Lead Opinion
The National Association of Realtors (NAR) appeals from the dismissal, for want of subject-matter jurisdiction, of its diversity suit against a rival trade association, the National Real Estate Association, Inc. (NREA), and several insurance companies.
The suit — which although not a class action or other recognized form of representative action purports to be on behalf of NAR’s members as well as on behalf of the association itself — charges the defendants in Count I of the complaint with fraud that has injured the reputation of the association and the pocketbooks of those of its
The district judge held that the real parties in interest on the plaintiff’s side of the case are NAR’s members, not NAR, and since some of them are conceded to be citizens of Ohio, the requirement of complete diversity of citizenship (Newman-Green, Inc. v. Alfonso-Larrain, — U.S. -,
NAR is a corporation, and for purposes of diversity jurisdiction the relevant citizenship is that of the corporation rather than that of its shareholders. F. & H.R. Farman-Farmaian Consulting Engineers Firm v. Harza Engineering Co., supra,
But the rule we have just stated, and have expanded to embrace non-share corporations, presupposes that the wrong is to the corporation rather than to the shareholders or members directly. If the defendants had blown up NAR’s corporate headquarters, or broken a contract they had with the association, the wrong would be to the association even though the loss resulting from it would be borne ultimately by the real estate agents who are its members. Cf. American Federation of Technical Engineers v. La Jeunesse,
Since it is the members of NAR who are the real parties in interest so far as the claim for damages on their behalf is concerned, it is their citizenship that counts for diversity purposes. Some of them are Ohioans, and therefore citizens of the same state as one of the defendants, NREA. The requirement of complete diversity of citizenship is indeed not satisfied.
Could the State of Illinois confer on NAR the right to seek redress for injuries to its members? “Congress may enact statutes creating legal rights, the invasion of which creates standing, even though no injury would exist without the statute,” Linda R.S. v. Rickard D.,
The Illinois legislature has not conferred on NAR a substantive right that the defendants infringed by trying to defraud its members. Even if the legislature had done
So the district judge was right to dismiss the complaint. But since the dismissal, based as it was on lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, is without prejudice to the plaintiffs filing a new suit curing the jurisdictional defect, we should consider whether the defect is curable, for if not the new suit would have to be dismissed too. NAR argues that all it has to do to cure the defect is dismiss its request for damages (and not all of that request, but only the part that seeks damages on behalf of its members), which is confined to Count IV, in order to satisfy the requirement of complete diversity.
We disagree. The requirement is independent of the nature of the relief sought; it is as applicable to injunction cases as it is to damages cases. No cases so hold, but perhaps only because the proposition is obvious. The rationale for requiring complete diversity is that the presence of residents of the same state on both sides of the lawsuit neutralizes any bias in favor of residents; the rationale is independent of the nature of the relief sought. This point is obscured by the fact that associations have been held to have standing under Article III of the Constitution to seek injunctive relief — but never damages, for reasons our earlier discussion may have helped clarify — on behalf of their members. Warth v. Seldin,
They might be able to do so by filing a class action, since the citizenship of unnamed class members is not germane to diversity, Snyder v. Harris,
This suit by NAR is more like an assignment intended to confer federal jurisdiction than like a representative action, and such assignments are invalid. 28 U.S.C. § 1359; Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Sullivan,
Since an association is free as a matter of federal law to seek an injunction against wrongs that injure its members, Illinois could empower NAR to represent its members in this suit. But it has not done so. On the contrary, its highest court has held — with specific reference to nonprofit associations seeking to sue in the place of their members — that a “party seeking relief must possess a personal claim, status, or right which is capable of being affected.” Underground Contractors Ass’n v. City of Chicago,
Could this suit be maintained on NAR’s own behalf, without reference to the interests and entitlements of its members? The association has property of its own, but its counsel acknowledged at oral argument that the association has suffered no injury to that property — and no other measurable loss — as a result of the defendants’ alleged misdeeds. One can imagine competitive injury to NAR because some of its members had been lured to a rival trade association by a fraudulent promise of insurance coverage. But this is not alleged, and at argument was disclaimed. One can imagine competitive injury because NAR offers a competitive product which is losing out in the marketplace as a consequence of NERA’s misrepresentations. But it does not offer a competitive product. One can imagine a loss of membership fees as members go broke when their insurance claims are unpaid; NAR does not allege this form of injury either. The only injury to NAR alleged in the complaint is an injury to the association’s reputation, but this too was disclaimed at argument when counsel acknowledged that the association had suffered no loss as a result of the defendant’s conduct. The acknowledgment was prudent. It is difficult to understand how the sponsorship of a fraudulent insurance scheme by a rival trade association could injure — rather than enhance — NAR’s reputation. Maybe the fear is that brokers will confuse NREA with NAR and think that the latter is the sponsor of the fraudulent scheme, but this is hardly plausible, and is not suggested; there is no contention that NREA is misrepresenting itself to be NAR or infringing NAR’s trademarks.
Apart from any legal interest that NAR may have — or rather not have — in this suit, it has a general interest in the practices of the real estate industry, and for all we know it may have a well-founded concern with the practices attacked in its complaint. “Interest” is a chameleon, however, and “a mere ‘interest in a problem,’ no matter how longstanding the interest and no matter how qualified the organization is in evaluating the problem, is not sufficient by itself” to give the organization standing to sue. Sierra Club v. Morton,
Even if the association had an interest in this lawsuit sufficient to entitle it to sue on its own behalf, the members who are the real victims of the alleged fraudulent
Affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
The majority opinion, in which I join, is analytically defensible but pragmatically questionable — to say the least.
There is an important policy underlying the delimitation of diversity jurisdiction in 28 U.S.C. § 1332(c), which provides that a corporation is to be considered a citizen of its state of incorporation and the state encompassing its principal place of .business. That policy is the desire to keep primarily local suits out of the federal courts. See S.Rep. No. 1830, 85th Cong., 2d Sess., reprinted in U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 3099, 3101-3102 (1958) (It is an abuse of federal jurisdiction when “a local institution, engaged in a local business and in many cases locally owned, is enabled to bring its litigation into the Federal courts simply because it has obtained a corporate charter from another State.”). The instant suit does not appear to be primarily local since it involves two national real estate associations. In that connection, the majority concedes that section 1332(c) is applicable to membership corporations like the NAR. Section 1332(c) was clearly designed to obviate any need to pierce the corporate veil in order to determine corporate citizenship in a case like this.
Moreover, recognizing the NAR “as the real party in interest under Rule 17(a) not only avoids a multiplicity of actions by the individual members of the association, but also assures that the interests of the members as a collective group can be fully presented on litigation of the matter, due to the pooling of financial resources which is possible.” Mass. Ass’n, Etc. v. Commissioner of Ins.,
Despite these practical concerns, the majority’s approach does not seem analytically incorrect, and the majority’s opinion is persuasive — especially given current trends in this court’s approach to matters of jurisdiction. With the reservations I have noted, I join the majority opinion.
