36 F. 735 | U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illnois | 1888
This case is now before the court on a motion by the defendant the Illinois Central Railroad Company to dismiss on the ground that the Dubuque & Sioux City Railroad Company, an Iowa corporation, is made a party defendant in the case, but has not been served with process, and lias not appeared; the moving party insisting that the Dubuque & Sioux City Railroad Company is, upon the issue made by the bill, so far interested in the subject-matter of the controversy as to make it an indispensable party to the suit, and without wbicli the suit
“ Upon the actual structure of the bill it is very clear that Swan is a necessary party, and that no relief can be had against the other defendants until the debt is established against him. The whole frame of the bill points to this conclusion; and the process and proceedings to compel Swan to come in all show that he is deemed an indispensable party, or, in the sense of a court of chancery, an active and not merely a passive party. * * * The general principle is perfectly well settled that the defendant may have the bill of the plaintiff dismissed for non-prosecution, if the plaintiff does not proceed within a reasonable time. * * * The present is a case where co-defendants, having answered, insist upon the right to dismiss the bill on account of the non-prosecution of the same against Swan. It would be an intolerable grievance, if co-defendants could not insist upon such aright; for it might otherwise happen that the cause could not be brought to a hearing against them alone, and thus they might be held in court for an indefinite period, perhaps during their whole lives, and very valuable property in their hands be incapable of any safe alienation. Ro court of justice, and least of all a court of equity, could be presumed to suffer its practice to become the instrument of such gross mischief. We accordingly find it very clearly established that a co-defendant possesses such a right. ”
The bill in this case alleges that, in the month of September, 1866, the Cedar Falls & Minnesota Railroad Company, a corporation of the state of Iowa, authorized to construct and operate a railroad from Cedar Falls in said state, along the Cedar valley to the south line of the the state of Minnesota, made a lease for the term of 40 years of its entire railroad and railroad property to the Dubuque & Sioux City Railroad Company, at a fixed rental of $1,500 per year for each mile of road operated, with provisions for an increase of such rental in case the earnings per year
Upon this statement of the scope and nature of the bill and the relief asked the question arises, does this bill upon its face show the Dubuque & Sioux City Railroad Company to bo a necessary party to this suit? What parties must be before the court in order to enable a court of equity to proceed, is stated in Story, Eq. PI. § 72, as follows:
‘ “It has been remarked that courts of equity adopt two leading principles for determining the proper parties to a suit. One of them is a principle admitted in all courts upon questions affecting the suitor’s person and liberty, as well as his property, namely, that the rights of no man shall be finally decided in a court of justice unless he himself is present, or at least unless he has had a full opportunity to appear and vindicate his rights. The other is that, when a decision is made upon a particular subject-matter, the rights of all persons, whose interests are immediately connected with that decision, and affected by it, shall be provided for, as far as they reasonably may be. * * * It is the constant aim of courts of equity to do complete justice, by deciding upon and settling the rights of all persons interested in the subject-matter of the suit, so that the performance of the decree of the court may be perfectly safe to those who are compelled to obey it, and also that future litigation may be-pr even ted.”
Then, at section 138, he says:
“It the defendants actually before the court may be subjected to undue inconvenience, or to danger of loss, or to future litigation, or to a liability under the decree, more extensive or direct than if the absent parties were before the court, that of itself will in many cases furnish a sufficient ground to enforce the rule of making the absent persons parties.”
The doctrine as to w'ho are indispensable parties is very clearly stated by the supreme court in Barney v. Baltimore City, 6 Wall. 284, as follows:
“The learning on the subject of parties to suits in chancery is copious, and within a limited extent the principles which govern their introduction are flex-*739 iblo. There is a class of persons having such relations to the matter in controversy, merely formal or otherwise, that while they maybe called proper parties, the court will take no account of the omission to make them parties. There is another class of persons whose relations to the suit are such that, if their interest and their absence are formally brought to the attention of the court, it will require them to be made parties, if within its jurisdiction, before deciding the case; but if this cannot be done it will proceed to administer such relief as may be in its power, between the parties before it. And there is a third class, whose interests in the subject-matter of the suit and in the relief sought are so bound up with that of the other parties that their legal presence as parties to the proceeding is an absolute necessity, without which the court cannot proceed. In such cases the court refuses to entertain the suit when these parties cannot be subjected to its jurisdiction. This class cannot be better described than in the language of this court, in Shields v. Barrow, [17 How. 130,] in which a very able and satisfactory discussion of the whole subject is had. They are there said to be ‘ persons who not only have an interest in the controversy, but an interest of such a nature that a final decree cannot be made without either affecting that interest or leaving the cont ro-versy in such a condition that its final determination may be wholly inconsistent with equity and good conscience.’ ”
It is manifest that this suit involves a construction of the lease made by tlio Dubuque & Sioux City Railroad Company to the Illinois Central llailroad Company. It raises the question whether by that lease the Illinois Central Company assumed the lease of the Cedar Falls & Minnesota llailroad for 40 years from its dato, and is bound to operate said Cedar Falls & Minnesota road, and pay rentals therefor, for the entire term, notwithstanding the expiration of the lease of the Dubuque & Sioux City road. By the showing of the bill the Illinois Central Railroad Company made no contract in regard to the matters in controversy directly with the Cedar Falls & Minnesota Company. The entire relation between the Illinois Central Railroad Company and the Cedar Falls & Minnesota Railroad Company is created by the lease of the Dubuque & Sioux City Railroad Company, and the clause in that lease assuming the lease of the Cedar Falls & Minnesota Railroad; and the important and natural question will bo, in the light of the terms of the lease itself and of the surrounding circumstances, was it the intention of the parties to the lease of the Dubuque & Sioux City road that the assumption clause should bind the Illinois Central Company for the entire term of the lease of the Cedar Falls & Minnesota road, or was it their intention that the assumption clause should cease, and the Cedar Falls & Minnesota road be relumed to the Dubuque & Sioux CityCompaiiyalthe expiration of the 20 years, if the lease was not extended, or was this assumption clause in the contract a provision within the control of the parties who made it, so that, even if by its terms the assumption was for the full term of the lease of the Cedar Falls & Minnesota Railroad, yet it was competent for the parties to rescind or change it, or, yet further, if the Illinois Central Company, by reason of the facts stated in the bill, shall be held, as towards the holders of these bonds, to be estopped from denying that the assumption of the lease was for the full term of 40 years, still the Dubuque & Sioux City Company is a necessary party to the bill, in order that it, too, may be decreed to
This suit was commenced the 1st of March, 1888. The defendant the Illinois Central Railroad Company filed its answer on the 9th of May last. ' The appearance of the Cedar Falls & Minnesota Railroad Company seems to have been entered, without service of process, on the 23d of March last, but no answer has been filed by that company. A replication, however, was filed to the answer of the Illinois Central Railroad Company, and the case is now at issue, so far as that company is con
I have not, in passing upon this motion, considered any of the matters set up in the answer of the Illinois Central Railroad Company by way of defense to the matters alleged in the bill, but have passed upon the motion solely on the face of the bill itself. It was urged in argument very strenuously on the part of complainants from the showing of the ■ bill that the Dubuque & Sioux City Railroad Company had become merged in the Illinois Central Railroad Company. It is true the bill charges that the Illinois Central Railroad Company has obtained control of the stock of the Dubuque & Sioux City Railroad Company. ‘ This allegation, upon the familiar rule that statements of this character wall be taken most strongly against the pleader, only implies that the Illinois Central Railroad Company has obtained a majority of the*stock of the Dubuque & Sioux City Railroad Company. It does not appear but that there is still a minority of the stockholders of the Dubuque & Sioux City Railroad Company who hold their stock and are interested in that company, but, even if the Illinois Central Railroad Company is the owner of the entire stock of the Dubuque & Sioux City Railroad Company, still, the Dubuque & Sioux City Railroad Company is a separate entity, exercising its rights and franchises under the laws of the state of Iowa, and is as essentially a necessary party to the case as if its stock were held by others than the Illinois Central Railroad Company.- Upon this question I read an instructive extract from an opinion of the supremo court in Car Co. v. Railroad Co., 115 U. S. 597, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 198
“The Missouri Pacific Company has bought the stock of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Soutliern Company, and has effected a satisfactory election of directors, but this is all. It has all the advantages of a control of the road, but that is not, in law, the control itself. Practically it may control the company, but the company alone controls its road. In a sense the stockholders of a corporation own its property, but they are not the managers of its business, or in*742 theimmediatecontrolofits affairs. Ordinarily they elect the governing body of the corporation, and that body controls its property. Such is the case here. The Missouri Pacino Company owns enough of the stock of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern to control the election of directors, and this it has done. The directors now control the road through their own agents and executive officers, and these agents and officers are in no way under the direction of the Missouri Pacific Company. If they or the directors act contrary to the wishes of the Missouri Pacific Company, that company has no power to prevent it, except by the election, at the proper time and in the proper way, of other directors, or by some judicial proceeding for the protection of its interest as a stockholder. Its rights and its powers are those of a stockholder only. It is not the corporation, in the sense of that term as applied to the management of the corporate business or the control of the corporate property.”
This case and all the reasons of the court upon it seem to me to completely answer all the.allegations of this bill as to the Illinois Central Company’s control of the Dubuque & Sioux City Company, and by the light of this decision it is clear that the Dubuque & Sioux City road is a separate entity of itself, and as such is necessarily a party, so that the court may make its decree so as to bind all parties to be affected by it.