delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioners, residents of the City of New York, are holders of Class B debentures issued by respondent railroad company, a Wisconsin corporation. They brought this suit in the New York courts to recover amounts alleged to be due and payable under the debentures out of earnings in lieu of interest. On petition of respondent the
*551
action was removed to the federal District Court for the Southern District of New York on the grounds of diversity. Respondent thereupon moved (1) to set aside the service because respondent was not doing business in New York and (2) to dismiss because the subject matter was concerned with the internal affairs of a foreign corporation. The District Court denied the first motion, but granted the second. 59 E. Supp. 98. On appeal the Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed by a divided vote, holding that the District Court did not abuse its discretion in basing its dismissal on
jorum non conveniens.
The Class B debentures, issued in 1896, have no maturity date. Their principal is payable “only in the event of a sale or reorganization” of the company and “then only out of any net proceeds” remaining after specified payments to the Class A debentures and to the stock. The covenant in the Class B debentures out of which this litigation arises is set forth below.
1
The Circuit Court of
*552
Appeals was divided as to its meaning. The majority concluded that even though there were net earnings after the payments to the Class A debentures and to the stock, the directors had discretion to determine whether or not that sum should be paid to the Class B debentures. The court thereupon held, in reliance on
Rogers
v.
Guaranty Trust Co.,
We leave open the question of the proper construction of the “net earnings” covenant in the Class B debentures. Although we assume that the majority of the court below *553 was right in its interpretation of the covenant, we think it was improper to dismiss the case on the grounds of forum non conveniens.
Rogers
v.
Guaranty Trust Co., supra,
is the only decision of this Court holding that a federal court should decline to hear a case because it concerns the internal affairs of a corporation foreign to the State where the federal court sits. A corporation chartered by one State commonly does business in the farthest reaches of the nation. Its business engagements — the issuance of securities, mortgaging of assets, contractual undertakings — frequently raise questions concerning the construction of its charter, by-laws and the like, or the scope of authority of its officers or directors, or the responsibility of one group in the corporate family to another group. All such questions involve in a sense the internal affairs of a corporation — whether in a suit on a contract the corporation interposes the defense of
ultra vires,
or a bondholder sues on his bond or a stockholder asserts rights under his stock certificate. But a federal court which undertakes to decide such a question does not trespass on a forbidden domain. See
Williamson
v.
Missouri-Kansas Pipe Line Co.,
We mention this phase of the matter to put the rule of forum non conveniens in proper perspective. It was designed as an “instrument of justice.” 3 Maintenance of a suit away from the domicile of the defendant — whether he be a corporation or an individual — might be vexatious or oppressive. 4 An adventitious circumstance might land *555 a case in one court when in fairness it should be tried in another. The relief sought against a foreign corporation *556 may be so extensive or call for such detailed and continuing supervision that the matter could be more efficiently handled nearer home. 5 The limited territorial jurisdiction of the federal court 6 might indeed make it difficult for it to make its decree effective. 7 But where in this type of litigation only a money judgment is sought, the case normally is different. The fact that the claim involves complicated affairs of a foreign corporation is not alone a sufficient reason for a federal court to decline to *557 decide it. 8 The same may be true even where an injunction is sought. 9 We give these merely as illustrations. Each case turns on its facts. There are no special circumstances here, however, which should lead the District Court in New York to decline to exercise the jurisdiction which it has.
If petitioners’ theory of the case is right, the court need go no further than it would in enforcing any contract to pay money. If, as the maj ority of the court below thought, the payment of net income to the Class B debentures rested in the discretion of the directors, the question under the applicable local law would normally be whether their discretion had been abused.
10
In case it were found to
*558
have been abused, the customary remedy is comparable to that which a court of equity affords in a suit for specific performance.
11
The point is that, however this suit be viewed, the relief sought is not of such a character as to suggest that the federal court in New York would be so handicapped that it should remit the parties to Wisconsin. There is a suggestion that the parties should be remitted to Wisconsin because a construction of the covenant will primarily affect the interests of the public in that State where all of respondent’s railroad lines are located. Reference is made to
New York, L. E. & W. R. Co.
v.
Nickals,
It was held in
Weiss
v.
Routh,
Nor can we conclude that the maintenance of this suit in New York will be vexatious or oppressive. Petitioners, as we have said, reside there. While respondent’s rail *560 road lines are wholly in Wisconsin, it does business in New York. The Class B debentures are listed and traded in on the New York Stock Exchange. The amounts payable on them in lieu of interest are payable in New York. Respondent maintains its financial as well as a traffic office in New York. It maintains a bank account in New York, not only to take care of obligations under its securities, but also to handle excess operating funds not needed in Wisconsin. Five of respondent’s six directors are to be found in New York. These five directors include all the executive and fiscal officers, except the president who supervises operations in Wisconsin and the general auditor who is in Wisconsin. Directors’ meetings are customarily held in New York. Two of the three members of the executive committee, which acts for the board between meetings, are to be found in New York. Financial records, transfer books, minute books and the like are kept in New York. These facts plainly indicate to us that it would not be vexatious or oppressive to entertain this suit in New York, whether the availability of witnesses or any other aspect of a trial be considered. We accordingly conclude that, the requirements of jurisdiction and venue being satisfied (Judicial Code, §§ 24, 51, 28 U. S. C. §§41 (1), 112), the District Court should not have declined to hear and decide the case.
Reversed.
Notes
“The said Railroad Company Hereby Agrees that until such payment, the holders of this Series of Debentures shall in lieu of interest thereon participate in the distribution of annual net income to the following extent, viz.: — So much of the annual net earnings of the said Company in any year as would be applicable to the payment of dividends on stock shall be applied as follows, viz.: — To the holders of Class A Debentures 2% per cent upon the face value thereof, or if such annual net earnings are insufficient for the payment of the same, then all such net earnings shall be distributed pro rata among the holders of said Class A Debentures. After the payment of 2% per cent upon the face value of Class A Debentures, the stockholders of the Company are entitled to receive the balance of such net earnings until 2% per cent shall have been paid out of the same upon the par value of the said stock, and all surplus net earnings then remaining shall be paid to the holders of Class A Debentures and of the stock pro rata until five per cent shall have been paid upon the face value of said Debentures and upon the par of said stock for such year, and any surplus net earnings arising in such year which may then remain shall be paid to and distributed among the holders of Class B *552 Debentures pro rata. None of such payments shall be cumulative. The amounts, if any, payable upon this series of debentures out of the net earnings in any year, will be fixed and declared by the Board of Directors on or before the first day of February, in the following year . . .”
Petitioners alleged that, with the exception of three years, respondent had substantial net earnings in each year from 1924 to 1943 inclusive, in excess of the amounts required to be paid and actually paid on the Class A debentures and on the stock. The aggregate amount of such net earnings, after deducting reserves for additions and general improvements and depreciation, and after deducting the payments on the Class A debentures and the stock was alleged to be approximately $1,650,000. The amounts actually paid on the Class B debentures during those years was $840,000, leaving due, according to petitioners, about $810,000.
Mr. Justice Cardozo dissenting, Rogers v. Guaranty Trust Co., supra, p. 151.
In Gibb, International Law of Jurisdiction (1926), pp. 212-213, the law of England and Scotland is stated as follows: “the court will not hold its hand unless there be, in the circumstances of the case, such hardship on the party setting up the plea as would amount to vexatiousness or oppression if the court persisted in exercising jurisdiction. The inconvenience, then, must amount to actual hardship, and this must be regarded as a condition sine qua non of success in putting forward a defence of forum non conveniens. For the general rule is that a court possessing jurisdiction must exercise it unless the reasons to the contrary are clear and cogent.”
*555 In Societe du Gaz de Paris v. “Les Amateurs francais”, 1926 S. C. (H. L.) 13, perhaps the leading English case on the subject, a French manufacturing company sued a firm of French shipowners in a Scottish court on a charter-party. It provided that the vessel was to load a cargo of coal in England and proceed to a French port. The vessel, after loading, sailed and foundered. The plaintiff attached another vessel of defendants found in a Scottish port and claimed damages by reason of the unseaworthiness of the vessel. Neither plaintiff nor defendant had a place of business in Scotland. The bulk of the evidence necessary to determine the controversy was French, no machinery existed for compelling the attendance of French witnesses in a Scottish court, no question of Scots law was involved, and a trial in Scotland would deprive defendants of a defense open under French law. A judgment sustaining the plea of forum non conveniens was sustained. Lord Chancellor Cave summarized the rule as follows : "... if in any case it appeared to the Court, after giving consideration to the interests of both parties and to the requirements of justice, that the ease could not be suitably tried in the Court in which it was instituted, and full justice could not be done there to the parties, but could be done in another Court, then the former Court might give effect to the plea by declining jurisdiction and permitting the issues to be fought out in the more appropriate Court.” pp. 16-17. Lord Shaw of Dunfermline stated: “If in the whole circumstances of the case it be discovered that there is a real unfairness to one of the suitors in permitting the choice of a forum which is not the natural or proper forum, either on the ground of convenience of trial or the residence or domicile of parties, or of its being either the locus con-tractus, or the locus solutionis, then the doctrine of forum non con-veniens is properly applied.” p. 20. - ■
And see
Canada Malting Co.
v.
Paterson Steamships,
See
Wallace
v.
Motor Products Corp.,
Georgia
v.
Pennsylvania R. Co.,
The same is true, of course, of state courts. See
Taylor
v.
Mutual Reserve Fund Life Assn.,
American Seating Co.
v.
Bullard,
Harr
v.
Pioneer Mechanical Corp.,
That is the usual rule in suits to compel the declaration of dividends.
Dodge
v.
Ford Motor Co.,
See Spellman, Corporate Directors (1931) § 141; Weiner, Theory of Anglo-American Dividend Law, 29 Col. L. Rev. 461; Ballantine & Hills, Corporate Capital and Restrictions Upon Dividends Under Modern Corporation Laws, 23 Calif. L. Rev. 229.
For the decree entered in
Dodge
v.
Ford Motor Co., supra
note 9, see
Kales
v.
Woodworth,
