Opposing parties in this case contracted on June 15, 1981 for fifteen years. Mesa Operating Limited Partnership (Mesa) was to sell and Louisiana Intrastate Gas Corp. (LIG) was to buy royalty gas belonging to the State of Louisiana for which Mesa served as agent. The contract contained an arbitration provision under which the parties were to arbitrate “any controversy between the parties ... arising under this Contract.” § 8.1. The contract was performed satisfactorily to both sides for about two years. Mesa alleges that some time before July, 1984 LIG ceased payments due under the take-or-pay provision of the contract. Mesa then attempted to invoke the arbitration procedure by letter of December 23, 1985. LIG refused to name an arbitrator, taking the positions (a) that Mesa had not complied with Louisiana statutory procedure in acquiring the right to sell the gas belonging to the State, rendering the contract void ab initio, and (b) that validity ab initio of a contract is not arbitrable under the applicable Louisiana law.
Mesa filed a petition to compel arbitration in the District Court for the Middle District of Louisiana under section 4 of the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), 9 U.S.C. §§ 1-14, on January 14, 1986. LIG moved to dismiss on grounds of lack of federal jurisdiction under Title 28 and inapplicability of the FAA. The district court granted Mesa's petition and LIG has appealed. We affirm.
I. Diversity Jurisdiction
Under the FAA, federal jurisdiction is available only if otherwise available through some independent source such as 28 U.S.C. § 1331 or § 1332. 9 U.S.C. § 4. Here diversity is the alleged basis of jurisdiction. LIG contends that the citizenship of the limited partners of a limited partnership must be alleged and considered in determining diversity jurisdiction. Since we find it unnecessary to consider the citizenship of limited partners, we conclude that it need not be ascertained.
We apply the Supreme Court’s analysis in
Navarro Savings Ass’n v. Lee,
We find this reasoning equally appropriate here. A limited partnership is also neither corporation nor association but a similar hybrid. Here, as in Navarro, the power to control and manage assets and litigation rests exclusively with one class of members, the general partners. We think that where it is possible to identify clearly a class of members as the real party to a controversy, the citizenship of that class alone is relevant for diversity purposes.
Judge Friendly of the Second Circuit reached a similar result in
Colonial Realty Corp. v. Bache & Co.,
A number of other circuits disagree.
Carlsberg Resources Corp. v. Cambria Sav. & Loan,
The three circuits that have looked to the citizenship of limited partners for diversity purposes have also relied on
United Steelworkers v. Bouligny, Inc.,
This is consistent with the holding in
Navarro,
where the Supreme Court found
Bouligny
inapposite. The Court cited
Bouligny
only to exemplify the difference in outcome for diversity purposes between a real party in interest test and the Court’s real party to the controversy test.
The reasoning of the other circuits comes down to a disinclination to expand diversity jurisdiction without congressional authorization. We find that reason irrelevant to our decision. If determination of diversity jurisdiction rests on the test the Supreme Court developed in Navarro, diversity jurisdiction extends only to the precise parties to whom it should extend: that is, the real parties to the controversy. While this may arguably create diversity expansion, it is more semantics than principle. An attempt to create a new type of citizen would, of course, expand jurisdiction. Here we are dealing only with which already extant citizens are involved in the case; the issue *242 here is merely a necessary interpretation of existing law.
In
Lee,
we drew an analogy between a business trust and a limited partnership. “The trust here is analogous to a limited partnership, and the citizenship of its beneficiary shareholders should not be counted in determining the existence of diversity jurisdiction.”
Before the
Navarro
decision, lower courts had frequently held citizenship of the beneficiaries of a business trust relevant to determination of diversity jurisdiction.
Belleview Apts. v. Realty ReFund [sic] Trust,
The correct analogy to be drawn is not between the types of business enterprise involved, but between application of the Court’s test in Navarro to another enterprise. The Court held the trustees the real parties to the controversy because they, and they alone among the membership, held title to the assets, managed the assets, and controlled any litigation involving the trust. Similarly, in the limited partnership here, the general partners, and they alone as against the limited partners, control and manage assets, conduct all business and control all litigation. In the absence of specific direction from the Supreme Court, we think the proper course is to apply the analysis made by the Court in Navarro to the facts before us.
Mesa’s Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership, Plaintiff’s exhibit 5, dated September 5, 1985, provides that the general partners have full authority without limitation to conduct all business; expend or encumber all assets; negotiate, enter into, execute and perform all contracts and conveyances; and control all matters affecting rights and obligations of the partnership, “including the conduct of litigation.” § 6.1(a). In contrast, the limited partner is to take no part in operation, management or control of the partnership. § 7.2. The limited partner cannot remove the general partners, § 13.1. The limited partner can dissolve the partnership only after withdrawal of a general partner or an event which removes him. § 14.1. The limited partner can amend the agreement only with consent of the general partners where such amendment has any legal effect on the general partners; the general partners may amend without agreement of the limited partner in a number of ways. Art. XV(a), (b), (c). 1 We conclude on the *243 basis of this partnership agreement (1) that the general partners of Mesa have exclusive power to manage and control all assets, conduct all business, and control all litigation; (2) that the general partners are the real parties to the controversy; and (3) that only their citizenship is relevant to the determination of diversity jurisdiction. 2
II. Applicability of the Federal Arbitration Act
The FAA provides that a written provision in a “contract evidencing a transaction involving commerce” to arbitrate a “controversy thereafter arising out of such contract” shall be “valid, irrevocable, and enforceable, save upon such grounds as exist at law or equity for the revocation of any contract.” 9 U.S.C. § 2. LIG alleges that the contract between these parties did not involve commerce in that the gas did not cross state lines. LIG has submitted an affidavit containing uncontroverted testimony that the gas under the contract is produced in Louisiana waters by Mesa, transported and sold to LIG in Louisiana, and sold by LIG to Louisiana customers only. Whether or not these customers in turn sell interstate is not clear. In LIG’s view, this prevents the contract from “involving commerce.”
Mesa has also submitted an affidavit which contains further uncontroverted facts: under the contract and during the course of its performance, the general partners of Mesa were recognized as citizens of Texas operating in Louisiana; they sent personnel from Texas to Louisiana and received all communications related to the contract and all payments under the contract in Texas.
Citizens of different states engaged in performance of contractual operations in one of those states are engaged in a contract involving commerce under the FAA. Such a contract necessitates interstate travel of both personnel and payments. Commerce under the FAA is not limited to interstate shipment of goods, as LIG argues, but includes all contracts “relating to interstate commerce.”
Prima Paint v. Flood & Conklin Mfg. Co.,
The fact that the parties intended arbitration under Louisiana law does not affect the question of arbitrability. As we said in
Huber, Hunt & Nichols v. Architectural Stone Co.,
The affidavits conflict on whether LIG uses interstate pipelines to transport the gas under the contract. But where Congress has exercised its authority under the Commerce Clause to regulate
intrastate
shipments of gas, 15 U.S.C. § 3371(a) & (b), we may presume the commerce is under regulation by Congress. Where the price established in the contract is the amount established as the maximum lawful price by the Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978, § 6.1, we may presume the commerce is under regulation by an agency created by Congress. Unless commerce under the FAA is a narrower term, as suggested by Justice Black’s dissent in
Prima Paint,
III. Application of the federal law of arbitrability to the issue of validity ab initio.
LIG alleges that the state Mineral Board, from which Mesa leased the production site, and Mesa had together failed to comply with La.Rev.Stat. 30:142 (West 1974), which required that the contract to sell the state’s gas be approved by certain state officials or that public bid procedures be followed. LIG contends that this failure made the contract between LIG and Mesa void as never having been entered into. LIG further argues that this issue could not, therefore, have arisen under the contract and was, therefore, not arbitrable.
The Gas Purchase Contract states that the parties agree to arbitrate “any controversy between the parties ... arising under this Contract.” § 8.1. This is the same language held broad enough to encompass — as an arbitrable issue — an allegation of fraudulent inducement against the entire contract in
Prima Paint,
This case is very close factually to Prima Paint. There, the defendant had represented itself as able to perform under the contract though in fact it was unable to do so. Here, Mesa warranted title to the gas and offered indemnification for adverse claims to title. § 7.1. Even if LIG’s allegation is correct, the worst result of the defect in the contract would be Mesa’s inability to perform. This was precisely the factual situation referred to arbitration in Prima Paint.
We find the issue raised by LIG separable from the arbitration agreement on a further ground. A regulatory agency has its own duty to enforce its own procedures; it is free to pursue its own remedies and is not bound by the arbitration results of parties to a contract involving those regulations.
Gulf Oil Corp. v. Federal Power Comm’n,
The legislative purpose of the FAA, consistently interpreted as such by the Supreme Court, is to enforce arbitration clauses as liberally and rigorously as possible. “Contracts to arbitrate are not to be avoided by allowing one party to ignore the contract and resort to the courts.”
Southland Corp. v. Keating,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Under most state limited partnership acts and the Uniform Limited Partnership Act, limited partners have more power than the limited partner in this case does. Under Delaware law, for example, the limited partner is excluded from participation in control of the business. But the following powers are defined as not constituting participation: consulting, advising; being employed by or hired as a contractor or agent by the general partner; and voting on amendments to the partnership agreement, dissolution of the partnership, removal of the general partner, transfer of a material portion of the assets, incurrence of material indebtedness, and approving matters related to the business. 6 Del.C. § 17-303. Furthermore, the limited partner may sue in the name of the partnership if the general partner refuses or would refuse to *243 do so. § 17-1001. Thus the partnership here, if formed under Delaware law — as is the case— and with no further restrictions on powers of the limited partner, might not meet the Court’s test for the clear division between classes of partners on which this decision is based. We express no opinion as to whether a limited partnership agreement which granted powers to limited partners as broad as the Delaware statute permits would require the limited partners to be considered for diversity jurisdiction.
. The Court suggested in Navarro that diversity jurisdiction should be a question capable of a simple and immediate answer. Where jurisdiction depends on citizenship of general partners and a showing that they have exclusive management and control of assets and litigation, determination of citizenship would be both faster and easier than a process of matching up long lists of members whose addresses may not even be correctly carried on the partnership’s books as of the date of filing.
