6 F. 787 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana | 1881
This is a suit in equity brought by William G. Fargo, a citizen of the state of New York, individually, and as president of the American Express Company, against the Louisville, New Albany & Chicago Railway Company for an injunction and other relief. • The grounds of jurisdiction assigned in the bill are — (1) That the right of the American Express Company to sue and be sued in the name of its president is a franchise conferred upon it by the legislature of New York, which, by comity, follows it into other states where it is permitted to do business; also, that the president is a natural person and a citizen of the state of New York, and the defendant is a citizen of the state of Indiana. (2) That if it be held that the complainant, as such president, is not entitled to maintain the suit under the laws of New York, then he brings the suit, not only in his own name and behalf individually as a shareholder in the company, but also in behalf of such of the other numerous shareholders not citizens of the state of Indiana as shall come in and be made parties to the suit, and share in the expense thereof.
Is the American Express Company, which is a joint-stock company, organized under the laws of New York, a citizen in the same sense and for the same purpose ? In chapter 258 of the laws of 1849 of the state of New York, and in subsequent amendatory acts, joint-stock companies may sue and be sued in the name of the president and treasurer when the nature of the cause of action is such that the suit might be maintained by or against all the shareholders. Such companies are endowed with perpetual succession, dissolution not resulting from changes in membership produced, by death or otherwise, A pending-.suit,, by or. against the president or treasurer of the company is not abated by the death, resigna
Corporations are artificial persons — ideal creatures of the state — and so are New York joint-stock companies. It is of no consequence that in the statutes under which these companies are organized they are called “unincorporated associations.” In determining what such institutions really are, regard is to be had to their essential attributes rather than to any mere name by which they may be known. If the essential franchises of a corporation are conferred upon a joint-stock company, it is none the less a corporation- for being called something else. Section 8, art. 8, of the constitution of New York declares that “the term corporation, as used in this article, shall be construed to include associations and joint-stock companies having any of the powers and privileges of corporations not possessed by individuals or partnerships, and all corporations shall have the right to sue, and shall be subject to being sued, in all courts in like eases as-natural persons.” It is urged, however, by counsel for the defendant that the statute which confers the right upon these companies to sue and be sued in the name of the president or treasurer relates to the remedy only, and that it can have no extraterritorial effect.
Experience demonstrated the usefulness, of these institutions in carrying on trade and business,, and convenience required that they should be allowed to- sue and, be subject to* suit in the name of an individual who. should; represent the.
In 1855 the legislature of Indiana passed an act (1 Davis, 4-66) relating to express companies. At that time, and.ever since, the express business in this state has been done by foreign companies organized as this company was. By this act it is declared that all such companies, (and clearly foreign companies are contemplated,) before entering upon business in any county in this state, shall file in the clerk’s office of that county a statement of their membership, the amount of capital invested in their business, and an agreement that service of process upon any agent of the company shall .be deemed good service on the company. Here was a recognition by the state of the existence of express companies like the American, with all the privileges which .they enjoyed where organized,.one of which was the right to sue in a representative or common name. .
In the case of Westcott v. Fargo, 61 N. Y. 542, it was held that under section 3, art. 8, of the constitution of New York, and under the legislation of that state, already alluded to, the president of the American Express Company was to be deemed a corporation sole for the purpose of suing and being sued in the courts of that state. The reasons which induced the supreme court to hold that, for the purposes of federal jurisdiction, corporations are to be regarded as citizens of the states whose creatures they are, call with equal force, for a similar ruling in favor of joint-stock companies which are organized .under the laws of New York. It is no less convenient for the public than it is for these companies that they should be allowed to sue and be sued in the name of the presi
For these reasons I think the suit is properly brought, and, without deciding other questions which were argued by counsel, the motion to dismiss for want of 'jurisdiction is overruled.