This appeal from an order of the District Court for the Southern District of New York dismissing a complaint for improper venue brings us for the first time a question of the interpretation of 28 U.S.C. § 1391(c) that has divided the district courts and the commentators ever since its enactment twenty years ago. We join the twо other courts of appeals which have considered the issue in holding that the second clause of the section does not refer to a corporation as plaintiff.
The action here sought injunctive relief and damages for adverse publicity resulting, from defendant’s alleged instigation of a lawsuit by his controlled corporation against plaintiff in the District Court for the Northern District of California. Federal jurisdiction was founded only on diversity of citizenship. Although not licensed under New York law, plaintiff, a Connecticut corporation, claims to be doing business in Manhattan. Dеfendant, a resident of California, was served while in the Southern District. The applicable venue statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1391(a), says that such an action may “be brought only in the judicial district where all plaintiffs or all defend *630 ants reside, or in which the claim arose.” It is common ground that venue was improper unless plaintiff was a resident of the Southern District of New York.
To sustain its claim of residence plaintiff points to 28 U.S.C. § 1391(c), which was added in the revision of 1948, and particularly the second clause. The section reads:
A corporation may be sued in any judicial district in which it is incorporated or licensed to do business or is doing business, and such judicial district shall be regarded as the residence of such corporation for venue purposes.
Although we are in agreement with Judge Sobeloff’s view that, despite its seeming generality, the second clause was no more intended to apply to a corporate plaintiff than the first, Robert E. Lee & Co. v. Veatch,
The parties agreе we should begin with the statutory language. Both assert its meaning to be plain, although opposite. Defendant says that “such corporation” in the second clause must mean a defendant corporation since that is what the first clause is talking about. Judge Sobeloff thought “[t]his would certainly be thе more natural usage of the ‘such.’ ”
Section 1391(c) had a considerable background in history, much of which is reviewed in the two opinions in Neirbo Co. v. Bethlehem Shipbuilding, Corp.,
Appellant’s argument is that this important objective was fully accomplished by the first clause of § 1391(c) and the “canon” directing a court to avoid redundancy thus requires us to assume that the second clause had another purpose, namely, to give foreign corporations federal venue privileges as plaintiffs coextensive with their obligations as defendants. We find the argument defective in several particulars.
To begin, we do not accept the premise. The first clause of § 1391(c) did most of the necessary work but not all. One problem it did not reach was that of Suttle v. Reich Bros. Construction Co.,
Beyond this we find it exceedingly hard to believe Congress had any idea that by enacting § 1391(c) it was allowing a corporation which did business in a multitude of districts to sue in any of them irrespective of the residence of the defendant, although a natural person similarly doing business in a number of districts could sue only in the district of his residence or in that of the defendant. Thе problem of venue with respect to corporate defendants had been bothersome, particularly because the statute did not then allow venue to be laid apart from residence in a district “in which the claim arose” — a provision added only in 1966, 80 Stat. 1111. As indicated,
Neirbo
had done a good deal to alleviate the problem but not enough. A broadened conception of residence for corporate defendants wa§ thus “a response to a general conviction that it was ‘intolerable if the traditional concepts of “residence” аnd “presence” kept a corporation from being sued wherever it was creating liabilities.’ ” Transmirra Prods. Corp. v. Fourco Glass Co.,
Wе find no sufficient countervailing force in plaintiff’s other arguments. It urges that its reading would broaden a corporation’s choice of venue under the 1962 statute relating to actions against federal officers, employees, or agencies, 28 U.S.C. § 1391(e), and thus help to deal with the problem encountered in Abbott Laboratories, Inc. v. Gardner,
The judgment dismissing the complaint for improper venue is affirmed.
Notes
. Followed in Carter-Beveridge Drilling Co. v. Hughes,
. Not suprisingly the same view with respect to the meaning of the second clause is taken in 1 Barron & Holtzoff, Federal Practice and Procedure § 80 at 387-88 (Wright ed. 1960). In an article written while the 1948 revision was under way, Professor Wechsler stated rather cursorily that the proposed § 1391(c) would enable a corporate plaintiff in a diversity ease “to lay venue in any district in which it does businеss.” Federal Jurisdiction and the Revision of the Judicial Code, 13 Law and Contemporary Problems 216, 240 n. 126 (1948). Five years later he and his distinguished co-author seemed to have become doubtful that the clause had this “drastic and unannounced effect.” Hart & Wechsler, The Federal Courts and the Federal System 959 (1953). Professor Moore is “sympathetic with the result reached by the courts that hold § 1391(c) applies to a corporate plaintiff, as well as to a corporate defendant” but does “not believe they have correctly construed the provision,” 1 Federal Practice ([0.142 [5.-3] at 1503 (1964).
. Judge Sobeloff thought the obscure Reviser’s Note was directed to just this point,
In subsection (c), references to defendants “found" within a district or voluntarily appearing were omitted. The use of the word “found” made said section 111 ambiguous. The argument that an action could be brought in the district where one defendant was “found,” was rejected in Camp v. Gress, 1919,250 U.S. 308 ,39 S.Ct. 478 ,63 L.Ed. 997 . However, this ambiguity will be obviated in the future by the omission of such reference.
. In Pure Oil Co. v. Suarez,
supra,
. Representative Keogh and Senator Donnell also advanced the view that the bill had not included controversial changes where these could be avoided. Hearings before Subcommittee No. 1 of the Committee in the Judiciary in H.R. 1600 and H.R. 2055, 80th Cong., 1st Sess. 6 (1947); 94 Cong.Rec. 7928 (1948). Moreover, the House Committee Report states that § 1391 makes only “minor changes” in existing law. H.R.Rep.No. 308, 80th Cong., 1st Sess. (1947).
. The case for doing this is even poorer now that a corporate plaintiff can sue in any district where the cause of action arose, regardless of the defendant’s residence. The American Law Institute’s proposals do not make the plaintiff’s residence a basis for venue in general diversity or federal question jurisdiction. ALI, Study of the Division of Jurisdiction between State and Federal Courts, §§ 1303 and 1314 (1969).
. The problem that arose in Abbott Laboratories could be solved quitе simply by changing “the plaintiff” in § 1391(e) (4) to “a plaintiff.” Another course is a special definition of the residence of corporate plaintiffs for actions against the United States or federal officers similar to that recommended by the ALI for corporate defendants in general diversity and federal question cases. See Study of Division, supra, § 1326(b). The definition is considerably narrower than the first clause of § 1391(c).
