This is an original action in this court for wrongful death. The plaintiff-administrator sought to invoke the jurisdiction of this court under the diversity statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1332.
At the pretrial conference herein, the Court, sua sponte, directed counsel’s attention to the insufficiency of the allegations in the complaint to invoke effectively the jurisdiction of this court under the diversity statute, supra. Inter alia, the plaintiff had not alleged the State in which the corporate defendant has its principal place of business. 28 U.S.C. § 1332(c). The plaintiff being a Tennessee citizen, and the citizenship of the corporate defendant not having been alleged, the possibility existed that both the plaintiff and the defendant were to be deemed citizens of the same state; thus the diversity of citizenship necessary to invoke this court’s jurisdiction did not affirmatively appear. Pan American Petroleum Corp. v. Superior Court (1961),
The plaintiff was permitted, however, to amend his complaint so as to properly allege the essential jurisdictional facts. 28 U.S.C. § 1653. He alleged that the corporate defendant has its principal place of business in Delaware, the only state by which it is incorporated. The defendant denied this allegation, contending that it has its principal place of business in Tennessee, and moved for a dismissal for want of jurisdiction.
Thus, the onus of supporting the disputed allegation by competent proof rested on the plaintiff. Thomson v. Gaskill (1942),
Counsel for the plaintiff produced at the pretrial conference an authenticated copy of a verified report for the year commencing July 1, 1963, purportedly filed with the Tennessee secretary of state on June 7, 1963, in which the defendant foreign corporation listed as its “principal office and place of business out of Tennessee” as “100 West Tenth Street, Wilmington, Delaware”. While this reported information may have justified the plaintiff’s understandable conclusion that the defendant .was a Delaware corporation, not incorporated by any other state, with its principal place of business in Delaware, this Court is not bound by any statement of either party in determining its jurisdiction. Even if both parties hereto consented to this court’s jurisdiction, such consent would not clothe the Court with jurisdiction under the facts hereinabove related. Mitchell v. Maurer (1934),
The situs of a corporation’s principal place of business is purely a question of fact. Continental Coal Corp.
The evidence in this record not supporting the necessary allegations of diverse citizenship of the litigants, the defendant’s motion to dismiss is granted, and this action will be dismissed. Rule 12(h) (2), Federal Rules of Civil Procedure; Thomson v. Gaskill, supra,
The plaintiff being denied all relief in this court, the clerk will forthwith prepare, sign and enter an order dismissing this action.
