41 F. 723 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1890
This is á motion to remand this suit to the state court in which it was originally brought, and from which it was removed upon the petition of the Denver, Texas & Fort Worth Railroad Company, one of the three defendants. The petition for removal alleges that the plaintiffs are citizens and residents of the state of New York; that-the Denver, Texas & Fort Worth Railroad Company is a corporation of the state of Colorado; that the defendant the Colorado & Texas Construction Company is a corporation of the state of Iowa; and that the Mercantile Trust Company is a corporation of the state of New York, “but is a nominal defendant, without any substantial interest in the controversy.” The petition does not state that there is a controversy in the suit which is wholly between citizens of different states, and which can be fully determined as between them. The question which has been argued is whether the record discloses a controversy which is wholly between citizens of different states, and which can be fully determined without the presence of the Mercantile Trust Company. Succinctly stated, the controversy shown by the complaint is, in substance, this: The railroad company has created an issue of bonds, secured by a mortgage to the trust company as a trustee for the bondholders, and has placed the bonds in the hands of the trust company, and the trust company, assuming to be authorized . by a provision contained in the mortgage, is about to deliver 1,000 of these bonds to the construction company. The provision referred to is that these 1,000 bonds are to be issued by the trust company “to be used upon the road-bed of the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad Company,” a railway line which is included in the mortgage. The plaintiffs are stockholders of the railway company, but the majority of the stockholders are also stockholders of the construction company, and control the railway company in the interest of the construction company. Under this control the railway company has made a corrupt bargain with the construction company, by which the latter is to be paid a large sum
The averment in the petition that the trust company is only a nominal party is the averment of a legal conclusion, and is overthrown by the facts which appear in the complaint, and the nature of the relief sought. It may be that the cause of action belongs to the railroad company, and that the suit is one in which its real relation to the controversy is that of a plaintiff. But the removing defendant cannot be heard to assert that the railroad company is the real plaintiff when the parties are arranged according to their real interests, because .its petition proceeds upon the ground, not that the railroad company and the trust company are citizens of different states, but upon the ground that the plaintiffs and the railroad company are citizens of different states and •the trust company ought not to be a party at all. A removing defendant may supplement the case made by his petition by a reference to the facts which appear elsewhere in the record; but it has never been decided that he is at liberty to abandon the ground upon which his petition proceeds, and assert an inconsistent case, and it would be contrary to the spirit of the present removal act, which does not permit a plaintiff to remove a suit, to permit a defendant to avail himself of the privilege upon the theory that the suit is brought in his interest, and he is in reality the plaintiff.
The motion to remand is granted.