This is a diversity suit for breach of contract. The only question we shall have to decide is whether there was, in fact, the required diversity of citizenship.
Contemporary, Inc., a closely held corporation that makes gift items, had three *776 shareholders: the brothers James and Warren Kanzelberger, each of whom owned 45 percent of the corporation’s common stock, and William Deau, who owned 10 percent. James was the president and marketing director, Warren the executive vice-president and general manager, Deau the production manager. The brothers did not get along well, and in February 1983 the three shareholders agreed that the corporation would acquire from Warren Kanzelberger an option to buy his stock; when exercised, the option would give James control of the corporation. As part of the agreement, Warren resigned as an officer of the company, but he remained a director. James Kanzelberger and Deau were left in effective control, but they soon had a falling out, allegedly over James's dictatorial methods. In May, Deau agreed to sell his stock to Warren Kanzelberger, resigned as a director, and, pending completion of the sale of his stock, gave' Warren his proxy. Warren, now in control of 55 percent of the company’s stock, called a meeting of the shareholders for June 7. At this meeting he nominated, and caused to be elected, his wife Geraldine as the third director, in place of Deau; and the board then, by a vote of two to nothing (James not being in attendance), voted James Kanzelberger out of all of his offices and replaced him with Warren. James forthwith attempted to exercise the option for Contemporary to acquire Warren’s stock, but Warren rebuffed him, taking the position that only Contemporary (which he now controlled) could decide whether the option would be exercised. On June 11 a directors’ meeting was held at which the actions taken on June 7 were ratified by a two to nothing vote, with James abstaining.
This suit was brought on June 16 in an Illinois state court by James Kanzelberger and Contemporary, Inc. The complaint identified James as an Illinois citizen and Contemporary, which is incorporated in Illinois, as an Illinois corporation. The defendants named in the complaint, all citizens of Wisconsin, were Warren and Geraldine Kanzelberger and William Deau. On June 17 the defendants filed a petition in a federal district court in Illinois to remove the case from state to federal court. The petition alleged that Contemporary was incorporated in Illinois and had its principal place of business there. The plaintiffs did not move to remand the case to the state court, as they could have done if they had thought removal improper. See 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c). The case was tried and a judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiffs, which among other things ordered specific performance of the option contract; the effect of compliance with this order would be to restore James to his position as president of Contemporary and indeed to give him control of the company. The defendants have appealed. The plaintiffs have cross-appealed, complaining that the judge should have given them additional damages.
At no point in this lawsuit has any party, or the district judge, questioned the existence of federal jurisdiction. But we did, at oral argument, and the helpful responses of counsel to our questions have enabled us to resolve the issue of jurisdiction without having to remand the case for further proceedings.
The only basis on which the defendants could have removed this case to federal court was that the parties were citizens of different states and the defendants were not citizens of the state where the suit was brought (Illinois). 28 U.S.C. §§ 1441(a), (b). The second requirement is satisfied but not the first. James Kanzelberger is a citizen of Illinois, and Warren and Geraldine Kanzelberger and William Deau are citizens of Wisconsin. The question concerns the other plaintiff, Contemporary, Inc. If on June 16 or June 17 it was a citizen of Wisconsin rather than Illinois, complete diversity of citizenship was lacking and the district court had no jurisdiction.
Strawbridge v. Curtiss,
Even when there is no collusion (and we do not suggest that there was here), the federal courts are obliged to police the constitutional and statutory limitations on their jurisdiction. That is why, even at the appellate level, the court must satisfy itself that there is federal jurisdiction over the case. See, e.g.,
Indiana Port Comm’n v. Bethlehem Steel Corp.,
We do not suggest that the district court or this court must always or even often conduct an inquest on jurisdiction; but certainly if deficiencies in the pleadings, or facts brought out in pretrial discovery or at trial, fairly shriek that there is no federal jurisdiction, the district judge must conduct whatever supplementary factual proceedings are necessary to resolve the doubt. Here the probable absence of complete diversity should have been apparent by the third day after the case was removed, when the plaintiffs moved for a temporary restraining order.
In this circuit, a corporation’s principal place of business is the place where the corporation has its nerve center. See
Wisconsin Knife Works v. National Metal Crafters,
But even if this is wrong and on June 6 the corporation’s principal place of business was wherever James had his office, by June 16 when this suit was brought the corporation’s principal place of business was in Wisconsin. For by then James was no longer an officer of Contemporary. The president was Warren, who works out of Manitowoc. Every other officer works in Wisconsin. The plant was there, as we have said. Not only the nerve center, but the body, was on that date in Wisconsin. Only a severed head was in Illinois.
The plaintiffs argue that because, as the district judge found, James was wrongfully dispossessed of his office, we should treat the case as if he had never ceased being the president of Contemporary. But the conclusion does not follow from the premise. Maybe James II was wrongfully dispossessed of his crown during the Glorious Revolution of 1688, but it does not follow that the seat of government followed James to Dublin and then to Paris. Our James was in exile from Contemporary from June 7 on. The suit was not filed till June 16. The plaintiffs asked for a preliminary injunction to restore James to office. When the district judge denied this request he did so in part on the ground that Warren was perfectly capable of running the company until the dispute over control was resolved. There was never any doubt who was running the company after June 7.
Moreover, James will not be heard to complain that Warren attempted to move the principal place of business of the company in order to hurt James. Warren and Geraldine did not try to prevent James from litigating this case in federal court by joining a party whose presence would eliminate complete diversity of citizenship. James did not bring suit in federal court. He defends federal jurisdiction now only because he won on the merits in federal court.
If Contemporary, Inc. were merely a nominal party, maybe we could dismiss it retroactively — even at this late date and without a motion to do so — on the authority of such cases as
Othman v. Globe Indemnity Co.,
We do not have to untie these knots. Whether or not it should have been allowed into the case, Contemporary was as we have said an active litigant and obtained damages. Moreover, its presence may have colored the outcome of James’s suit. The corporation’s presence side by side with James lent some additional credence to his claim that the defendants had *779 usurped control of the corporation — made the dispute seem less a squabble among the shareholders and more an effort by the defendants to despoil the corporation. Having enjoyed whatever trial advantage he got from joining the corporation with him, not to mention the indirect advantage that he derived from the judge’s ordering the defendants to pay several thousand dollars to the corporation of which James is a major shareholder, James cannot now turn around and drop his coplaintiff retroactively in order to cure the jurisdictional defect and confirm his victory on the merits; and anyway he has made no attempt to do so.
We regret having to dismiss a proceeding which has been actively litigated for two and a half years, but there is no doubt that the case is not within the jurisdiction of the federal courts. The judgment must be reversed with directions to vacate all orders in the case and remand it to the state court from which it was removed. No costs in this court.
Reversed with Directions.
