Gard v. Durant

9 F. Cas. 1149, 4 Cliff. 113
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 15, 1869
DocketCase No. 5,216
StatusPublished

This text of 9 F. Cas. 1149 (Gard v. Durant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gard v. Durant, 9 F. Cas. 1149, 4 Cliff. 113 (circtdri 1869).

Opinion

CLIFFORD, Circuit Justice.

Provision was made by section 12 of the judiciary act for the removal of certain causes pending in the state courts into the circuit court for trial within the same district, and the directions were that the causé should then proceed in the same manner as if it had been brought there by original process. 1 Stat 93.

Federal officers, or other persons also, against whom any suit or prosecution was commenced in a court of any state, for or on account of any act done under the revenue laws of the United States, or under color thereof, or for or on account of any right, title, or authority set up or claimed by such officer or other person under any such federal law, might also, by section 3 of the act of March 2, 1S33. transfer the same into the circuit court of the United States in and for the district in which the defendant in suen suit or prosecution was served with process, in the manner and through the proceedings therein mentioned' and described. 4 Stat 633.

Special provision is also made by section 2 of the act of July 27, 1868, “that any corporation, or any member thereof, other than a banking corporation organized under a law-of the United States, and against which a suit at law or equity has or may be commenced in any court other than a circuit or district court of the United States, for any lia[1151]*1151bility or alleged liability of such corporation, or any member thereof, as such member, may have such suit removed from the court in which it may be .pending to the proper circuit or district court of the United States.” 15 Stat. 227.

Strangely expressed as the section is, it is matter of some doubt as to what congress intended, and what they have accomplished by the provision. Nothing contained in section 1 affords any aid in ascertaining the meaning of section 2, as section 1 merely provides that the United States may prosecute writs of error from the circuit court to the .district court, and appeals from the district court to the circuit court, without giving security, as previously provided in respect to ■writs of error and appeals returnable to the supreme court. 12 Stat 657.

Application for such removal must .be made by petition; but the petition may be filed either before or after issue joined, and it must state that the defendants have a defence arising under or by virtue of the constitution, or some treaty or law of the United States, and the defendants must offer good and sufficient surety for entering in such court, on the first day of its then next session, copies of •all process, pleadings, depositions, testimony and other proceedings in said suit, and for doing such other appropriate acts as are re•quired to be done by the act to which this one is supplementary. 12 Stat C57.

. Much of the difficulty in the case arises from the first clause in the section under consideration, which enacts that any corporation, .or any member thereof, against which a suit has been or may be commenced, &c., may have such suit removed. Evidently the petition for removal must be filed by the defendant in the suit, .but the question is whether -the defendant is either the corporation or .any member thereof, or only the corporation ■organized under a law of the United States. The language of the act is “any corporation, or any member thereof, against which a suit has been or may be commenced.” Does the word “which” refer only to the organized corporation, or does it refer both to the corporation and to any member thereof, as the language, taken literally, seems to imply?

Considered grammatically, the word “which” should be restricted to the corporation, and yet the latter clause of the section pretty clearly indicates; that such was not the intention of congress, as appears from the statements required to be made in the petition as to the nature and character of tbé .defence which would justify the removal, as ■well as from the nature and character of the suit. By the language of the section, the suit must be one for a liability or alleged lia-bilitj' of the corporation or “any member thereof” as such member, and the defence must be one arising under or by virtue of the constitution or any treaty or law of congress.

No one doubts that a suit may be prosecuted against a corporation for its own liabilities, but it is past comprehension how a suit can be sustained against a corporation for the liability of one o*f its members.

Laws which subject a corporation to accountability for the conduct and acts of its members, as such, make the corporation itself liable, and a prosecution therefor would not be based on any liability of the member, but upon the liability of the corporation arising from the conduct and acts of the member as the agent of the corporation. Viewed in the light of these suggestions, it cannot be admitted that the provision in question was intended to apply to suits against any such corporation, for any liability or alleged Lability of any member of the corporation.

Incorporated companies are made accountable for the acts and conduct of their members, when the members are-acting on behalf of the corporation and by its authority, because their acts in that state of the case become the acts of the corporation itself. Redress for such acts, against the corporation, however, is not sustained, and does not depend upon any liability of the member, but upon the original liability of the corporation, created by the acts and doings of the member in their behalf.

Consonant with .these views, the word “which” must be considered as the antecedent of the word “member,” as well as the antecedent of the word “corporation,” and •the whole section must be construed distribr utively, so that the several provisions respecting the removal of the suit from the state court to the proper circuit or district courts shall be equally applicable, whether the suit pending in the state court be one against the corporation described in the,section, answering for its own liabilities, or one where a member of such corporation is sued upon the ground that he is personally liable for the debt or other obligation of the corporation. When the corporation is the defendant, the petition for the removal must be filed in their behalf, but when the pending .suit is brought against a member of the corporation upon the ground that he is personally liable for the debt of the corporation, he, as the defendant in the suit, may file the petition and claim to have the cause removed.

Statutes making the members of a corporation liable in certain contingencies for the debts, of the corporation, in whole or in part, .are familiar to the courts in all the states, •and the true meaning of the alternative clause of the sentence is, that any member .of the corporation, when sued as such member for the debt of the corporation, may have .the same right to remove the cause into the proper circuit or district courts as the corporation would have had if they had been sued for the same debt Construed in this [1152]*1152way, the provision is a reasonable one, but it would be contrary to any analogy of the law to hold that a member of a corporation, by reason of his membership, might remove a suit brought against a corporation, without their consent, to which he was not otherwise a party than as a member of the incorporated company.

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Bluebook (online)
9 F. Cas. 1149, 4 Cliff. 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gard-v-durant-circtdri-1869.