Hale v. Allinson

102 F. 790, 9 Pa. D. 408, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 5244
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 11, 1900
DocketNo. 26
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 102 F. 790 (Hale v. Allinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hale v. Allinson, 102 F. 790, 9 Pa. D. 408, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 5244 (circtedpa 1900).

Opinion

McPHERSOR, District Judge.

The complainant is the receiver of the Northwestern Guaranty Loan Company, a Minnesota corporation, and has been specially appointed by a court of that state to enforce the additional liability that is imposed upon stockholders of certain classes of corporations by the Minnesota constitution. The defendants are Pennsylvania stockholders, 47 in number, who were not served with process and did not appear in the proceeding by which the Minnesota court ascertained what debts were due by the corporation, and how large the assessment upon each stockholder should be. The assessment was fixed at 100 per cent., and recovery is therefore sought of the whole amount that each defendant can be called upon to pay. The demurrer attacks the bill upon several grounds, of which only one,, in my opinion, is necessary to be considered, namely, that the complainant has an adequate remedy at law.

As it stands, the bill is brought by two complainants; one being the creditor that began the foregoing proceeding in Minnesota, and the other being the receiver that was thereupon specially appointed,— both professing to sue in this jurisdiction for the equal benefit of all the creditors of the company. The joinder of these two complainants is one of the grounds of demurrer; but as leave has been asked, and is now granted, to dismiss the creditor from the suit, I shall treat the bill as if it had been brought in the first instance by the receiver alone. But, even thus considered, I think it cannot be sustained, because the complainant’s remedy is properly at law. I have heretofore had occasion to decide a similar question, in Tompkins v. Craig, 93 Fed. 885; and, without repeating the reasons there given [791]*791(to which I now take leave t.o refer), I adhere to that decision. It is, no douM, true that the authorities are not uniform upon the point under consideration, but I think this much, at least, may he safely affirmed: Equity does not under all circumstances acquire jurisdiction of a controversy against numerous defendants upon the single ground that a multitude of suits at law might thereby he avoided. For example, if the receiver of an insolvent bank should come into jiossession of 50 promissory notes, apparently due to the bank from as many separate debtors, he certainly- could not join these defendants in one equitable proceeding, based upon all the notes, merely because 50 suits at law might thereby be avoided. Neither would a court of equity acquire jurisdiction in such a case upon the additional ground that the money, when collected, would become part of a fund (hat would he distributed under the court’s control. The principles that might govern the distribution would not change the character of the various liabilities sought to be enforced by the bill, and the receiver would he obliged io sue at law upon the separate legal obliga lion created by each contract, although the money realized by the suits might he afterwards distributed by a court of equity in accordance with equitable principles. Keiiher would the court acquire jurisdiction in such a case if the further ground be added, that the receiver's right of action against each defendant wars similar to his right against every other; being a right in each case to sue upon a contract made with (he same insolvent, and evidenced by a written instrument essentially of the same description. Moreover, if such a bill could be filed in equity merely because a multitude of suits at law would thereby be avoided, by what rule of computation should the objectionable multitude be determined? Would 2 suits be sufficiently numerous? Or 5? or 25? And, if one-bill might be filed because there were 50 defendants, why might not two bilis be filed, each selecting 25 defendants? 1 see no equitable principle, therefore, in the mere consideration that the receiver might have a legal right to sue many debtors» separately upon obligations similar in kind, or in the additional fact that the money recovered upon such obligations might afterwards be distributed under the supervision of a court of equity.

Something more is necessary before the equitable jurisdiction will attach, and I think the needful something is this: Before a controversy between a receiver and numerous separate debtors of the corpora lion cam he joined in one proceeding, there must be some common relation or common interest or common question to serve as a hards for the joinder. In (he absence of such a relation or interest or question, as is said by Mr. Pomeroy in the first volume of his treatise on Equity Jurisprudence (section 251), “Hie decree of a court of equity, and tiie relief given by it in one judicial proceeding, could not by any possibility prevail to prevent the multiplicity of suits which is the very object of its interference.” That is to say, the issues will still be actually numerous, and will still be essentially separate, although there is a formal pretense that one suit only is being carried on. ⅛ section 289 the rule is stated affirmatively in the following language:

“The weight of authority is simply overwhelming: that the jurisdiction may ami should be exercised either on behalf of a numerous body of separate [792]*792claimants against a single party, or on behalf of a single party against such a numerous body, although there is no common title nor community of right or of interest in the subject-matter among those individuals, but where there is, and because there is; merely a community of interest among them in the questions of law and fact involved in the general controversy, or in the kind and form of relief demanded and obtained by or against each individual member " of the numerous body.”

And in section 274 a subdivision of the fourth class of such controversies is thus described:

“Suits by a single plaintiff against á numerous body of' persons to establish his own right and defeat all their opposing claims, where the claims of these persons are legally separate, arose at different times, and from' separate sources, and are common only with respect to their interest in the question involved, and in the kind of relief to be obtained by or against each.”

These quotations state the rules that are relied on by the complainant to sustain the present bill, but, assuming them to be correct, —and I have no disposition to controvert them, — I do not think the facts bring the bill within the rules. Each case is to be considered upon its own circumstances, in order to determine whether the equitable jurisdiction exists (Rich v. Braxton, 158 U. S. 406, 15 Sup. Ct. 1006, 39 L. Ed. 1022); and, in my opinion, the circumstances of the case now before the court do not disclose a common interest between or among the parties, nor a common relation, nor a common interest in the questions involved or in the kind of relief to be obtained. The common interest of the stockholders in the question, how large the assessment should be, ceased when the decree of the Minnesota court upon that subject was entered. Thereafter a different question arose for determination, namely, can the assessment be lawfully enforced against the individuals charged therewith? And in this question the interest of each stockholder is separate and distinct. The bill asserts the conclusiveness of the Minnesota decree upon the defendants, so far as the necessity for the assessment and the amount charged against each stockholder are concerned. Bank v. Farnum, 20 Sup. Ct. 506, Adv. S. U. S. 506, 44 L. Ed. -.

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Bluebook (online)
102 F. 790, 9 Pa. D. 408, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 5244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hale-v-allinson-circtedpa-1900.