REMAND ORDER
The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico filed a petition for expropriation on January 1979 in the Superior Court of Puerto Rico seeking the condemnation of part of defendant Cordeco’s oeeanfront property. The land condemned will serve as a recipient of the pluvial waters of a government housing project to be built nearby. Cordeco filed a Petition for Removal on March 4, 1981 which was later amended. Jurisdiction is invoked on the basis of diversity of citizenship, Cordeco being a corporation which is registered in Panama, and because the cause of action arises under the Constitution of the United States and other federal laws. Cordeco claims it has been deprived of property without due process of law because the expropriation proceedings are part of a plan devised by certain indi *614 viduals 1 to make a profitable sale of the housing project. It contends that the housing project could not be sold unless the problem of the drainage of pluvial waters was solved and that the delay caused by this problem resulted in the expiration of a governmental permit for the project. It is further alleged that an expired permit for the project was then renewed without following legal procedures in the proper agency and that, as part of the plan, these individuals then induced the Governor of Puerto Rico to commence proceedings to condemn part of Cordeco’s land. Cordeco claims that these series of events, plus the alleged inadequate appraisal of the land, all point to violations of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments and of 42 U.S.C. Secs. 1981, 1982, 1988, 1985. As a final alternative argument, it suggests that we exercise pendent jurisdiction over the expropriation proceedings because there are serious constitutional questions involved.
Plaintiffs urge that there is no diversity jurisdiction because the Commonwealth is the plaintiff in the condemnation proceedings and a “state” cannot be a citizen for diversity purposes.
2
Defendant argues, in turn, that the Commonwealth is only a nominal party
3
and that the real parties in interest are the Cooperative Development Company (“Agency”) and the Agency’s chief executive,
4
who are U. S. citizens, residents of Puerto Rico, and, therefore, as a foreign corporation, it is entitled to litigate in this forum since diversity jurisdiction exists. Plaintiffs’ position is based primarily on the fact that the action is an exercise of its power of eminent domain, a power that has traditionally been associated with the sovereign characteristics of a state.
Louisiana Power and Light Co. v. City of Thibodaux,
Under Rule 17(a) FRCP a real party in interest is one who by federal or local substantive law possesses the right sought to be enforced and not necessarily the person who will ultimately benefit from recovery.
Doherty v. Mutual Warehouse Co.,
The courts in Puerto Rico have long recognized the power of eminent domain as one inherent to the Commonwealth.
FLA v. Soc. Civil Agrícola e Industrial,
Although the Puerto Rico Development Company has been authorized to acquire property by expropriation, it is only by requesting the Governor to initiate the proceedings and acquire the property on “behalf of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico” that this agency can exercise the delegated power. P.R.Laws Ann. Tit. 5 Sec. 981h(b). When the agency returns to the Commonwealth the total amounts disbursed as compensation or when the Governor deems it necessary that the title be vested in the agency, then by order of the court, title to the property is conveyed to the agency id. at Sec. 981h(d)(e). In the meantime, title is vested in the Commonwealth and is recorded as such in the Registry of Property. P.R.Laws Ann. Tit. 32 Sec. 2907. There is no indication in the law creating this agency that it is empowered to initiate condemnation proceedings in its own name. The fact that the agency cannot per se initiate the proceedings but must request the Governor to institute the action on behalf of the Commonwealth is a clear indication that the Legislature of Puerto Rico chose to limit the delegation to this agency by the manner the power was to be exercised. This limitation is not unique to this agency but is found in many government instrumentalities to which a similar concession has been granted. See: P.R.Laws Ann. Tit. 32 Sec. 2916 (Municipalities), Tit. 5 Sec. 931r(a) (Cooperative Development Administration); Tit. 22 Sec. 149 (Aqueduct & Sewer Authority); Tit. 22 Sec. 6 (Public Works Dept.); Tit. 22 Sec. 203 (Electric Power Authority); Tit. 23 Sec. 251g (Commercial *616 Development Co.); Tit. 23 Sec. 278m (Industrial Development Co.), etc. Not all government instrumentalities in Puerto Rico to which the power of eminent domain has been delegated are limited in this manner. The enabling statutes of the Puerto Rico Land Administration, for example, when describing the proceeding by which it may acquire property by condemnation, states: “The power hereby conferred on the Governor” (to initiate the condemnation proceedings on behalf of the agency) “shall not limit or restrain the authority of the Administration to institute itself the condemnation proceedings when it may deem it convenient.” P.R.Laws Ann. Tit. 28 Sec. 264. The Puerto Rico Housing Authority also has been expressly permitted to exercise the power of eminent domain in its own name. Id. Tit. 17 Sec. 14. These express provisions, outlining the manner in which the power of eminent domain is exercised, reinforce the proposition that the requirement imposed on some agencies limiting the initiation of the proceeding to the Governor on behalf of the Commonwealth is part of a deliberate legislative scheme that we assume responds to constitutional considerations. See: P.R.Cons. Art. II Sec. 9. In fact, an examination of the legislative debate preceding the enactment of the enabling statutes of the Puerto Rico Cooperative Development Company reveals concern for the dangers of creating a centralized powerful agency. To quiet some of these fears, and in particular the matter of the agency’s condemnation power, the legislators expressed that the power of condemnation that would be delegated to the agency was checked by the safeguards in the Constitution and by the fact that the power could only be exercised by the Governor on behalf of the Commonwealth. Vol. 20 Sessions Diary, House of Representatives 1966 p. 1272.
Absent an issue as to the public use of the property to be condemned or of its adequate compensation, this Court has no reason to question why the Puerto Rican Legislature chose to restrict the delegation of the power of eminent domain on some government agencies by limiting the manner of exercising the expropriation proceeding. See:
Rindge Co. v. Los Angeles,
The long recognized principle that the power of eminent domain is inherent to the sovereignty of a state and the particular legislative design here involved lead us to conclude that the real substantive as well as procedural party in interest, is the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. 5 This being so, there can be no federal diversity jurisdiction in the action sought to be removed.
The other jurisdictional argument deals with the determination of jurisdiction based on “federal question” when removal is requested pursuant to 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1441(a). The established test used to determine the existence of jurisdiction based on federal question — the well pleaded complaint rule,
Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Texaco, Inc.,
For a suit to be one that arises under the laws of the United States so as to confer original or removal jurisdiction on the federal courts, it must appear on the face of the complaint that resolution of the case depends upon a federal question (citations omitted) .... The fact that a defense to the action may raise a federal question ... is immaterial (citations omitted) ....
Brough v. United Steelworkers of America,437 F.2d 748 , 749 (1st Cir. 1971).
It is possible that in the interests of justice certain circumstances may require a departure from this general rule. See:
Oquendo v. Dorado Beach Hotel Corp.,
Although defendant’s suggestion that we exercise pendent jurisdiction is not presented in the proper case (see note 1) we believe there is no need to exercise this discretionary power. Aside from the alleged existence of “substantial constitutional questions,” defendant has not indicated any other persuasive reason that would convince this Court of the necessity of exerting pendent jurisdiction. Puerto Rico provides adequate procedural and substantive remedies to deal with defendant’s “serious constitutional questions.” P.R.Laws Ann. Tit. 32 App. III R. 58, P.R.Const. Art. II Sec. 9. Our decision today that the Commonwealth is the real party in interest in the eminent domain proceeding sought to be removed and the command of the Eleventh Amendment bring forth additional considerations that prevent us from exerting pendent jurisdiction. But above all, it is imperative to recognize that the power of pendent jurisdiction is a discretionary one,
United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
Defendant’s jurisdictional arguments fail to place the expropriation proceedings even close to the fringes of Article III. Removal is unwarranted and the case is remanded.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. These individuals are defendants in a separate civil rights action filed by Cordeco, Civil No. 81-0289, which is essentially based on the same allegations which Cordeco here asserts as the jurisdictional basis for a cause “arising under.”
. There is no statute conferring diversity jurisdiction when a state is a party since a state cannot be a citizen.
Illinois v. City of Milwaukee,
. This argument was brought forth in the amended petition for removal after plaintiff had mentioned it in the Motion to Remand.
. One of the defendants in the civil rights complaint. See note 1.
. For these purposes the Commonwealth is treated as a state. See 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d).
