9 F. 191 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1881
This suit was brought in the supreme court of New York, and has been removed into this court by the defendants Richardson and Stevens, as citizens of Massachusetts, the other
In addition to alleging a violation of said agreement by said trustees, the complaint alleges that the trustees have wrongfully retained from the rent paid to them moneys claimed to have been paid by them for expenses of suits brought' by them against Stanfield to compel him to pay the rent to them, and moneys for commissions, and have refused to pay over to the plaintiff the whole amount of moneys so received from Stanfield, and have wholly faffed in the performance of their duties as trustees, and reside in Massachusetts, and have no property in the state of New York, and are of but little pecuniary responsibility,- and the plaintiff has suffered great loss and been put to great expense in her efforts to protect herself against the wrongful acts of said trustees. There is other property besides said apartment house held by said trustees under said trust. Founded on the above allegations the complaint prays:
(1) That the trustees he enjoined from collecting from Stanfield the rent of the apartment house, and from receiving and disposing of any moneys as trustees of the plaintiff, and from doing any act as such trustees; (2) that they be required to account as such trustees; (3) that they he removed as such trustees; (4) that some other and competent person or persons he appointed trustee or trustees in their place; (5) that they pay to the plaintiff such damages as she has sustained by their wrongful acts.
Certainly, in the matters which are the subject of those five prayers, there are controversies which are wholly between the plaintiff on the one side and the trustees on the other side. Stanfield is not an
But there are other matters in the complaint. The trust for the benefit of the plaintiff is one for her life, for the sum of $1,000,000. It has not been completed by the executors. It was for the executors, under the will, to put into the hands of the trustees property to that amount. That has been done only in part. The complaint prays that the executors may complete the trust fund by conveying real estate to the trustees; and that they pay to the plaintiff what may be due to her for interest on the trust fund; and that they pay to her, or for her benefit, out of the estate other moneys which she claims; and that they do not charge against her certain moneys which the estate has paid; and that they be restrained from paying to certain trustees, of certain residuary trusts created by said will, any moneys now in, or which may hereafter come into, their hands as such executors. It also prays that the rent of said apartment house, under the lease to Stanfield, be paid to the plaintiff. There is nothing in any of these allegations, which makes Meleher, as executor, a necessary party to any of the said controversies between the plaintiff and her trustees.
Those controversies, as embodied in the said five prayers in respect to the trustees, can be fully determined as between the parties actually interested in them without the presence of either Meleher or Stanfield as a party. If the suit had sought no relief but what is embodied in said five prayers, neither Meleher nor Stanfield would have been a necessary or an indispensable party to those issues. The controversies involved in those five prayers do not cease to be controversies wholly between the plaintiff on the one side and the trustees on the other, because the plaintiff has chosen to embody in her complaint distinct controversies between herself and the executors, or a controversy between herself and Stanfield. Whether there is or is not such a connection between the various transactions set out in the complaint as to make all of the defendants proper parties to the suit, and to every controversy embraced in it, at least in such a sense as to protect the complaint against a demurrer for multifariousness or misjoinder, is a question not affecting the matter of removal. If there was any fault in pleading in that respect it'was the plaintiff’s. On the question of removal she must abide by the case made by her complaint. The question of multifariousness or misjoinder comes
The state-court made an order accepting the petition for removal and the bond filed, and ordering the removal of the suit into this court. This order was made without prior notice to the attorney for the plaintiff, and the plaintiff contends that the proceedings for removal were therefore irregular. The act of 1875 does not require any notice. The filing of the petition and bond makes it the duty of the state court to accept them and to proceed no further in the suit. In the present case the petition and the bond were filed on the twenty-seventh of July, 1881, and the court on that day accepted them without requiring any previous notice. As was said by this court in Wehl v. Wald, 17 Blatchf. 346: “If, as matter of discretion, a state court can or does require notice in any case of removal, such notice was dispensed with in this case by the state court; and, the matter being one of practice, it is for the state court to regulate its own practice, and this court will not review such a question.” It has always been held in this court that no notice was necessary. Fisk v. Union Pac. R. Co. 8 Blatchf. 243, 247.
The bond for removal is not executed by Stevens and Richardson, nor does it name them as obligors. It is executed by two other persons, who are named in it as obligors. It recites that Stevens and
It is also objected that Stevens and Richardson voluntarily appeared in the state court without the summons being served upon either of them; that, therefore, they were not in court, and no action was pending as to them; that their voluntary appearance was a submission to the jurisdiction of the court, and a waiver of their right of removal; and that they also waived such right by obtaining in the state court an extension of their time to answer, and by giving notice of a motion in said court to dissolve a temporary injunction, which that court had granted, restraining them from collecting any rent from Stanfield, and from doing other acts as trustees. There is no force in these objections. A plaintiff, who brings his suit voluntarily, has a right to remove the cause under the same statute. The trustees were called on to appear and defend their trust by the bringing of the suit and the issuing of the injunction, and they lost no right of removal by saving to the plaintiff the trouble, expense, and delay of bringing them in compulsorily or by doing what they did.
The defendants move that the plaintiff replead in this court. It is not so entirely clear that there are causes of action at law set forth in the complaint which are so separate and distinct from the equita
'' I see no sufficient ground in the' papers for requiring the plaintiff at'present to give additional injunction security to the trustees; and, although the notice of motion includes the giving further- security to the executors, there is nothing in the moving affidavits on that subject;