96 F. 504 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts | 1899
This case was assigned for trial by a jury, the court, at the time the assignment was made, not having been informed of the fact that a jurisdictional question was involved. On opening the pleadings at the time the jury was impaneled, it was made known to the court that the issue covered by this opinion was raised by the defendant. It was also found that the issue involved too much investigation to be properly disposed of with the expedition which the necessities of a jury trial call for, and that the cause must either be continued, or the practice which was approved in Wetmore v. Rymer, 169 U. S. 115, 18 Sup. Ct. 293, followed, as nearly as might be, reserving the rights of hoih parties to except to the final rulings on the question of jurisdiction, and to sue out the proper writ of error based on such exceptions, so far as it was in our power to give effect to such reservation. Thereupon, after the verdict of the jury had been rendered against the defendant, it again brought this issue to the attention of the court by a formal motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction, reaffirming the allegations relating thereto found in its answer to the plaintiff’s declaration, and the motion has now been heard by us and carefully considered.
The issue before us resolves itself into two fundamental questions, that is to say: Whether the case falls within the class to which Nashua & L. R. Corp. v. Boston & L. R. Corp., 136 U. S. 356, 10 Sup. Ct. 1004, relates, or within that class covered by Railway Co. v. James, 161 U. S. 545, 16 Sup. Ct. 621, and Louisville, N. A. & C. Ry. Co. v. Louisville Trust Co., 174 U. S. 552, 19 Sup. Ct. 817, or whether, by possibility, the case is so exceptional that it does not fall within either of these classes.
The line of railroad to which this case relates is continuous, and is operated continuously, extending into or through New York, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Massachusetts. At the trial by the jury, the court wras satisfied that, while the mere injury for which the plaintiff sued occurred in Connecticut, the relations between the parties by virtue of which the injury afforded a right of action arose in Rhode Island. The defendant, in arguing this motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction, submitted the following proposition:
“That if it should be hold, for purposes of jurisdiction in this case, the defendant is a. citizen of Massachusetts only, yet that the Massachusetts corporation, which is made the defendant in this case, is not liable to this*506 plaintiff, because it could not, and did not, commit or permit the act of negligence upon which the plaintiff relies to recover.”
This, however, under the existing circumstances, relates entirely to the merits of the case, and it was disposed of by the rulings during the trial so far as the proposition was then brought to the attention of the court. There is ordinarily no difficulty growing out of this proposition with reference to corporations organized by concurrent legislation of several legislatures, as were the Nashua & Lowell Railroad Corporation and the Boston & Lowell Railroad Corporation, referred to in the case already cited; betause, in such instances, each has a joint interest in the operation of the entire line of railroad through the several states whose legislatures have acted, and may be therefore liable jointly, whatever may be the locus of the tort. This is evident on principle, and is also in harmony with the line of reasoning in Railway Co. v. James, where it appears, on pages 546, 554, 161 U. S., and page 621, 16 Sup. Ct., that, while the suit was brought in the Arkansas district, the cause of action arose in Missouri. Yet no point was made by the supreme court on this account, although, except for the principle to which we have referred, of the joint liability of corporations created by concurrent legislation and jointly operating a line of road extending through several states, this fact would have stood at the threshold of the case, and would have disposed of it. The view of Judge Lowell was the same in Horne v. Railroad Co., 18 Fed. 50, 52. Therefore, if there is in fact a corporation created by the legislature of Massachusetts, under the circumstances required by the decisions of the supreme court to which we have referred, and known as the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad Company, the proposition of the defendant which we have cited, and all other propositions touching the liability of that corporation, are aside from any question of jurisdiction which we now have before us, and cannot be' considered with reference to it.
In the case at bar, the defendant is described in the record as the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad Company, and is alleged to be a corporation created by the laws of Massachusetts; and, in accordance with the rule established by the supreme court, it is therefore presumed to be a citizen of that state, and it is so described in the writ. No question has been made before us with reference to the legislation of any state, except Massachusetts and Connecticut; and therefore the principal issue is whether the allegation that the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad Company, defendant in this case, can, under the legislation of the two states named, which has been brought to our notice, be held to be a corporation of the state of Massachusetts, or whether, in this respect, the allegation that it .is such is contrary to law, and therefore to be so determined, whether brought to our attention on a motion, plea, demurrer, or in any other way suitable to raise an issue of that kind, wherever an allegation is legally impossible.
Apparently, we can dispose without difficulty of the question whether or not this case is in the class covered by Railway Co. v. James, ubi supra. It seems that, in some of the Western states, either the constitution or general legislation provides that no corporation
“In order to bring such an artificial body as a corporation within the spirit and letter of that constitution [meaning' the constitution of the United States], as const rued by the decisions of this court, it would be necessary to create it out of natural persons, whose citizenship of the state creating- It could be imputed to the corporation itself.”
This rule and phraseology are both reaffirmed in Louisville, N. A. & C. Ry. Co. v. Louisville Trust Co., 174 U. S., at pages 565, 566, 19 Sup. Ct. 817. It is to be observed that in Memphis & C. R. Co. v. Alabama, 107 U. S. 581, 2 Sup. Ct. 432, it was held that an action could not he brought by a citizen of Alabama against a corporation made by the statutes of that state an Alabama corporation, previously incorporated in Tennessee, and not constituted in Alabama of natural persons. This case was cited, and not disapproved, in Railway Co. v. James, 161 U. S., at page 559, 16 Sup. Ct. 621; so that the rule which we have given with reference to corporations which are not organized from natural persons stands limited to I lie extent of the rule of Memphis & C. R. Co. v. Alabama, although this limitation is not of consequence in the case at bar.
When vve explain the statutes out of which the corporation in issue in the present case arose, we think it will be clear that Massachusetts lias not: attempted to create a Connecticut corporat ion, as such, into a corporation within its own jurisdiction. Therefore we have nothing left except to consider whether the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad Company is a corporation within Massachusetts, as were the corporations in Nashua & L. R. Corp. v. Boston & L. R. Corp., ubi supra. In determining this question, we think that, with reference to cases of the class of that last referred to, we ought not to go a step beyond what has been actually decided. Our reasons for this are that the underlying rule with reference to the jurisdiction of federal courts over corporations is somewhat artificial', and, with reference to corporations created by concurring legislation, it is so to such a degree that it was declared by Judge Lowell, in Horne v. Railroad Co., already cited, at page 51, as a “useful fiction.” We have also to remember that in Farnum v. Canal Corp., 1 Sumn. 46, 62,
We should also bear in mind the observation of Mr. Justice Harlan in his opinion in behalf of the court in Goodlett v. Railroad Co., 122 U. S. 391, 7 Sup. Ct. 1254, in which he said, at page 401, 122 U. S., and page 1255, 7 Sup. Ct.: “Whether a corporation created by the laws of one state is also a corporation of another state within whose limits it is permitted, under legislative sanction, to exert its corporate powers, is often difficult to determine.” We also note his more important observation in the same opinion at page 406, 122 U. S., and page 1257, 7 Sup. Ct.: “The solution of this question [meaning the same issue which we have at bar] depends upon the intent of the legislature of Tennessee, as gathered from the words used in the statutes now to be examined.” We also refer to the application to this class of cases of the well-known rule made in Memphis & C. R. Co. v. Alabama, 107 U. S., at page 584, 2 Sup. Ct. 432, that the whole legislation must be taken together, — a rule which is also applied to the same class of cases in Goodlett v. Railroad Co., 122 U. S., at page 404, 7 Sup. Ct. 1254. In each of the cases referred to, the legislation contained inconsistent expressions, but some leading fact necessarily brought the court to the conclusions which were reached, and such, we think, will be found to be the condition in the case at bar.
We have now nothing remaining except to apply these principles to those portions of the legislation .of Massachusetts and Connecticut which have been brought to o.ur attention. The first act which we need consider is the statute of Massachusetts approved April 5, 1839, creating a corporation from natural persons by the name of Hartford & Springfield Railroad Corporation, with authority to construct and operate a railroad from Springfield to the north line of the state of Connecticut, “with a view,” as stated in the act, “to unite the said railroad with a railroad authorized by the legislature of Connecticut, from Hartford to the line of the state of Massachusetts.” With, some intervening legislation which we need not consider; the legislature of Massachusetts, by an act approved February 23, 1844, provided that “the persons who now are, or may hereafter be, stockholders of the Hartford & New Haven Railroad Company, a corporation established by an act of the legislature of the state of Connecticut, shall be stockholders of this corporation [meaning thereby the Hart
“The Hartford & New Haven Railroad Company may sell, transfer, merge and consolidate its corporate rights, powers and estate to, into and with the New York & New Haven Railroad Company, upon such considerations, terms, stipulations and conditions as may he agreed upon between said corporations ■and as are authorized by the provisions of this act.”
It next provided, in section 2, for the execution of an agreement “for the sale, transfer, purchase and merger hereby authorized,” specifying the details of what might enter into the agreement, and, further, that a copy of it, “together with a certificate of the adoption thereof,” should be filed in the office of the secretary of state.
The next provision, which is found in section 3, is as follows:
“Upon the filing of such certificate said companies shall become and be merged and consolidated into one corporation, under the name of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad Company, and shall become and be a body politic and corporate, and shall possess, hold and enjoy all the rights, powers, franchises and privileges, theretofore vested in either of said corporations, and all property, real and personal, of said companies, 'shall be deemed to be vested in said consolidated corporation.”
The first provision found in this act contains the words we have •cited, “sell, transfer, merge and consolidate,” followed by the words, “its corporate rights, powers and estate.” This phraseology is, of •course, subject to several different constructions, and, standing alone, it might be held to contemplate an election among different modes •of procedure by the corporations to which the legislation relates. The words, “rights, powers and estate,” might well be construed as limited to property and franchises necessary to the construction and operation of the railroads which the corporations controlled, and. as not including that class of franchises which relate merely to the entity and perpetuation of corporate existence; ’ and, with this construction, the words which precede them might well be held as limited strictly to a sale or transfer, — that is, to an acquisition by one corporation of the property and. the franchises to construct and operate a railroad of the other, — leaving the corporate existence to stand, though, ol^ ■course, as a mere name and useless personality. In many of the cases which the supreme court has been required to consider, the condition has been substantially that in which the case at bar would have been left on this hypothetical construction and action by the corporations in accordance therewith; that is to say, a foreign corporation, with a right to construct and operate a railroad within the state-to which it is foreign. Some expressions in the act would give color to this construction; among the rest, .like provisions to those which we have already given as existing in the act of February 23, 1844, which carry an implication that the legislature .of Massachusetts was dealing with a foreign corporation. But these expressions, as the history of the legislation shows, were undoubtedly inserted in the last act for the same reasons for which they were inserted in the earlier ones, and they must be regarded as indicating only greater ■caution. They certainly cannot control the positive declaration of the legislature that, on the completion • of the agreement between
Section 2 of the act of April 5, 1872, in enumerating the details of the agreement to which we have referred, enacts that it shall prescribe ihe manner of converting the capital stock of the original corporations into the capital stock of the consolidated corporation. It is true it may he said that this is only an alternative provision, in the event the corporations should actually consolidate, instead of proceeding to “sell” and “transfer”; hut, inasmuch as they did in fact convert their capital stocks inio that of the new corporation, they thus elected io consolidate, and thus definitely determined the status, and put it beyond all question.
The attorney general of Massachusetts, in an interesting and thorough opinion which involved the issue here, found in Public Documents 1895, No. 12, at page 43, reached the conclusion that the New York, New Haven & Hartford Eailroad Company must he held to he a corporation created by Massachusetts, within the meaning of the statute which was there under consideration by him. His opinion contains a much more detailed and elaborate examination of the legislation out of which the defendant corporation arose, and of the principles involved, than we find now necessary, in view of the late decisions of the supreme court to which we have referred.
Under the circumstances, we feel that we are compelled to find that the Hartford & Springfield Eailroad Corporation was created' a corporation from natural persons by Massachusetts; that the Hartford & New Haven Eailroad Company became, within that state, its successor, and impressed, for all federal jurisdictional purposes, with its characteristics; and that, in turn, the New York, New naven & Hartford Eailroad Company became, in like manner, the true successor in law of the Hartford & New Haven Eailroad Company, and so of the Springfield & Hartford Eailroad Corporation; so that, within Massachusetts, the New York, New Haven & Hartford Eailroad Company is, by lawful succession, a corporation created by the legislature of Massachusetts from natural persons, and must he held, for all purposes of federal jurisdiction, a citizen of that state. The motion to dismiss is denied.