172 F. 899 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1909
(after stating the facts as above). Three (questions are presented: First, the jurisdiction of this court under
I understand the plaintiff concedes that, if the former Northern district of New York had not been subdivided, this action could not be entertained by the Circuit Court for the Southern district of New York, for it is a case of original jurisdiction; and no one contends, I think, that the cause of action did not arise in the territory comprised within the old limits of the Northern district of New York. If so, the case would have been strictly within the prohibition of the statute, and the defendant could not confer jurisdiction on this court by waiver. The plaintiff, therefore, bases, or must base, its claim entirely upon the theory that the division of the Conner Northern district of New York under Act May 12, 1900, c. 391, 31 Stat. 175 (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 394), into two districts, changed the meaning of section 657, so that it applied only to that territory which has since 1900 been comprised within the new Northern district of New York.
Congress intended, by dividing the districts, to create new facilities for the dispatch of judicial business in the territory comprised within the old district, and it cannot have intended to throw some of the litigation which formerly belonged in the Northern district of New York upon the Southern district of New York. This necessarily results, if the plaintiff is right, and if actions arising within a part of the former Northern district can now be tried in the southern district, though formerly they could not. Certainly nothing has arisen since the year 1838 which made it desirable to increase the jurisdiction of the Southern district of New York, whose proper work has so greatly increased since that time. Least of all was that desirable at the very moment when the capacity of the former Northern district was doubled by the addition of a new District Judge. So far as the reasonable purpose of an enactment guides its interpretation, this act will not bear the plaintiff’s construction.
Aside from the purpose of the act, it is quite clear to me that the words “Northern district of New York” must be read as though they meant “territorial limits of the present district.” It is the locality of the cause of action which is to determine jurisdiction, and it -is fair to construe the limits as only a convenient mode of designating a fixed territory. No doubt the significance of general terms in an act will change, as those terms may themselves be varyingly described by other acts from time to time. The punishment for larceny means the punishment for what the Legislature may from time to time make larceny. The phrase “Northern district of New York” is not a general term. It described, when it was used, a definite territory, as though it had used metes and bounds. It is quite true that the descriptive term has since.been given another meaning; but that does not change the particular legislative intent to include just the territory, properly described in 1818 by that description, for, as I have said, it was the locus of origin of the wrong that excluded it from the jurisdiction of this .court. It cannot be assumed that this intention changed when the old district
Upon the second ground I will deny the motion as to the third, fourth, and seventh causes of action, and grant it as to the rest. Upon the plaintiff's opening he frankly stated that all the assignments had been obtained without consideration and were held practically in trust for the assignors; that is to say, the proceeds, or some portion of them, were to be turned back to the assignors in the event of success. This would very clearly constitute a collusive assignment, tinder Farmington v. Pillsbury, 114 U. S. 138, 5 Sup. Ct. 807, 29 L. Ed. 114, Lehigh Mining Co. v. Kelly, 160 U. S. 327, 16 Sup. Ct. 307, 40 L. Ed. 444, Lake County Commissioners v. Dudley, 173 U. S. 243, 19 Sup. Ct. 398, 43 L. Ed. 684, and Waite v. Santa Cruz, 184 U. S. 302, 22 Sup. Ct. 327, 46 L. Ed. 552; and if all the claims were obtained in this way it would be my duty to dismiss the complaint as to all seven causes of action, But there are other considerations which apply to this case, which do not seem to have occurred in any of the authorities I have examined. The ¿Etna Insurance Company, having paid, a loss of $2,376, as stated in the fourth cause of action, would have been entitled to bring a suit for that sum in the United States Circuit Court.- So far as the assignment of that claim by the Etna Company to the plaintiff is concerned, it cannot, therefore, be collusive, for the plaintiff got no greater rights of jurisdiction under it than the assignor had itself. It does not appear in Lake County Commissioners v. Dudley, 173 U. S. 243, 19 Sup. Ct. 398, 43 L. Ed. 684, that Dudley had procured enough coupons from any one of the nonresident assignors to bring the case as to him up to the jurisdictional amount.
As to the fourth cause of action, in which the .¿Etna Company had the claim of over $2,000, the jurisdiction of this court is not, therefore, collusive. I cannot, however, on this motion, determine whether the recovery in this cause of action must be limited to the ¿Etna claim, or may include the other elements of damage which go to make it up. Even if these several claims were susceptible each of independent suit when separated, they were none the less, when united, all items of damage in one action on the case, and constituted, when united, a single cause of action. Jacobs v. N. Y. Central R. R., 107 App. Div. 134, 94 N. Y. Supp. 954, affirmed on opinion below 186 N. Y. 586, 79 N. E. 1108. The motion to dismiss cannot be directed, therefore, at the several items of this cause of action seriatim; for the court had jurisdiction at least as to a part, and the question of jurisdiction alone is raised at this time.
In the third and seventh causes of action, the ¿Etna claims were below the jurisdictional amount; but, when united by collusive assignment to the other items of damage, the amortnt in each case became above $2,000. I regard the - collusive obtaining of additional items of damage to raise above $2,000 these .¿Etna claims, and the plaintiff’s own claim in the fifth cause of action, as precisely similar to obtaining the collusive assignment of independent and separable claims. It seems to me to make no'difference whatever that the items of damage
The question as to the third and seventh causes of action must therefore be decided in the same, way as though the Ætna Company had tried tinder the New York Code to sue in this court upon the third, fourth, and seventh causes of action, seeking to carry along into the jurisdiction of this court the third and seventh, because it could properly claim jurisdiction in the fourth. I have not found any case in the Supreme Court controlling this question; but it has been decided in the Circuit Courts, by authority which T am bound to follow, that when one plaintiff in good faitli procures assignments of several claims each below the jurisdictional amount, but together aggregating over $2,000, this court has jurisdiction. Bowden v. Burnham, 59 Fed. 752, 8 C. C. A. 248, decided in the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, and four other cases in the Circuit Court cited in that case on page 755 of 59 Eed. and page 252 of 8 C. C. A. I confess that as an original question I should have thought otherwise; but I am not free to disregard so much authority, and it follows from that authority that any person, himself holding claims below the jurisdictional amount, may, if permitted by the local rules of joinder, bring them all together for determination into this court. The result is to bring into this court separate actions of less than the proper amount; but that appears to be the necessary result of the decisions 1 have cited. This would, therefore, result in dismissing the motion in respect of the third and seventh causes of action, in which there were ¿Etna claims below £2,000, as well as in respect of the fourth.
There remain the first, second, fifth, and sixth causes of action. On one of these, the second, the Rondon Assurance Company paid a loss of less than $2,000; but the fact that the assignor is a foreign corporation has no bearing, if it could not have sued independently, as was the fact. Nor, in my judgment, could the Rondon Assurance Company have bettered its position by taking colorable assignments of the other items of damage, even though at the end there resulted a cause of action of over $2,000. As to the remaining causes of action, the assignors could by no possibility have come to this court; nor could the ¿Etna Company, by procuring colorable assignments of them, have joined ihem to the third, fourth, and seventh causes of action, if I am right. If so, the plaintiff is in no better position, and they must he dismissed upon the second ground.
I conclude, therefore, that the motion is good upon the second ground as against all the causes of action except the third, fourth, and seventh, but that whether those causes of action can be pressed for more than the Ætna claim cannot be decided upon this motion, and must be reserved till the trial.
The third objection was based upon the theory that the liability arising from a tortious act was not assignable at common law; that the
Besides, an assignment, even of a chose in action, is no more than a power of attorney to sue in the assignor’s name. A right of action on the case was no more difficult of assignment than a chose in action. The trouble was the same in each case, i. e., merely that the obligor could not be called on to perform except secundum tenorem, and hence no one could ask him to pay a substituted party when his obligation ran only to the original party. This formal difficulty was avoided by the fiction of a power of attorney, and the statute giving the power to sue, in the assignee’s name was merely a regulation of procedure, which must be followed here, as has been often decided. A power of attorney at common law was as good in an action on the case as in an action in special assumpsit.
I therefore conclude that the third objection to all the causes of action is without basis; but because this objection is not to the jurisdic
Let judgment be entered dismissing the complaint as to all the causes of action for lack of jurisdiction. If the counsel for the plaintiff will prepare a certificate stating that the dismissal was for lack of jurisdiction upon the first two grounds mentioned, I will certify these questions to the Supreme Court.