The facts involved in the present motion are matters of record and are sufficiently set forth in the opinions upon the motions previously decided in 165 Fed. 241, and 177 Fed. 547.
The earlier of these motions was an application to remand to the state court from which the action had been removed, the plaintiff alleging that certain necessary defendants were citizens of the same state as himself. It appeared that these parties were not indispensable, and the motion was denied. The later application was for a dismissal of the action upon affidavits alleging facts from which it was apparent that the present situation was likely to develop, and also setting up the death of one of the defendants whose personal representatives had not sought to have themselves brought in, and
The defendant contends ás a primary proposition that the present action is in form what is known as a representative or stockholder’s action. The plaintiff alleges in his complaint that he brings suit for himself and for all others who as minority stockholders have been affected by the various transactions in a similar way to himself, and who may come in and share in the burdens and benefits of the action. A number of cases have been cited upon this question, such as Davenport v. Dows, 85 U. S. 626, 21 L. Ed. 938, in which Judge Davis said:
“That a stockholder may bring a suit when a corporation refuses is settled in Dodge v. Woolsey, 18 How. 340 [15 L. Ed. 401], but such a suit can only be maintained on the ground that the rights of the corporation are involved. * * * Á court of equity will not take cognizance of a bill brought to settle a question in which the corporation is the essential party in interest, unless it is made a party to the litigation.”
Dewing v. Perdicaries, 96 U. S. 193, 24 L. Ed. 654, Central Railroad Co. of New Jersey v. Mills et al., 113 U. S. 249, 5 Sup. Ct. 456, 28 L.
The plaintiff herein attempts to meet the charge that this is a representative action, and that the Houston & Texas Central Railway Company (which has not been served) is a necessary party to the suit. He has cited Rogers v. Penobscot Mining Co., 154 Fed. 606, 83 C. C. A. 380, and Sioux City Terminal R. & W. Co. v. Trust Co. of N. A., 82 Fed. 124, 27 C. C. A. 73, in which the courts discuss at length the provisions of section 737 of the Revised Statutes (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 587), and equity rule 47. But these cases do not settle for us the question whether the Houston & Texas Central Railway Company is an indispensable rather than a proper party in the present action. In the case of Rogers v. Penobscot Mining Co., supra, a number of citations are given and a clear definition of indispensable and proper parties furnished on page 616 of the report. The conclusion is that the defendants in question were necessary parties under the old chancery rule, but not indispensable parties under the section and rule above referred to, “because a final decree can be rendered herein between the complainants and the defendants, which will completely adjudicate their rights, without binding or injuriously affecting the rights of the defendants not served.” Recently in this circuit, in the case of Kuchler v. Greene (C. C.) 163 Fed. 91, and again in Slater Trust Co. v. Randolph-Macon Coal Co. (C. C.) 166 Fed. 171, the Circuit Court of the Southern District of New York passed upon the question whether a certain defendant was an indispensable party. In the Kuchler v. Greene Case the action was against individuals for an accounting of profits as between stockholders, while in the Randolph-Macon Case the real controversy was against certain directors, who were being sued for fraud by bondholders who asked for money damages, and, while each case is near enough in its nature to the case at bar to afford some aspects of a representative action, nevertheless the actual relief there demanded would not seem to be the restoration of rights to the corporation itself, to be there devoted to corporation purposes for the benefit of the plaintiff, as is the case in the present action. In Payne v. Hook, 7 Wall. 425, 19 L. Ed. 260, the Supreme Court of the United States said that the rule requiring all persons materially interested to be made parties to an action should yield if the
Many cases are cited in support of this proposition, and Mr. Justice Story in West v. Randall, 2 Mason, 181, Fed. Cas. No. 17,424, again refers to the necessity of such a yielding of rule in the United States Courts, where the limited nature of its authority might otherwise oust the court of jurisdiction. In Ervin and Others v. Oregon Railway & Nav. Co. (C. C.) 20 Fed. 577, a corporation was held not to be indispensable as it was not a going concern, when the plaintiffs, who were formerly stockholders, attempted to follow into the hands of third parties assets that had been transferred by the corporation before it ceased to exist. The doctrine asserted in this case is more nearly applicable to the present litigation than any of the other cases cited, and but for the peculiar facts of this case might be taken as a precedent at the present time.
In the present action, however, the charge is that the missing defendant company, which now appears to have but one director within the state of New York, and to be doing no business in that state, to have had no election of directors since 1885, and to have had no meetings of any sort since the decree of foreclosure under which the property was sold, should nevertheless be brought to life, and its directors should sue the other defendants to recover the property which it is charged was illegally transferred or allowed to be transferred for the benefit of certain majority stockholders. And prior to the death of the defendant Olcott there was also present the question as to the ownership of certain land admittedly available as security for an issue of bonds, but, if more than sufficient to secure that issue, apparently originally an asset of this absent defendant corporation.
The plaintiff does not seek to recover a share of the profits of any of the transactions of the corporation or its majority stockholders. He does not seek to- obtain damages, nor is there any theory shown upon which he can prove damage to his property, nor as to which an accounting would result in a decree in which compensation could be computed upon the plaintiff's rights as distinguished from his ulti-' mate position as a stockholder in the absent corporation. It would seem to be necessary to hold, therefore, that this action cannot proceed without the presence of the Houston & Texas Central Railway Company as a party thereto. Nor can it be urged that this railway company can be aligned as anything but a defendant, and therefore entitled to representation upon any trial. It is the real party in interest if the sales of its property were invalid, and it is accused of the wrongdoing by which its property was sold.
We therefore must consider what the situation is with this corporation a necessary and indispensable party, which has not been and cannot be served in such a manner in the present action as to give this court jurisdiction over it. This defendant corporation must be brought into this court by proper service, and it appearing that a corporation doing no business within the state, and, having no one who can be served either as officer or director, when engaged in the business of the
In the case of In re Moore, 209 U. S. 490, 28 Sup. Ct. 585, 706, 52 L. Ed. 904, the differences and difficulties found in the numerous decisions of removal cases are referred to, and the provisions of the various sections of the law — chapter 137 of 1875, as amended by chapter 866 of 1888, and chapter 373 of 1887 — are discussed. The court therein explained the case of Ex parte Wisner, 203 U. S. 449, 27 Sup. Ct. 150, 51 L. Ed. 264, and held, citing many other cases, that the general description of jurisdiction of United States courts set forth in section 1 of the act of 1888, above quoted, allows the removal of any case into the proper Circuit Court of the United States from a state court, when the Circuit Courts of the United States generally would have jurisdiction of the subject-matter of such an action, or when a controversy between the parties to the suit might be brought in some Circuit Court of the United States, and when the defendants have either waived the right to dispute the jurisdiction of the court of that particular district, rather than that of some other district, or have consented to the choice of districts by bringing removal proceedings on their own behalf. The court says on page 506 of 209 U. S., on page 591 of 28 Sup. Ct., 52 L. Ed. 904:
“So long as diverse citizenship exists, the Circuit Courts of the United States have a general jurisdiction. That jurisdiction may be invoked in an action originally brought in a Circuit Court or one subsequently removed from a state court, and, if any objection arises to the particular court which does not run to the Circuit Court as a class, that objection may be waived by the party entitled to make it. As we have seen in this case, the defendant applied for a removal of the case to the federal court. Thereby he is foreclosed from objecting to its jurisdiction. In like manner, after the removal had been ordered, the plaintiff elected to remain in that court, and he is, equally with the defendant, precluded from making objection to its jurisdiction.”
The statement, “The defendant applied for a removal of the case to. the federal court. Thereby he is foreclosed from objecting to its jurisdiction,” would seem to be an express holding that the application for removal is a waiver of any objection to the exercise of the jurisdiction which some Circuit Court of the United States might have, as
“That the defendant consented to accept the jurisdiction of the United States court is obvious. It filed a petition for removal from the state to the United States court. No clearer expression of its acceptance of the jurisdiction of the latter court could be had.”
In the present case an exactly similar situation exists. The defendants have not objected to the jurisdiction of the United States court. They have riot attempted to appear specially, except for the purpose of removing the case, and they have filed pleas, thereby admitting the jurisdiction of this court over the parties and its right to determine whether it has jurisdiction over the cause of action. Venner v. Great Northern Railway Co., supra, at page 35 of 209 U. S., at page 328 of 28 Sup. Ct., 52 L. Ed. 666.
The statements in the Moore Case are broad enough to cover the case of a defendant who has appeared specially, solely for the purpose of removal, and then has objected to the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of the United States upon the sole ground that the suit could not have been originally brought in that particular district. It would seem to follow that in such a case the right to make an objection of that nature — that is, to the jurisdiction of the court over the parties— had been waived. But the present case goes a step further. It is similar to a motion to dismiss by a defendant who has appeared specially and removed the case upon the ground that the service of the parties has not been of such nature as to allow the action to be maintained in the Circuit Court of the United States under the provisions of section 3 of the act. This section provides that, after removal, the cause shall then proceed in the same manner as if it had been originally commenced in the said Circuit Court. But section 5 of said act further provides that if at any time it shall appear that the suit does not properly belong within the jurisdiction of said Circuit Court, or there has been improper or collusive joinder of parties, that the Circuit Court shall proceed no further therein, “but shall dismiss the suit or remand it to the court from which it was removed, as justice may' require.” It may be noted here that in some cases the sentence just ' quoted has been interpreted to mean that, if the court does not appear to have jurisdiction, the suit shall be dismissed, if begun in the Circuit Court, but that it shall be remanded if removal has been had. See Northern Pac. Ter. Co. v. Lowenberg (C. C.) 18 Fed. 339. But the words in the alternative, followed by the phrase “as justice may require,” which have been quoted above, do not indicate that this sentence was intended to be applied in the respectively consecutive way .just indicated, but, on the contrary, when either of the conditions arise, the proper alternative remedy should be applied to that condition. With respect to the question of when an action should be dismissed, if •a defendant appeared specially and removed the case, and then claimed that the court had not jurisdiction of the action and could not proceed to final judgment, it is only necessary to refer-to such decisions as Goldey v. Morning News, supra, where an action was dismissed because the service of the parties was not such as would justify the main
In the present case the alleged defect does not lie in the method of service. It does not lie in a question as to whether the parties now here are properly before the court, nor whether they can object to the court’s disposing of the case. Its right so to do is admitted. But the precise objection is that the case cannot proceed to judgment through the lack of an indispensable party, and that the objection on that ground must be considered exactly as if the action had been instituted in the Circuit Court of the United States originally, and upon the trial plaintiff had been confronted with an objection to proceeding in the absence of this indispensable defendant. There would be no answer to such a situation, and in a case at law a dismissal or the withdrawal of a juror, accompanied by the granting of leave to amend or to bring in the party (or in a case tried without a jury similar action in the appropriate way), would be necessary.
The defendants insist that upon the testimony offered, the action being now before the court on a hearing upon the pleas raising these precise questions, and it admittedly being impossible to serve or to obtain the appearance of the missing defendant, no alternative exists other than that the action should be dismissed. Such a decision would leave the plaintiff apparently remediless, for he could not serve the various defendants in any Circuit Court of the United States, and he could not start an action in the state court, as every action of this nature would be subject to removal and a similar dismissal. The effect of this interpretation would be to make the act of Congress not jurisdictional for the sake of removing and hearing the cause, but jurisdictional to the extent of taking the plaintiff from a forum where his case could be heard, and compelling him to litigate in a forum where his case could not be heard, and from which he could not escape with the possibility of bringing his action in any other court.
The two positions are exactly illustrated by the cases of Goldey v. Morning News, and Ex parte Wisner, above referred to. The language of the court in the Goldey Case intimated that wherever an action was brought under such circumstances that the courts had exercised the jurisdiction given by Congress under the Constitution to the extent of providing a method by which the United States court must, if its power were invoked, take charge of the case, such jurisdiction was then exclusive, and should not be relinquished when the parties had not instituted their action by ways which complied with the necessary requirements of the United States Circuit Court. The Wisner Case, on the other hand (while holding that the removal statutes had narrowed the jurisdiction of the Circuit Courts, and while applying the rule as to the limitation of jurisdiction as to the particular district of residence, which limitation has since been in effect removed by the case of In re Moore, supra), nevertheless held that if the defendant appeared specially for the purpose of removal, and then raised the question of lack of jurisdiction, and if the plaintiff accepted that contention and asked for remand, the remedy should not be dismissal, but that the Circuit Court should have remanded the case; a manda
The sole question presented in the last analysis upon this motion is whether an action should be dismissed for lack of an indispensable party, when all- other elements of jurisdiction over the case are present, and when such dismissal might deprive the plaintiff from maintaining his action in any forum, it being apparent that, wherever brought, the suit might be subject to removal into the United States court, and then to dismissal for the same reason. The statute providing for the removal of causes was intended to give litigants residing in different states an opportunity to remove cases into a forum which would apply the laws relating to the case in a uniform manner without reference to where the court might be held; that is, to free the trial of the action from the legal restrictions or conditions of the courts of either party’s home. The provision that after removal the removed case shall proceed as if originally begun in the United States court means that from that time on the rights of the parties provided the case can be considered by the court are to be interpreted according to their actual positions when tested by the standards of the laws of the United States, with reference to their claims for relief. If it were not for the language of section 5, providing for dismissal or remand “as justice may require,” there would be no room for argument. The exercise of the power to remand when justice does require has been established by the cases already cited. As such action is an exercise of discretion, appeal does not lie, while from an order of dismissal on ground of lack of jurisdiction, an appeal may be had. Goldey v. Morning News, supra, at page 520 of 156 U. S., at page 559 of 15 Sup. Ct., 39 L. Ed. 517, and Courtney v. Pradt, 196 U. S. 89, 25 Sup. Ct. 208, 49 L. Ed. 398. In the present instance, if the word “justice” be interpreted to mean the possibility of bringing the various defendants into court, then remand would be the only remedy. If “justice” means a hearing and disposition of the case by a court having jurisdiction of a controversy between citizens of different states, and also jurisdiction pver all of the parties before it, with a determination that no judgment against any defendant can be entered, because an indispensable defendant has not and cannot be made party to the suit, then the present
The question is very similar to that raised in cases where service of the parties has been obtained by methods which will not stand the test of the United States court rules and decisions. Where a party has been sued in a district other than that of his residence, but when the amount involved is sufficient and the parties are citizens of diverse states, it is apparent that some United States court has jurisdiction of such a cause of action, and that the particular parties to the action are within its jurisdiction to the extent of determining whether it will proceed to judgment. But, if the defect be only that the suit has been instituted in a way which the United States courts will not recognize as sufficient to allow the entry of judgment, dismissal is the remedy, rather than to exercise jurisdiction in a case in which the court is not satisfied to allow that judgment to be entered in some other forum, with the sanction of the United States court, upon the very point which it has already determined would not justify a judgment in the United States court itself. Such cases as have been cited establish the proposition that if jurisdiction exists over the subject-matter of the action, but if there is a defect in jurisdiction over the parties, that question of jurisdiction should be determined as if the action had been begun in the United States Circuit Court in the first instance; and the conclusion would seem to be necessary that for this court to send the present action (which is between citizens of different states, which has been properly removed into this district, and which could be determined as between the parties before the court, if no one else were necessary to such determination, and hence in which there is no defect of jurisdiction but simply lack of parties) to a state court for trial, and thereby to hold that such a suit does not properly belong within the jurisdiction of this court, or that there has been improper or collusive joinder of parties, is impossible, and it must be held that the defendants interposing the pleas are entitled to judgment dismissing the action, if the absent party be not brought in within a reasonable time.