103 F. 212 | 6th Cir. | 1900
having stated the ease as above, delivered the opinion of the, court.
The assignments of error, omitting such as are not specific enough to require attention, are all closely related, and may be considered under a few beads. It is urged that there was error in granting the injunction, because it appears from the record that the defendants faad not made the connections complained of, arid were not intending to do so. The contention is that it is only the patrons who are making these connections, and that, as the answer puts it, “complainant Las sued the wrong persons.” But it seems to us that no mistake has fceen made in this particular. The participation of the defendant telephone company in effecting the connections with the complain-mt's lines is but thinly veiled in the answer. Referring to the first occasion when a subscriber had discovered the way and liad effected the connection, the answer states that:
"When defendants learned of this connection, they made no objection to it, mid in fact thought it a convenience that its patrons had a rigid to enjoy, and one that was a real advantage to the complainant company, as it saved the use of its battery and wall ’phone. As various common patrons of the two companies saw and heard of this convenience, they made application to these defendants for desk sets, with tlie necessary switch and wire to make said connection, and defendants supplied them with the same; but no agent or cm*214 ploye of the defendants has ever made any connection with any wire or instrument ot complainant; defendant Duncan having expressly notified parties applying -for desk sets that his employes would not make connection wi,tli, complainant’s wires or ’phones, but that the applicant would have to make, same, if he desired it, on his own responsibility.”
And again, in paragraph. 5 of the answer, it is said:
“As before stated, no employé of the defendant company nor defendant X O. Duncan has ever made any connection with complainant’s lines, but defendant X O. Duncan, as general manager, has leased to the subscribers of the defendant company desk sets, switches, and wires, capable of such-a connection, and has had his employes place said desk sets, switches, and wires for connection with defendant’s desk ’phones, and upon inquiry and at the request of subscribers to both companies obtaining desk sets, defendant X C. Duncan explained the practicability and method of connecting a desk ’phone with the lines of both companies, — information that any ordinary mechanic could give, — but in every instance notified the applicant that neither he nor any of his co-defendant’s employes- would make any connection with complainant’s lines or ’phones. These things defendants had a legal right to do, and still-have such right.”
The judge before whom the motion was made had, we think, sufficient evidence before him to justify Ms conclusion that the defendant telephone company was co-operating in the unlawful invasions of the other company’s property rights which were alleged in the bill. And he might' not unreasonably conclude his inference was right when he perceived the vigor with which the right claimed was defended. In this connection it .is proper to take notice of the suggestion in the assignments of error that the making and using the connection by the patrons “had not in any way benefited the defendants except in so far as they sold and furnished material for such purpose.” But, if it were material that the defendant company should be benefited in order -to make its conduct unjustifiable, it is easy to see the advantage it would gain by thus bringing its lines and telephones into communication with those of the other company. There is evidence in the record, and it seems quite credible, that the bringing into communication of the two systems in this way injuriously affects the apparatus, and disturbs the operation of the service. It is not necessary to go into a discussion to demonstrate so plain a proposition as that the complainant’s rights, as the owner of the lines and apparatus installed and operated by it, were not subject to be invaded in the mflnner complained of. We have already referred to the objection that the patrons are not made defendants. As it is made a distinct ground of one of the assignments of error that they are necessary parties, it seems proper to refer to the subject more at length. In the first place, there was no demurrer to the bill on that ground, nor was it distinctly taken by the answer. The point is first made on the appeal. The courts are not inclined to favor this defense when it is postponed to the hearing in the appellate court. It will not be listened to-if there are sufficient parties before the court who are amenable to- its' decree to enable the court to award a substantial remedy. Society v. Watson, 37 U. S. App. 141, 15 C. C. A. 632, 68 Fed.. 730; Cowen v. Adams, 24 C. C. A. 198, 78 Fed. 536; McGahan v. Bank, 156 U. S. 218, 15 Sup. Ct. 347, 39 L. Ed. 403. Besides, the defendant is, if the facts be as they appear on this motion, a tres
Another ground of defense newly raised in this court is that the complainant wholly fails to show diverse citizenship of the parties, and in support of this contention it is urged that “the allegation that complainant is a nonresident of Tennessee is not equivalent to the allegation that it is a citizen of another state,” — a proposition which might be admitted. And it is true that there is no direct averment in the bill that the complainant is a citizen of another state than Tennessee. But this is not indispensably necessary. If it appears by way of description in any part of the pleadings or process that the requisite diversity of citizenship exists, that is sufficient where the question is first raised on an appeal. Gordon v. Bank, 144 U. S. 97, 12 Sup. Ct. 657, 36 L. Ed. 360; Ward v. Manufacturing Co., 12 U. S. App. 295, 5 C. C. A. 538, 56 Fed. 437. And see Maddox v. Thorn, 23 U. S. App. 189, 8 C. C. A. 574, 60 Fed. 217. The pleader has entitled the bill in the case, and therein described the complainant as “duly incorporated under the laws of the state of Kentucky,” and although this may be regarded as informal, it is substantially equivalent to the not unusual preface wherein it is stated that the plaintiff, a citizen of some named state, brings this his bill against, etc. If the allegation of the citizenship of complainant is not technically in due form, we think it sufficient for this belated objection.
A further new objection, not mentioned in the assignment of errors, is. that it is not shown by the bill that the value of the matter in controversy requisite to give jurisdiction is at stake. The bill prays for an injunction, and also for a decree for the damages already incurred, and claims for the latter the sum of $3,000. No estimate is put or amount claimed for the value of the right the invasion of which is anticipated. We should be disposed to agree with counsel for the appellants that there is no reasonable ground shown for believing that the damages already incurred amount to so much as $2,000, but it seems to us very probable that the value of the right to preserve the property of the complainant from the anticipated disturbance is more than that sum. If this objection had been Taken in. the court below, it is reasonable to suppose that court would have allowed an amendment which would have made more certain'this ground of jurisdiction. And this would have been permissible. Carr v. Fife (C. C.) 45 Fed. 209; Carr v. Fife, 156 U. S. 494, 15 Sup. Ct. 427, 39 L. Ed. 508. But the rule applicable at this stage of the progress of the case is that, in order to justify this court in directing the dismissal of the bill, we should be clearly satisfied that .the: necessary amount is not involved. This change in the attitude of the court towards such questions arises upon the presumption that the necessary facts do, in truth, exist, else their existence .would have been promptly challenged, instead of being tacitly assented to,' and the objection subsequently presented in a court which has no power to amend the record. In the case of Insurance Co. v. Nobles (C. C.) 63 Fed. 641, Judge Dallas, at the circuit, declined to dismiss; the