Muller v. Dows

94 U.S. 444, 24 L. Ed. 207, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1887
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 1, 1876
Docket411
StatusPublished
Cited by169 cases

This text of 94 U.S. 444 (Muller v. Dows) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Muller v. Dows, 94 U.S. 444, 24 L. Ed. 207, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1887 (1876).

Opinion

*445 Me. 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 and South-western Railway Company, and the Chicago, Rock Island, and 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 The Lafayette Insurance Company v. French et al., 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 Ava-s made a corporation. It was therefore ruled, that, if the defective, averment had not been otherAvise supplied, the SAiit 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 laAvs, 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 Avhicli 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 The Lafayette Insurance Company v. French et al., 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 *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 bil£ 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 and South-western 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 and South-western 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, and 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 and South-western 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.

*447 Still, it is argued on behalf of the appellants that the Chicago and South-western 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 conjpany, 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 and South-western 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 qompany, 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 cor *448

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Bluebook (online)
94 U.S. 444, 24 L. Ed. 207, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muller-v-dows-scotus-1876.