and W. F. Wenli as the true names of “John Doe and Richard Roe”. Nordlinger, R. & B. and Burke & B., in addition to opposing the aforesaid motions of Wolf, P. R. & W. have jointly moved by way of cross motions, for relief as follows: first, for an order remanding the causes to the New York State Supreme Court, New York County; second, for an order vacating the ex parte order of June 15th, extending the time to answer or move, of the defendants -hereinabove mentioned in that connection; and third, that the appearances of Wolf, P. R. & W. on behalf of Hung, Chung, Piao and Wenli be stricken out.
Obviously, if the cross motion to remand
The petitions under which the state court cause was removed, as two causes into this court, each, recite, “that this is a suit of civil nature to which a corporation organized under the laws of the United States, to wit, the plaintiff is a party; that this suit arises out of transactions involving international or foreign banking and out of other international or foreign financial operations, and arises under the laws of the United States (12 U.S.C. § 632).”
Title 12 U.S.C.A. § 632 provides that “ * * * all suits of a civil nature at common law or in equity to which any corporation organized under the laws of the United States shall be a party, arising out of transactions involving international or foreign banking, * * * or out of other international or foreign financial operations, * * * shall be deemed to arise under the laws of the United States, and the district courts of the United States shall have original jurisdiction of all such suits; and any defendant in any such suit may, at any time before the trial thereof, remove such suits from the State Court into the district court of the United States for the proper district * * *."
The; statute mandates that before removal can properly be had, it must appear that a party to the suit is a corporation organized under the laws of the United States. There is no' dispute that Chase is so organized. Blow ever, is it a party to the suit? As is pointed out above, the Supreme Court, New York County, made its order on January 24th, directing Chase to hold the accounts to the credit of this action and further providing that upon the entry of said order, Chase be discharged from any and all liability to any of the parties to this action with respect to all of said deposit balances.
While it is true that the order of January 24th was granted ex parte, it is equally true, as Wolf, P. R. & W. frankly confess in an affidavit of one of the members of that firm
Notwithstanding the obvious afterthought of the affiant
Whether Chase remained a party to the action after the order of January
In Empire Engineering Corp. v. Mack, 217 N.Y. 85, 111 N.E. 475, 477, Judge Pound wrote, “It has repeatedly been held that when the amount of the debt is not in dispute, when the conflicting claims are to substantially the same debt, when plaintiff stands indifferent between the rival claimants, when the only question in the case arises from the doubtful rights and conflicting claims of the several defendants as between themselves, the real parties in interest are the defendants. Plaintiff may then be discharged from liability by paying the amount of the debt into court * * *. Crane v. McDonald, 118 N.Y. 648, 654, 23 N.E. 991.”
In Edison Illuminating Company of Brooklyn v. Horace E. Frick Co., 146 App. Div. 605, 131 N.Y.S. 125, 126, the Second Department Appellate Division affirmance is specifically based on the opinion of the Justice at Special Term quoted therein. In dealing with the forerunner of the present interpleader sections of the New York Civil Practice Act, Justice Blackmar at Special Term said, “The interlocutory judgment or order, under section 820a of the Code, having been entered, the plaintiff is practically discharged from the action. The contest is now solely between the different defendants.”
In Sulzberger v. Seklir, 153 App.Div. 749, 138 N.Y.S. 691, 693, the Appellate Division, First Department, in discussing the effect of a deposit under § 820(a), Code of Civil Procedure, said, “In effect, however, the order to pay into court determines the action so far as the plaintiff is concerned.”
The federal rule is in complete accord. In Treinies v. Sunshine Mining Co., 1939, 308 U.S. 66, 60 S.Ct. 44, 84 L.Ed. 85, adequacy of diversity of citizenship in a suit under the Interpleader Act of January 20, 1936, 49 Stat. 1096, was found where the complainant-stakeholder was co-citizen of one group of claimants who were, in turn, of different citizenship from the other group of claimants. In concluding that the citizenship of the complainant-stakeholder was of no moment in testing diversity, Mr. Justice Reed, speaking for the full bench (one Justice taking no part) said 308 U.S. at page 72, 60 S.Ct. at page 48 “ * * * there is a real controversy between the adverse claimants. They are brought into the court by the complainant stakeholder who simultaneously deposits the money or property, due and involved in the dispute into the registry of the court. This was done in this case. The act provides that the 'court shall hear and determine the cause and shall discharge the complainant from further liability.’ Such deposit and discharge effectually demonstrates the applicant’s disinterestedness as between the claimants and as to the property in dispute, an essential in inter-pleaders.”
It must follow that upon the entry of the order of January 24, 1950, thus far unchallenged, directing Chase to retain the funds to the credit of the action and discharging it from any liability thereafter, Chase no longer remained a party to the suit. There being then, no corporation organized under the laws of the United States remaining a party to the litigation since January 24, 1950, this court could not obtain jurisdiction of the suit under Title 12 U.S.C.A. § 632 by removal thereof on June 10, 1950. The suit should not have been removed from the New York Supreme Court to this court and must therefore be remanded.
In view of this holding, it becomes unnecessary to consider the other arguments advanced for and against remand (see marginal note 9) and upon those contentions no opinion is ventured.
The cross-motion by Nordlinger, R. & B. and Burke & B. to remand is granted. Their cross-motion to vacate the ex parte order made in this court on June 15, 1950, extending the time of certain defendants to answer or move and the motions brought on by Wolf, P. R. & W., 1. (a) for a
Settle order on notice.
. The seventeen additional defendants are Chinese Postal Remittances & Savings Bank, T. Y. Ho, Lung Yu-Tan, H. J. Su, Chang Chi-Hsi, K. C. Tseng, H. C. Doong, Y. F. Loh, Fu Hsu-Ken, Y. W. Chan, C. F. Wu, S. T. Wong, Republic of China, Wellington Koo, as' Ambassador of the Republic of China, Su Yu Nung, “Director General' of Postos”, “John Doe and Richard Roe”, said last two names being fictitious, the true names being unknown to petitioner, it being intended thereby to designate all officers, directors, managers, or other persons claiming authority to act on behalf of Directorate General of Postal Remittances & Savings Bank and Chinese Postal Remittances & Savings Bank, and all persons having any interest adverse to that of any other party ' to this action in the deposit balances to which the action related.
. These five defendants are T. Y. Ho, Lung Yu-Tan, H. J. Su, Chang Chi-Hsi and K. C. Tseng.
. These six defendants are the five defendants mentioned in Note 2 and the defendant H. C. Doong.
. These six defendants are K. C. Tseng (who is included in those mentioned in Notes 2 and 3) and Y. F. Loh, Fu Hsu-Ken, Y. W. Chan, C. F. Wu and S. T. Wong.
. These are joined as the two defendants “John Doe” and “Richard Roe”.
. As will be noted from Note 3, supra, Doong had authority to sign only in connection with the $200,000 account of defendant Directorate General of Postal Remittances & Savings Bank. He had no authority to act with respect to the other two accounts, Notes 2 and 4, supra.
. Case Number Civil 58-346 removed by Wolf, P. R. & W. on behalf of Directorate General of Postal Remittances & Savings Bank, Chinese Postal Remittances & Savings Bank and Su Yu Nung, Director General of Postos must therefore be deemed to concern the deposits of (a) $532,829.68 in the name of Directorate General of Postal Remittances & Savings Bank and (b) $58,293.67 in the name of Chinese Postal Remittances & Savings Bank.
Case Number Civil 58-345 removed by Wolf, P. R. & W. on behalf of H. C. Doong must therefore be deemed to concern only the deposit of $200,000 in the name of Directorate General of Postal Remittances & Savings Bank.
. In this connection it should be noted that defendants K. C. Tseng, Y. F. Loh, Fu Hsu-Ken and Y. W. Chan, asserted
. In support of the motion to remand Case Number Civil 58-346 (see Note 7, supra), Nordlinger, It. & B. and Burke & B. in essence urged that, by virtue of Mr. Justice Koch’s short form order of June 6, 1950 the defendant Su Yu Nung had been effectively removed from the suit and was thus not a defendant entitled under Title 12 U.S.C.A. | 632 to remove the cause and that said short form order also struck out Wolf, P. life W.’s alleged appearance for the other removing defendants in that case and hence said other defendants had never sought removal. As to case Number Civil 58-345 (see Note 7, supra) the movants for remand urged that if Burke & B. improperly appeared for II. C. Doong originally, Doong was therefore in default and no longer a defendant entitled to remove the cause under Title 12 U.S.C.A. § 632.
Wolf, P. R. & W. met these contentions by asserting, in substance, as to the first, that the short form order
As to both cases now in this court, it was further urged by movants that the proceedings in the Supreme Court constituted the trial contemplated by Title 12 U.S.C.A. § 632 and the removal, not having preceded same, was abortive.
. This affidavit was submitted upon a supplemental argument addressed solely to the question whether Chase was still a party in view of the order of January 24th discharging it from liability upon the impounding of the deposits.
. Contained in the affidavit referred to in Note 10 supra.