Whitman v. Hubbell

30 F. 81 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1887

Wheelee, J.

The plaintiff is a citizen of New York, and the defendant of Connecticut. The Adams Express Company is a joint-stock association of New York. This suit was brought in the state court to restrain the maintenance of an awning over a part of Great Jones street adjoining the plaintiff’s premises. The defendant removed the cause into this court. The plaintiff moved to have it remanded because as he says the matter in-dispute does not exceed the sum or value of 8500, and there is not a controversy in it between citizens of different stales. Act of March 3, 1875, (18 St. 470, § 2.) The matter in dispute is the value of the right to maintain.the awning, not the amount of damage done by it to the plaintiff. Railroad Co. v. Ward, 2 Black, 485. This appears to he more than $500. The Adams Express Company is a partnership, and not a corporation. It has no existence apart from the members, and does not appear to he of itself a citizen of any place. The law of the state permits suit to be brought by or against the president or treasurer of such an association, instead of joining all the individual members. Code Civil Proc. §§ 1919, 1923. When an action is so brought, no action can be brought against the members except on failure to obtain satisfaction of the judgment. Section 1921. Tho officer is the only defendant on the record, although he represents tho association, and the execution against him, if obtained, is to be satisfied out of the assets of the association. Section 1921. The controversy is therefore between citizens of different states in this case, although others who may or may not be citizens of the same state with the jilaintiff are-*82interested in the controversy. The representative character of a party does not affect his right of removal. It depends upon his citizenship alone, without regard to that of those whom he represents, or of those who are interested in the controversy, hut are not parties to the record. Marshall v. Railroad, Co., 16 How. 314; Knapp v. Railroad Co., 20 Wall. 117.

midpage