In an action for copyright infringement and unfair trade practices involving-the right to license motion pictures for-television performance, Masterpiece Productions, Inc., a defendant, filed a countеrclaim to which it sought-to join certain other persons not then before the court. The district court held that the counterclaim, which alleged unfair trade practices and conspiratorial activities on. the part of the plaintiff and additional defendants, was merely permissive and not compulsory. The court further found. that the independent jurisdiction needed to sustain the permissive counterclaim.
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was lacking as tо some of the additional defendants, who were of the same state as the defendant Masterpiece. Hence these additional defendants were dismissed from the suit, and the counterclaim was dismissed as to them. United Artists Corp. v. Grinieff, D.C.S.D.N.Y.,
The case is before us at this preliminary stage because Judge Kaufman in his order of dismissal determined, pursuant to F.R.C.P. rule 54(b), 28 U.S.C., that there was no just reason for delay and directed the clerk to enter final judgment dismissing the counterclaim as against these additional defendants, and dropping them from the action. Neither party here questions appealability; independently we reach a like conclusion and find that we have jurisdiction to hear the case. Boston Medical Supply Co. v. Lea & Febiger, 1 Cir.,
The crucial question on this aрpeal is whether the counterclaim here pleaded is properly to be viewed as compulsory or as merely permissive. A counterclaim is compulsory under F.R. 13(a) “if it arises out of the transaction or occurrence that is the subject matter of the opposing party’s claim.” In practice this criterion has been broadly interpreted to require not an absolute identity of factual backgrounds for the twо claims, but only a logical relationship between them. Lesnik v. Public Industrials Corp., 2 Cir.,
Here, the television rights at stake depended upon a number of considerations, of which interpretation of a prior сontract — stressed by the district court — was only one. Defendants interposed á number of affirmative defenses, including that of estoppel. The plea of estoppel alleged that the additional defendants Bеnjamin, Krim, and Peyser, now .in control of the plaintiff corporation, had at one time acted as counsel for defendants in the acquisition of the very rights here at issue. The counterclaim is related to this estoрpel argument, ■ since it charges that Benjamin, Krim, and Peyser conspired to deprive defendants of their rights in order to cement their own position in control of the plaintiff corporation. This lawsuit was alleged to be one of a series of harassing maneuvers designed to interfere with defendants’ proper exploitation of rights acquired on the advice of the additional defendants. We think that these pleadings disclosе a sufficient logical relationship so that, in the interest of avoiding circuity and multiplicity of action, the counterclaim should be considered compulsory under the authorities cited above.
Jurisdiction over compulsory counterclaims is ancillary to the original jurisdiction of the district court. Moore v. New York Cotton Exchange, supra,
F.R. 13(h) provides: “When the presence of parties other than those to the original action is required for the granting of complete relief in the detеrmination of a counterclaim or cross-claim, the court shall order them to be brought in as defendants as provided in these rules, if jurisdiction of them can be obtained and their joinder will not deprive the court of jurisdiсtion of the action.” While a few district courts.
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have limited this provision to indispensable parties, see Kuhn v. Yellow Transit Freight Lines, D.C.E.D.Mo.,
We conclude that, in the case of a counterclaim which is compulsory, ancillary jurisdiction should extend to additional parties, regardless of an ensuing lack of diversity. This is the position taken by the commentators, Shulman and Jaеgerman, Some Jurisdictional Limitations on Federal Procedure, supra, 45 Yale L.J. 393, 418, and the few courts which have ruled on the question. Carter Oil Co. v. Wood, supra, D.C.E.D.111.,
Nothing in F.R. 13(a) compels a different result. True, that rule excludes from its definition of compulsory counterclaims those which require for their adjudication “the presence of third pаrties of whom the court cannot acquire jurisdiction.” This restriction should be limited to cases of inability to obtain personal jurisdiction over the additional defendants. Basic considerations of fairness dictate that potential parties cannot be forced to enter litigation without due service of process upon them and that the compulsory counterclaim must be limited to permit of the operation of this рrinciple. But the parties themselves can neither extend nor limit the court’s jurisdiction over the subject matter once it is correctly invoked in the original action.
The dismissal of Benjamin, Krim, and Peyser is therefore reversed, and they must again be made parties to defendants’ counterclaim.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. Ruling as to the additional defendants not directly involved in this appeal, Matthew M. Fox, Racine Television Corporation, and Motion Picturеs for Television, Inc., had been held in abeyance pending our decision in this case.
. The court, after pointing out that the complaint there charged a conspiracy, went on to say that such an allegation stated but a single claim under F.R. 8(a), citing F. L. Mendez & Co. v. General Motors Corp., 7 Cir.,
. In Chief Judge Duffy’s persuasive opinion in Mackey v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 7 Cir.,
. A recent contrary decision in the Fifth Circuit can perhaps be distinguished on the ground that the court there did not consider the counterclaim compulsory. Reynolds v. Maples, 5 Cir.,
