46 F. 824 | U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa | 1891
In the petition, filed in this case in the district court of Crawford county, Iowa, it is averred that the Bradstreet Compan}' is a corporation created under the laws of the state of Connecticut, engaged in carrying on the business of a mercantile agency throughout the United States; that the defendant H. S. Green is an agent and correspondent of said company, located at Dow City, Crawford county, Iowa; that on or about the 21st of December, 1890, said Green sent to the office of the Bradstreet company at Des Moines, Iowa, a telegram stating that the plaintiff, who was engaged in business at Dow City, Iowa, had transferred a large quantity of real estate, and on the 24th of December, 1890, said Green sent or caused to be sent to the Bradstreet Company a further telegram to the effect that plaintiff had failed in business; that the Brad
“In general, all persons in any manner instrumental in making or procuring to be made the defamatory publication are jointly and severally responsible therefor.”
In determining whether the case presents separable controversies, the allegations of the declaration or petition are held to be true, and the question is to be solved by the issues thereby presented. Railroad Co. v. Grayson, 119 U. S. 240, 7 Sup. Ct. Rep. 190. In Pirie v. Tvedt, 115
“There is here, according to the complaint, but a single cause of action, and that is the alleged malicious prosecution of the plaintiffs by all the defendants acting in concert. The cause of action is several as well as joint, and the plaintiffs might have sued each defendant or all jointly. It was for the plaintiffs to elect which course to pursue. They did elect to proceed against all jointly, and to this the defendants are not permitted to object. The fact that a judgment in the action may be rendered against a part of the defendants only, does not divide a joint action in tort into separate parts, any more than it does a joint action on contract.”
See, also, Sloane v. Anderson, 117 U. S. 275, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 730.
In the petition filed herein the publications complained of as causing damage to the plaintiff were those made bj1, the defendant company to their subscribers, and the defendants are declared against for these publications, as being jointly instrumental in bringing them about; and hence the petition must be construed as a joint declaration against the defendants. As the plaintiff and the defendant Green are both citizens of the state of Iowa, and as the petition does not present or include a separable controversy between the plaintiff and the defendant corporation, the jurisdiction of this court cannot be sustained upon that ground.
The next question for determination is that arising upon the averment of the petition for removal, that Green is but a sham party, having been joined as a defendant for the purpose of defeating the jurisdiction of this court. The first point for consideration is whether, if true, such fact can be shown in aid of a petition for removal filed by the real defendant. The principle has always been recognized that the joinder of purely nominal parties in an action cannot defeat the removal of the cause by the real party in interest if the jurisdictional facts exist as to him. Wood v. Davis, 18 How. 467; Sewing-Machine Cases, 18 Wall. 553; Bacon v. Rives, 106 U. S. 99, 1 Sup. Ct. Rep. 3. If, then, in determining the question of jurisdiction, either original or by removal, it is permissible to ignore the presence of parties who, upon the record, appear to be purely nominal parties, having no real interest in or relation to the cause of action, should not the same rule apply in case it appears that a given party has been made such, solely for the purpose of defeating the right of removal to the federal court, without such party having any interest in the subject of litigation? In the case of Society v. Ford, 114 U. S. 635, 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 1104, it was held that the colorable, or fraudulent assignment of a cause of action from A. to B., the latter being a citizen of the same state as the defendant, and the suit being brought in the name of B., could not be availed of as ground for removal, which right would have existed had the suit been in the name of A. It was held that the colorable or fraudulent nature of the assignment would be a defense to the action as brought, but that proof of the fraudulent purpose of .the assignment would not have the effect of changing the action from one between citizens of the same state to one between citizens of different states. To the same effect was the ruling in Oakley v. Goodnow, 118 U.
“ It would be a very dangerous doctrine, — one utterly destructive of the rights which a man has to go into the federal courts on account of his citizenship,--if the plaintiff in the case, in instituting his suit, can, without any right or reason or just cause, join persons who have not the requisite citizenship, and thereby destroy the rights of parties in federal courts. We must therefore be astute not to permit devices to become successful which are used for the very purpose of destroying that right.”
The ruling of Justice Miller in ibis case was cited approvingly by the supreme court in Walden v. Skinner, 101 U. S. 577. The reasoning which sustains the doctrine, which is now too firmly established to be called in question, that in determining the jurisdiction of the circuit court of the United States regard will be had only to the citizenship of the real parties in interest, disregarding wholly all nominal or immaterial parties upon the record, seems to me to be equally applicable to cases wherein it is made to appear that a party, having in fact no interest in or actual connection with the subject of litigation, has been joined as a party with those actually interested, for the sole purpose of defeating the jurisdiction of the federal court. A fraud of this nature, if successful, deprives the citizen of a right conferred upon him by the constitution and laws of the United States, and it certainly must be true that it cannot be perpetrated without a remedy existing for its correction. Unless this be so, then it is possible to defeat in every instance the right of removal, when the same depends upon the citizenship of the adversary parties, by the easy device of joining as a party one who has no interest in the case, but who is a citizen of the same state as the plaintiff. In Plymouth Min. Co. v. Amador Canal Co., 118 U. S. 264, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 1034, it was said:
“Under these circumstances, the averments in the petition that the defendants were wrongfully made to avoid a removal can be of no avail to the circuit court upon a motion to remand, until they are proven; and that, so far as the present record discloses, was not attempted. The affirmative of the issue was on petitioning defendant. That corporation was the moving party, and was bound to make out its case.”
In Railroad Co. v. Wangelin, 132 U. S. 599, 10 Sup. Ct. Rep. 203, is found the following:
“As to the suggestion, made in argument, that the Southeast and St. Louis Ry. Company was fraudulently joined as a defendant in the state court for the purpose of depriving the Louisville and asimile R. E. Company of the right to remove the case into the circuit court of the United States, it is enough to say that no fraud was alleged in the petition for removal, or pleaded or offered to be proved in the circuit court.”
Although not, perhaps, express adjudications upon the question, these intimations of the views of the supreme court support the doctrine that it is open to a party who desires to remove a case brought against him to show upon proper allegations and proof that a co-defendant has been