1. A suit by or against a corporation in a court of the United
States is regarded as brought by or against its stockholders, all
of whom are, for the purposes of jurisdiction, conclusively
presumed to be citizens of the state which created it.
2. It should appear by the declaration or bill of complaint that
the corporation was created by the state whereof the adverse party
is not a citizen, but a defective averment of that fact may be
cured by the subsequent pleadings.
3. A corporation created by the laws of Iowa, although
consolidated with another of the same name in Missouri under the
authority of a statute of each state, is nevertheless in Iowa a
corporation existing there under the laws of that state alone.
4. A decree foreclosing a mortgage executed by the Chicago &
Southwestern Railroad Company of its entire railroad and franchises
and ordering a sale of them, passed by the Circuit Court of the
United States for the District of Iowa, which, in a suit there
pending, had jurisdiction of the mortgagor and the trustees in the
mortgage, is not invalid because a part of the property ordered to
be sold is situate in the State of Missouri.
5. The Court holds that there was no waiver by the Chicago, Rock
Island & Pacific Railroad Company of its right to foreclose the
mortgage.
6. A surety who holds several securities by way of indemnity may
resort to either of them for payment.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 94 U. S. 445
MR. JUSTICE STRONG delivered the opinion of the Court.
The decree made below is assailed here for several reasons. The
first is that the court had no jurisdiction of the suit in
consequence of the want of proper and necessary citizenship of the
parties. This objection was not taken in the circuit court, but it
is of such a nature that if well founded, it must be regarded as
fatal to the decree. The bill avers that Dows and Winston, two of
the complainants, are citizens and residents of the State of New
York and that Burnes, the other complainant, is a citizen and
resident of the State of Missouri. The two original defendants, the
Chicago & Southwestern Railway Company and the Chicago, Rock
Island & Pacific Railroad Company, are averred to be citizens
of the State of Iowa. Were this all that the pleadings exhibit of
the citizenship of the parties, it would not be enough to give the
circuit court jurisdiction of the case. In
Lafayette
Insurance Company v. French, 18 How. 404, a similar
averment was held to be insufficient because it did not appear from
it that the Lafayette Insurance Company was a corporation, or, if
it was, that it did not appear by the law of what state it was made
a corporation. It was therefore ruled that, if the defective
averment had not been otherwise supplied, the suit must have been
dismissed. A corporation itself can be a citizen of no state in the
sense in which the word "citizen" is used in the Constitution of
the United States. A suit may be brought in the federal courts by
or against a corporation, but in such a case it is regarded as a
suit brought by or against the stockholders of the corporation,
and, for the purposes of jurisdiction, it is conclusively presumed
that all the stockholders are citizens of the state which by its
laws created the corporation. It is therefore necessary that it be
made to appear that the artificial being was brought into existence
by the law of some state other than that of which the adverse party
is a citizen. Such an averment is usually made in the introduction
or in the stating part of the bill. It is always there made if the
bill is formally drafted. But if made anywhere in the pleadings, it
is sufficient. In
Lafayette Insurance Company v. French,
supra, the defective averment of citizenship was held to have
been supplied by the plaintiff's replication to the plea, which
alleged that the defendants
Page 94 U. S. 446
were a corporation created under the laws of Indiana, having its
principal place of business in that state. And in the present case
we think the averment in the introduction of the bill, that the two
defendant corporations were citizens of Iowa, which, if standing
alone, would be insufficient to show jurisdiction in the federal
court, has been supplemented by other averments which
satisfactorily show that the court had jurisdiction of the case.
The bill in its stating part alleges that the Chicago &
Southwestern Railway Company, of the State of Iowa, was organized
by the adoption of articles of association in the manner provided
by the laws of said state, and that, with all the powers, rights,
and privileges granted and conferred on corporations by the then
existing laws of the said state, it assumed to act. The articles of
association are appended to the bill as an exhibit, and made part
of it by proper reference. So are the articles of consolidation
with a corporation of the same name of Missouri, in which the
Chicago & Southwestern Railway Company in Iowa is recited to be
a body politic and corporate, organized and existing under and by
virtue of the laws of the State of Iowa. The averments of the bill
were generally admitted in the answers of both the defendant
companies. But this is not all. Throughout the pleadings, the
corporate existence under the laws of Iowa of both the companies is
either admitted or asserted by all the original parties, and by the
appellants, who were made parties after the suit had been some time
in progress. The petition of the appellants to be made parties
adopted another petition, in which it was alleged that the Chicago,
Rock Island & Pacific Railroad Company was and is a corporation
organized under and in pursuance of the laws of the States of
Illinois and Iowa, and that the Chicago & Southwestern Railway
Company was and is a corporation created under and by virtue of the
laws of the States of Missouri and Iowa. Having been made parties,
the appellants filed cross-bills against the present complainants
and the two companies, in which they repeated the averments they
had previously adopted, and the answer to the cross-bill made by
all the defendants therein expressly admitted them. The record is
thus seen to be full of showing that both the defendant
corporations derived their existence as corporate bodies under the
laws of Iowa, at least in part, and that they were corporations of
that state.
Page 94 U. S. 447
Still it is argued on behalf of the appellants that the Chicago
& Southwestern Railway Company cannot claim to be a corporation
created by the laws of Iowa because it was formed by a
consolidation of the Iowa company with another of the same name,
chartered by the laws of Missouri, the consolidation having been
allowed by the statutes of each state. Hence, it is argued the
corporation was created by the laws of Iowa and of Missouri; and as
Burnes, one of the plaintiffs, is a citizen of Missouri, it is
inferred that the circuit court had no jurisdiction. We cannot
assent to this inference. It is true the provisions of the statutes
of Iowa, respecting railroad consolidation of roads within the
state with others outside of the state, were that any railroad
company, organized under the laws of the state, or that might thus
be organized, should have power to intersect, join, and unite their
railroads constructed or to be constructed in the state, or in any
adjoining state, at such point on the state line, or at any other
point, as might be mutually agreed upon by said companies; and such
railroads were authorized to "merge and consolidate the stock of
the respective companies, making one joint-stock company of the
railroads thus connected." The Missouri statutes contained similar
provisions; and with these laws in force the consolidation of the
Chicago & Southwestern railways was effected. The two companies
became one. But in the State of Iowa that one was an Iowa
corporation, existing under the laws of that state alone. The laws
of Missouri had no operation in Iowa. It is, however, unnecessary
to discuss this subject further. Doubt in regard to it is put at
rest by the decision of this Court in
Railway
Company v. Whitton's Administrator, 13 Wall. 270.
There a similar question arose. A suit was brought by a citizen of
Illinois in the state of Wisconsin, and it became a question
whether the federal circuit court of the latter state could
entertain jurisdiction. The company, sued at first in the state
court, resisted an application to remove the case into the United
States circuit court, on affidavits that it was a corporation
created by and existing under the laws of the States of Illinois,
Wisconsin, and Michigan; that its line of railway was located, in
part, in each of these states; that its entire line of railway was
managed and controlled by the defendant as a single
corporation;
Page 94 U. S. 448
that all its powers and franchises were exercised, and its
affairs managed and controlled, by one board of directors and
officers; that its principal office and place of business was at
the City of Chicago, in the State of Illinois, and that there was
no office for the control or management of the general business and
affairs of the corporation in Wisconsin. Nevertheless, the circuit
court took jurisdiction of the case, and this Court held correctly,
remarking that
"the defendant is a corporation, and as such a citizen of
Wisconsin by the laws of that state. It is not there a corporation
or citizen of any other state. Being there sued, it can only be
brought into court as a citizen of that state, whatever its status
or citizenship may be elsewhere."
In view of this decision, it must be held that the objection to
the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of Iowa is unsustainable.
The next objection urged against the decree of the court below
is that it is void so far as it directed the usual foreclosure and
sale of property not within the territorial jurisdiction of the
court. A part of the Chicago & Southwestern Railway is in the
State of Missouri, and the mortgage which the bill sought to have
foreclosed covered that part, as well as the part in the State of
Iowa. The court decreed a sale of the entire property covered by
the mortgage, and directed the master, who was ordered to make the
sale, to execute a good and sufficient deed or deeds to the
purchaser. It also declared that after the sale, both the defendant
corporations and the complainants' trustees named in the mortgage,
as well as all persons claiming under them or either of them, be
barred and foreclosed from all interest, estate, right, claim, or
equity of redemption of, in, and to the property, reserving,
however, the rights of the holders of the bonds and coupons secured
by the first mortgage, then remaining outstanding and unpaid. It
directed that the two defendant corporations should surrender to
the purchaser the property sold and conveyed, upon the execution,
approval, and delivery of the master's deed, and that, as further
assurance, the Chicago & Southwestern Railway Company should,
on the approval and delivery of the master's deed, convey all the
property therein described to the purchaser, by their good and
sufficient deed.
Page 94 U. S. 449
If such a foreclosure and sale cannot be made of a railroad
which crosses a state line and is within two states, when the
entire line is subject to one mortgage, it is certainly to be
regretted, and to hold that it cannot be would be disastrous not
only to the companies that own the road, but to the holders of
bonds secured by the mortgage. Multitudes of bridges span navigable
streams in the United States, streams that are boundaries of two
states. These bridges are often mortgaged. Can it be that they
cannot be sold as entireties by the decree of a court which has
jurisdiction of the mortgagors? A vast number of railroads, partly
in one state and partly in an adjoining state, forming continuous
lines, have been constructed by consolidated companies, and
mortgaged as entireties. It would be safe to say that more than one
hundred millions of dollars have been invested on the faith of such
mortgages. In many cases these investments are sufficiently
insecure, at the best. But if the railroad, under legal process,
can be sold only in fragments; if, as in this case, where the
mortgage is upon the whole line and includes the franchises of the
corporation which made the mortgage, the decree of foreclosure and
sale can reach only the part of the road which is within the state
-- it is plain that the property must be comparatively worthless at
the sale. A part of a railroad may be of little value when its
ownership is severed from the ownership of another part. And the
franchise of the company is not capable of division. In view of
this, before we can set aside the decree which was made, it ought
to be made clearly to appear beyond the power of the court. Without
reference to the English chancery decisions, where this objection
to the decree would be quite untenable, we think the power of
courts of chancery in this country is sufficient to authorize such
a decree as was here made. It is here undoubtedly a recognized
doctrine that a court of equity, sitting in a state and having
jurisdiction of the person, may decree a conveyance by him of land
in another state, and may enforce the decree by process against the
defendant. True, it cannot send its process into that other state,
nor can it deliver possession of land in another jurisdiction, but
it can command and enforce a transfer of the title. And there seems
to be no reason why it cannot, in a proper case, effect the
transfer by
Page 94 U. S. 450
the agency of the trustees when they are complainants. In
McElrath v. Pittsburg & Steubenville Railroad Co., 55
Penn.St. 189 -- a bill for foreclosure of a mortgage -- in which it
appeared that a railroad company, whose road was partly in
Pennsylvania and partly in West Virginia, had mortgaged all their
rights in the whole road, the court decreed that the trustee who
had brought the suit, being within its jurisdiction, should sell
and convey all the mortgaged property, as well that in the State of
West Virginia as that in Pennsylvania. This case is directly in
point, and tends to justify the decree made in the present case.
The mortgagors here were within the jurisdiction of the court. So
were the trustees of the mortgage. It was at the instance of the
latter the master was ordered to make the sale. The court might
have ordered the trustees to make it. The mortgagors who were
foreclosed were enjoined against claiming property after the
master's sale, and directed to make a deed to the purchaser in
further assurance. And the court can direct the trustees to make a
deed to the purchaser in confirmation of the sale. We cannot,
therefore, declare void the decree which was made.
The next objection urged by the appellants is that the bill for
a foreclosure and all the proceedings therein were collusive. It is
said the suit was instituted by collusion between the trustees and
the Rock Island and Southwestern Railroad Companies, for the
purpose of destroying the lien of the Atchinson branch bondholders
on the main line of the Southwestern Railway, and to enable the
Rock Island company to obtain the title to the main line,
discharged from any lien or claim on the part of such bondholders.
After careful examination of the evidence, we have failed to find
any thing that justifies this objection. And certainly if there was
collusion in bringing and conducting the suit, the appellants have
not been injured by it. They were permitted to come in as parties
defendant, and they had full opportunity to assert their
equities.
The fourth objection is general. It is that, at the time of
filing the bill, no right of foreclosure existed in favor of the
complainant trustees for the benefit of the Chicago and Rock Island
Railway Company or, if such a right did exist, that it had been
waived. In respect to this objection we have to
Page 94 U. S. 451
remark, that unless the right to a foreclosure had been waived
by the Rock Island company, we discover no foundation for the
assertion that there was no right of foreclosure when the suit was
brought. That company had endorsed $5,000,000 of the bonds of the
Southwestern company secured by the mortgage; and, in consequence
of the endorsement, had paid coupons for interest of the bonds to a
large amount. The mortgage stipulated that it might be foreclosed,
in case of failure by the mortgagor to pay the interest, and it
stipulated further that in case the Rock Island company should, in
consequence of its guaranty, pay any of the bonds or coupons, the
mortgage might be foreclosed at their instance. The right to
foreclose at the instance of the Rock Island company was expressly
given. Was there any waiver of this right? We think not. It is said
that the contract of July 27, 1871, coupled with the contract of
Oct. 1, 1869, constituted a waiver. The contract first made
preceded and contemplated the execution of the mortgage. It gave to
the Rock Island company the option of furnishing the equipment for
the Southwestern road, or to lease and operate it on such terms as
might be agreed upon. Manifestly, this was for an additional
security to the guarantors of the bonds, and not for a substituted
security. And the contract of July 27, 1871, made between the Rock
Island company and the Southwestern, merely provided that, with
regard to the lease of the branch railroad proposed to be
constructed by the latter to the Missouri River, opposite
Atchinson, it should be used and operated by the Rock Island road
in the same manner and on the same terms as the main line of the
Southwestern. The meaning of this is, not that a lease existed, or
should be taken, though one may have been contemplated, but that
the branch road should be operated in the same manner and on the
same terms as the main line might be. How this contract alone, or
connected with the contract of Oct. 1, 1869, can be construed as a
waiver of a right to sue for foreclosure of the mortgage on the
main line, we are unable to comprehend. Nor can we see that the
contract of Dec. 4, 1871, called a "lease contract," even if it be
regarded as an executed and subsisting contract, can have such an
effect. We have heretofore said that the agreement to give and take
a lease, dependent on the option of the Rock
Page 94 U. S. 452
Island company, was intended as an additional security to that
company for its endorsement of the bonds. If we are correct, a
lease executed in pursuance of the agreement could be only
cumulative security. Hence, it could be no waiver of the right to
foreclose.
But in fact there was no lease, nor any agreement for a lease,
that could be enforced specifically. The language of the agreement
of Oct. 1, 1869, and that of the agreement of July 27, 1871,
warrant no interpretation that makes them a lease in law, or in
equity. The first, it is true, contemplated the possibility of a
lease of the main line, if the terms could be agreed upon; and the
latter provided that when such lease should be agreed upon, if
ever, it should also embrace the branch line. But the terms never
were agreed upon. On the thirtieth day of October, 1871, at a
meeting of the executive committee of the Rock Island company,
Messrs. Scott and Riddle were appointed a subcommittee
"to agree upon the basis of a contract for a running arrangement
between the company and the Southwestern, with directions to report
to the general committee when an arrangement should be agreed
upon."
On the 4th of December, 1871, a proposition was submitted by
that subcommittee to the officers of the Southwestern, and accepted
by them. It was a proposition for a lease. But the subcommittee had
no authority to agree for the Rock Island company to take a lease,
and when afterwards they reported their action to the general
committee, that committee refused to confirm it. It is vain
therefore to contend that there was a lease, or any agreement for a
lease, that can be enforced. And even if there was, there is no
evidence that one of its terms was that the rent should be
sufficient for the payment, and should be applied to the payment of
the Atchinson branch bonds.
It is next insisted on behalf of the appellants that the Rock
Island company could not ask for a foreclosure of the mortgages
until it had accounted for and applied the stock of the
Southwestern company to its indemnification for its guaranty, for
which purpose it held such stock as security. The company did hold
a large amount of that stock. Whether it held it as an indemnity
for the liabilities it had assumed, we do not care to inquire.
Assuming that it did, the fact is quite
Page 94 U. S. 453
immaterial. It surely cannot be maintained that a surety who
held several securities for his indemnity cannot use one of them
because he has another to which he might resort.
The fifth particular in which the decree is alleged to have been
erroneous is that it denied the relief for which the appellants
prayed in their cross-bill. That relief was the enforcement of what
is called the lease contract of Dec. 4, 1871, or the enforcement of
the contract of July 27, 1871, by a lease of the branch line, on
terms and conditions to be derived from the contract of Oct. 1,
1869 -- that is to say, the rental to be paid by the Rock Island
company to be an amount sufficient to guarantee the principal, or
at least the interest, of the Atchinson branch bonds. The answer to
this is what we have heretofore said. There was no lease, nor any
contract which bound the Rock Island company to take a lease, much
less to pay a rental sufficient to guarantee the principal or
interest of the Atchinson branch bonds, or to apply the rent to the
payment of that principal or interest.
The appellants also, in their cross-bill, prayed in the
alternative that the bonds of the branch road held by them might be
deemed to have been obtained under false and fraudulent pretences,
and that the proceeds thereof were paid out by the Rock Island
company knowingly, fraudulently, and in violation of a trust
assumed by them, and that the said company might be decreed to pay
to them the par value of the same and interest.
We have sought in vain for any evidence that would justify a
decree that the Rock Island company obtained the bonds of the
branch road by fraudulent pretences, or that it knowingly,
fraudulently, and in violation of any trust assumed by it, paid out
the proceeds of sale of the bonds. By the provisions of the branch
mortgage the Rock Island company was made the custodian of the
bonds, with power and direction to pay them and their proceeds to
the president or other duly authorized agent of the Southwestern
company, in three contingencies: first, upon the delivery of an
invoice of articles purchased, approved by the president; second,
upon the presentation of monthly estimates by the engineer of the
Southwestern of work done and materials furnished
Page 94 U. S. 454
in the construction of the branch railway, approved in the same
manner; and third, on the certificate of the same engineer,
approved in like manner, that the road had been completed and was
in running order. If this constituted a trust, it was only that of
a custodian. The Rock Island company had no right to control the
location of the branch road, or the cost of its construction. It
was not its duty to supervise the contracts or direct the
alignment. Such action would have been outside of its corporate
power. If some persons who were its officers undertook to control
the expenditure in such a manner as to secure a proper location and
construction of the road (of which we discover no sufficient
evidence), those persons may be responsible for their breach of
duty, if there was any. But no such trust was assumed by the Rock
Island company. Certainly, then, there was no undertaking that the
branch road should be fifty miles long, and, if it was imperfectly
constructed, it appears that the Rock Island company has expended
upon its construction a very large sum of its own money, and has
made it a first-class Western road. If, then, there was such a
trust, as is charged by the appellants, and a breach of it, full
compensation has been made, and the appellants have all the
security the trust was intended to give them;
i.e., a
first mortgage upon a finished first-class road.
The last objection to the decree is that the relief prayed for
by the cross-bills of the two defendant railroad companies should
not have been granted, for the following reasons: 1st, if the
original suit fails for want of jurisdiction, so must the
cross-bills; 2d, the cross-bills were nullities, because filed
without leave of the court, and because not making the intervening
bondholders parties; 3d, because collusive. We have seen the court
had jurisdiction of the original suit. The permission of the court
to file the cross-bills must be presumed from its action upon them,
and the intervening bondholders were not parties or necessary
parties when the bills were filed. They became parties to the
original bill, but they did not ask to be made parties to the
cross-bills of the defendant corporations. That the cross-bills
were collusive in their origin, purpose, and conduct, if such was
the fact, which we do not perceive, is of no importance, since the
appellants had an unobstructed opportunity
Page 94 U. S. 455
to vindicate their rights. They might, if they had chosen, have
become parties defendant to the cross-bills, and, if they had, they
could not have resisted the relief given by the court.
The appellants are no doubt unfortunate. It may be that they
purchased their bonds expecting that the Rock Island company would
protect them, either by taking a lease of the branch road, or by
holding the purchase money of the bonds and expending it for their
security. But the expectation of a guaranty cannot be treated as a
guaranty itself.
Decree affirmed.