7 F. 129 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1881
This is a suit brought in the supreme court of New York. The plaintiff Pond is a citizen of New York. The other plaintiffs, three in number, are citizens of Maryland. The defendant the Atlanta & Charlotte Air-Lino Bailway Company (and which will bo called the “Atlanta Company”) is a corporation created by the laws of North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia. All of its directors hut one are citizens of New York. The defendant Sibley, who is its president, is a director of it, and is a citizen of Now York. All the individual defendants are directors of it. One of the individual defendants, who is a director of it, is a citizen of Maryland. The defendant the Bichmond & Dan-ville Railroad Company (and which will he called the “Bichmond Company”) is a corporation created by the laws of Virginia. The defendants are the two corporations and all the directors of the Atlanta Company. The cause of action appears from the complaint in the state court. The Atlanta Company owns and operates a lino of railway from Atlanta, in Georgia, to Charlotte, in North Carolina. Its principal office and place of business is in New York. All of its directors hut one reside in New York. No director of it resides in North Carolina, South Carolina, or Georgia. The meot
Tliat the Atlanta Company is not authorized by its charter, or any of the acts incorporating it, to make such a contract or lease, and is without power to make such a transfer of its property, rights, and franchises to the use, possession, and control of another railroad company, and that the Kiohmond Company is without legislative power or authority to accept such a contract or lease, or take the use, possession, control, and management of the property, road, and franchises of the Atlanta Company; that no contract of lease, or of the kind sought to lie executed by the Atlanta Company with the Bichmond Company, can be made by a railroad corporation without express legislative authority conferred on the companies seeking to make such contracts; that there is an absence of such authority enabling either of said two corporations to consummate such a contract ; that the plaintiffs, as holders of the first mortgage bonds, are entitled in the same manner as stockholders to have a voice and take part in the management of the road and property of the Atlanta Company; that their bonds are secured by mortgage on said road and property; that they, as holders of such bonds, are entitled, as part of their security, to take part in the management of said road; that by said contract of lease and transfer, should the same bo consummated by the action of the board of directors and president, as authorized by the resolution of the stock- ' holders and bondholders, as aforesaid, the plaintiffs will be deprived of any right or power to take any part in the management of said company, and the property, rights, and franchises which are pledged by said company as security for its bonds are transferred to another railroad corporation, which is authorized to take and use said property for its own purpose, and in such manner as the president and directors of the Bichmond Company shall determine; that if said contract of lease shall he consummated, and said transfer he made to the Bichmond Company, the plaintiffs*132 will be deprived of tlieir just rights, and will suffer irreparable damage thereby; ¡that as the two companies have no legal power to make said contract of lease, all the guaranties and covenants made by and between the parties thereto will be null and void, and all the guaranties and covenants made by the Bichmond Company for the payment of interest or dividends upon stocks will be null and void, and said contract cannot be consummated and enforced by the Allanta Company should default be made by the Richmond Company in the performance of any of the covenants or agreements therein contained; and that the transfer of. the said property of the Atlanta Company to the Richmond Company by said lease or agreement would impair the security which the plaintiffs have as owners of said bonds, and would diminish their value and destroy the rights of the plaintiffs under them, and the control over said property which the plaintiffs now have as such bondholders, to their great and irreparable injury. The prayer of the complaint is for judgment that the defendants be each and all enjoined from executing the said lease or agreement, and from delivering over to the Richmond Company the said Atlanta & Charlotte Air-Line Railroad, or the possession or use thereof, or any part thereof, and from making or carrying out any agreement between the said two companies, or doing any act towards or in furtherance thereof.
On the petition of the Atlanta Company the state court made an order on the ninth of April, 188-1, removing the suit into this court. The petition sets forth the citizenship and residence of the individual parties when the suit was brought, and still, to be as above stated, and the facts as above stated as to the corporate existence of the two companies. It sets forth the purpose of the suit to be according l¡o the foregoing prayer of the complaint. It states that the petitioner and the other defendants deny that the plaintiffs are entitled to such judgment, or to any judgment, against them; that in the suit there is a controversy between the plaintiffs and the petitioner and the Eichmond Company, and that there is a controversy in said suit which is wholly between citizens of different states, to-wit, between the plaintiffs and the petitioner and the Eichmond Company, which can be fully determined as between them; that the defendants, other than the petitioner and the Eichmond Company, are such only as officers and directors of the petitioner, and no judgment or relief is sought against them except in that capacity, and they are merely nominal parties to said suit; and that some of the individual defendants have been served with 'the summons therein, but the Eichmond Company has not been
A copy of the record in the suit in the state court was filed in this court on the eleventh of April, 1881, and on the same day the Atlanta Company entered its appearance in the suit in this court. The plaintiffs now move that the suit be remanded to the state court.
The plaintiffs contend that the suit, though primarily one for preventive relief, is one in which, in the state court, under section 1207 of the Code of Procedure, if there were an answer, the court might permit the plaintiffs to take any judgment consistent with the case made by the complaint and embraced within the issue; that, therefore, if, on the appearance of the two corporations, the lease were adjudged to be valid between them, as a corporate act, but it was held that the individual defendants were guilty of a broach of trust in consenting to it, they could be required to make good the loss sustained by the plaintiffs; that unless the individual defendants are all of them unnecessary parties, or if any one of them is, in any respect, a substantial party, the suit must be remanded; that a judgment between the plaintiffs and the Atlanta Company would not bind the Eichmond Company; that the suit is really one against the individual directors of the Atlanta Company rather than one against the two corporations, the corporations being made parties because of their interest in the controversy; that if it should be held that the lease has been executed, but is void for want of power, and if the Eichmony Company has taken possession under it, the question would arise how the road is to be taken out of its hands, it not being in court by service of process o’r appearance; and that the contention between the plaintiffs and the Atlanta Company might not dispose of the whole controversy.
This removal is sought under subdivision 2 of section 2 of the act of March 3, 1875, "(18 St. at Large, 1-70,) which provides that when, in any suit mentioned in said section, “there shall be a controversy which is wholly between eiti
The averment in the complaint that a majority of the stockholders and bondholders of the Atlanta Company, by resolution, authorized the president and board of directors of that company to make the contract of lease in question, is nothing more than an averment that the resolution was one authorizing that company to make such contract by the action of its president and board of directors. The corporation is to make the contract. The president and the directors are its agents. The complaint avers that it is the corporation that is to lease its road and property, and to make the transfer spoken of; that the corporation is not authorized to do so; and that the contract is to be executed by the corporation, although it and the transfer are to be consummated by the action of the president and the board of directors. The prayer of the complaint is that all and each of the defendants be enjoined from executing the lease and from delivering over the .property or its possession, and from making or carrying out any agreement between the two companies. No relief is prayed for against any individual defendant which is not prayed for against the Atlanta Company. The directors are made defendants merely because they are agents and officers of the Atlanta Company. The entire scope of the suit, as respects the Atlanta Company, is to restrain it. All the relief that is prayed for is by injunction. All the relief by injunction is prayed for in respect to all of the defendants. No such relief is prayed for in respect to any defendant other than the Atlanta Company that is not prayed for in respect to that company. The president and the directors are-its servants, through "whom; necessarily, it acts. They are not necessary or substantial parties, in considering the question of parties as to removal. They are not real
The individual defendants must, therefore, be considered as not parties to the controversy set forth in the complaint between the plaintiffs and the two corporations. There is such a controversy. Not only does such a controversy appear by tho complaint, but the petition for removal alleges that there is such a controversy, and that it is between, and wholly between, the plaintiffs on the one side and the two corporations on the other. The petition does not allege that there is any controversy which is wholly between the plaintiffs on one side and the Atlanta corporation on tho other. The controversy referred to is one which can be fully determined, as between the plaintiffs on the one side and the two corporations on the other, with those parties only as parties to the suit, and without tho presence of the individual defendants as parties. But such controversy cannot be fully determined, as regards either corporation, without tho presence of
Reference is made by the defendant to the opinion of Mr. Justice Nelson in Fisk v. U. P. R. Co. 8 Blatchf. 243. That case arose under the act of July 27, 1868, (15 St. at Largo, 226.) The language of that statute was that any corporation or person named in it, against whom a suit was commenced of the character specified in the act, might have such suit removed. Judge Nelson treated the statute as one to be construed as providing that any defendant in the suit might take steps to remove it, so far as he was concerned, wdien he was served with process in it.
The case of Ward v. Arredondo, 1 Paine, 410, is also referred to, where it was suggested that under the removal ac ■ of 1789, which required all the defendants to unite in removing the cause, they might apply to remove at different times, as they were brought into the state court. But it was also said, in that caso, that the circuit court could not proceed in tlie cause until all the defendants should come into it. Under
If time for the Richmond Company to appear is not allowed, the suit will be remanded to the state court, with costs.