delivered the opinion of the court.
'This suit was brought in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of California by “Miller & Lux, Incorporated,” a corporation of Nevada, against the East Side Canal & Irrigation Company, a corporation of California.
The case is here upon a certificate under the act of Congress ■of March- 3, 1891, c. 517, 26 S.tat. 826, relating.to the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court as affected by § 5 of the act of March 3, 1875, c. 137, 18 Stat. 470, 472. .That section provides that if, ■in any siiit commenced in a Circuit Court or removed from a state court to a Circuit Court of the United States, it shall appear at- any time to the satisfaction of said Circuit Court that ■such suit “does not really and substantially involve a dispute or controversy properly within the' jurisdiction of said Circuit Court, or that, the parties to said suit have been improperly or collusivcly made or joined, either as plaintiffs or defendants^
In stating the object and scope of that act this court in
Williams
v.
Nottawa,
In the answer of the defendant it is alleged that Miller & -Lux, Incorporated, was organized as a corporation in Nevada, but to act only as an agent of “Miller & Lux,” a corporation of California; that the" California corporation was the owner of all the capital stock of Miller & Lux, Incorporated, which as a corporation had no existence except as a mere agency of Miller & Lux, the California corporation; that all the property held by the plaintiff was as such agent in order that suits could be brought and prosecuted in the United States courts;-and that the plaintiff does not transact any business or do any act or thing other than such as may be necessary to carry out the purposes of the California corporation, “except to hold title to property for the purpose of prosecuting suits in the United States' courts.”
To these allegations the plaintiff made special replication,
It was established by the evidence and the court found as follows:
Henry Miller and Charles Lux were partners prior to and up to the death of Lux, one of the parties, which occurred March 15, 1887.'
In April, 1897, the heirs of the deceased partner and Miller, the surviving partner, wishing to have the partnership business liquidated and its assets distributed among those entitled thereto, made an agreement to form a corporation under the laws of California and transfer to it all the property of the partnership,- each person to receive in lieu thereof capital stock proportioned to his interest in the partnership. Pursuant to that agreement the corporation■ of•“Miller & Lux” was organized in California on the fifth day of May, 1897; to it was conveyed the property of the partnership and the stock of the corporation was distributed as provided in the agreement.
On the seventeenth day of December, 1900, the California corporation of Miller & Lux commenced an action in the Superior Court of Merced County, California, against the present defendant the East Side Canal & Irrigation Company, a California corporation. The object of that suit was to have the latter corporation perpetually enjoined from obstructing the natural flow of the waters of San Joaquin River and its branches, along and
On the twelfth day of June, 1905 — the above suit in the state court still being on the docket — the California corporation and the stockholders owning more than two-thirds of its capital stock, entered into an agreement that they would at once form a corporation under the laws of Nevada with an authorized capital of $12,000,000 — all of such capital stock to be issued and be deemed fully paid up — each director of the California corporation of Miller & Lux to be an incorporator of the Nevada corporation and to subscribe two shares of such capital stock to be issued as fully paid up stock of the new corporation.
That agreement stated that the laws, of California were unsatisfactory and in many particulars- uncertain and unsettled, “particularly as to dividends, a matter of the most vital importance to us, and as to which litigation is now pending and undetermined.” These difficulties, it was said, did not exist to the same extent unde,r the laws of Nevada;. Among the reasons assigned in the agreement for the formation of the Nevada corporation was the belief, on the part of the stockholders of the California corporation, that their rights in litigated cases would be “most fully protected and conserved in the Federal courts, to which corporations formed in other States are entitled to resort.”
The above agreement provided that upon the formation of the Nevada corporation all the property, real and personal, of the California corporation should be transferred and conveyed to the Nevada corporation,' and that the capital stock of the'latter corporation should be issued as fully paid up stock to the California corporation; and that after such transfer and conveyance were completed, and as soon as the law would permit, the California corporation should be dissolved, by voluntary proceedings under the State Code of Civil Procedure of that State.
On the same day,- June 12, 1905, the parties to that agree
On the fifteenth day of June, 1905, the California corporation of Miller & Lux directed the dismissal of the suit brought in the state court. And on the same day the present suit was brought in the Circuit Court of the United States in the name of the Nevada corporation against the East Side Canal & Irrigation Company. The relief sought was substantially the same as that sought in the suit instituted in the state court.
Process in the suit brought in the Circuit Court by the. Nevada corporation was served on June 17, 1905, and on the same day the California corporation formally dismissed .its suit in the state court.
The California corporation had not been dissolved nor., had it ceased to . exist when the present suit was brought by the Nevada corporation. It was then in existence, with all .of its -powers unmodified. And it does not appear that any steps had or have been taken to disincorporate the California corporation. Nor canlt be said when, if ever, that corporation will be dissolved. .
We are of opinion that the court below did not err in dismissing the suit. The question raised by the record is substantially the same as that determined in
Lehigh Mining & Mfg., Co.
v.
Kelly,
This court said (p. 331) that “The Virginia corporation still exists with the same stockholders it had when the .conveyance of March 1,1893, was made; and that, as so9n as this litigation is concluded, the' Pennsylvania corporation, if it succeeds in obtaining judgment against the defendants, can be required by the stockholders of the Virginia corporation, being also its own stockholders, to reconvey the lands in controversy to the Virginia corporation without any consideration passing to the Pennsylvania corporation.”
After referring to several cases, this' court, among other things, also said (p. 336): “In harmony with the principles announced in former cases, we hold that the Circuit Court properly dismissed this action.' The conveyance to the Pennsylvania corporation was without any valuable considération. It was a conveyance by one corporation to another corporation — the grantor representing certain stockholders, entitled collectively or as one body to do business under the name of the Virginia Coal and Iron Company, while the grantee represented
the sanie stockholders,
entitled collectively or as one’ body to do business under the name of the Lehigh Mining and Manufacturing Company. It is true that the technical legal title to the lands in controversy is, for the time, in the Penn
' The present case is controlled by the one just cited. The two cases are alike in all material respects. Looking at the facts as they were when this suit was instituted in the Circuit Court, it must be taken that the transfer of the property of the California corporation to the Nevada corporation 'was merely formal — only a device by which to have the rights asserted by the California corporation in the state court determined by the Federal court rather than by the state court. The agreement that all the property of the California corporation should be transferred to the Nevada corporation was attended by the condition that all the capital stock of the. new corporation should be issued — and it was issued — to the. California corporation which remained m existence with full power as the owner of such stock to control the operations of the
We do not intend by what has been said to qualify the general rule, long established, that the jurisdiction of a Circuit Court, when based on diverse citizenship, cannot be questioned upon, the ground
merely
that a party’s motive in acquiring citizenship in the State in which he sues was to invoke the jurisdiction of a Federal court. But that rule is attended by the- condition that the acquisition of such citizenship is real, with the purpose to establish a permanent domicil in the State, of which he professes to be a citizen at the time of suit, and not -fictitious or pretended.
Morris
v.
Cilmer,
In the present case; although the Nevada corporation appeared, upon the face of the record, to be the owner of the rights which the California corporation had asserted in the state court, it was, when this suit was brought, only the representative of the California corporation and its stockholders. The latter corporation holding all the stock and having the same directors and officers as the Nevada corporation, could control the suit brought by the Nevada corporation, and, in the event of a favorable decree, could have compelled it to surrender or abandon all its claims to the California corporation, which was still in existence when this suit was brought.
As the Nevada corporation was formed by the direction of the California corporation, its stockholders and officers, for
Decree affvfined.
