Wheeden v. Camden & Amboy Railroad

1 Grant 420, 1856 Pa. LEXIS 255
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 7, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Grant 420 (Wheeden v. Camden & Amboy Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wheeden v. Camden & Amboy Railroad, 1 Grant 420, 1856 Pa. LEXIS 255 (Pa. 1856).

Opinion

The opinion was delivered

by Woodward, J.

— The Constitution of the United States, (art. 3, see. 2,) extends tbe judicial power of the Federal Union to various classes of cases, and, among others, to all cases in law and equity “ between citizens of different States.” The 11th section of the Act of Congress of 1789, commonly called the Judiciary Act, vests original cognizance in the circuit courts, of all suits of a civil nature, at common law or in equity, where the matter in dispute exceeds, exclusive of costs, five hundred dollars, and where “ the suit is between a citizen of the State where the suit is brought and the citizen of another State;” and the 12th section provides, that if a suit be commenced in a State court by a citizen of the State in which the suit is brought against a citizen of another State, and the matter in dispute exceeds five hundred dollars, exclusive of costs, to be made to appear to the satisfaction of the court, and the defendant shall, at the time of entering his appearance in such State court, file a petition for the removal of the cause for trial into the next circuit court, to be held in the district where the suit is pending, and offer good and sufficient surety for his appearance in said court, and entering special bail, if necessary, “ it shall then be the duty of the State court to accept the surety, and proceed no further in the cause,” but the same is to proceed in the Circuit Court of the United States, in the same manner as if it had been brought there by original process.

It will be observed that the legislative language, descriptive of the parties who may sue or remove into the Circuit Court, is a little more restricted than that employed in the Constitution, but if any difference of meaning be indicated by the difference in phraseology, it is unimportant in the case before me, for if this be a removable cause, it is because it is within the words of the legislature, and of course within those of the Constitution.

What, then, is the case ? James' C. Wheeden brought suit in the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania against the Camden and Amboy Railroad and Transportation Company, for the recovery of damages claimed to exceed five hundred dollars, and which resulted, it is understood, from the late calamity, well known as the “Burlington disaster.” The company, at the time of appearing, filed a petition, setting forth that they were a corporation solely created and established by laws of the State of New Jersey, and having their chief place of business within the State of New Jersey, and that the corporation was and is a citizen of said State, and that the plaintiff is a citizen of Pennsylvania. Security was tendered, and the removal of the cause into the Circuit Court was prayed for.

The plaintiff puts in an answer to the petition, and alleges that the company own property and transact a large part of their [422]*422business in the city of Philadelphia. Several of the specifications in the plaintiff’s answer are qualified, and some of them contradicted by counter affidavits on the part of the company; but I do not consider the facts alleged in the answer, whether disputed, qualified, or admitted, as of much moment to the present inquiry, for the defendant being a corporation created by the Legislature of New Jersey, and having no vitality or existence save such as is derived from that source, cannot be, whatever their business transactions in this State, a citizen of Pennsylvania, in any sense of either the Constitution or the Judiciary Act. “ That invisible, intangible and artificial being, that mere legal entity, a corporation aggregate,” if capable of becoming a citizen of a State for any purpose, must be made so by the legislative power of the State. It is impossible that New Jersey should make a citizen of Pennsylvania, even of a natural person, much less of an artificial. And if the legislative faculty of that State is incompetent for this purpose, a corporation existing solely by her will, cannot make itself a citizen of Pennsylvania. No amount of business carried on, or property held here, can naturalize such a corporation. Its rights amongst us are permissive merely, resting entirely in the absence of prohibitory legislation. That we regard every corporation “ not holding its charter under the laws of this Commonwealth” as foreign, may be seen by reference to the 3d section of our Act of Assembly of 21st March, 1849, (Brightly’s Purdon, 169,) whiph provides that suit may be brought against “any such foreign corporation,” by process served upon “ any officer, agent, or engineer of such corporation, either personally or by copy, or by leaving a certified copy at the office, depdt, or usual place of business of said corporation.” It was under this act of assembly the present defendant was sued, as a foreign corporation. The answer does not allege any legislative recognition by Pennsylvania of this corporation defendant, and, therefore, if all that is alleged were admitted, it would not be a step in the process of proving a Pennsylvania citizenship for it. We subject it to suit through its agents, when they are found here, and we seize in execution of our judgments any property it may have within our borders; but in no sense or degree can it ever become a local institution, except by express legislative recognition.

Rut further. If the facts alleged in the answer are insufficient to prove a Pennsylvania citizenship, so also do they fail to disprove this corporation a citizen of New Jersey; and, to borrow the language of Chief Justice Taney, in Bank of Augusta v. Earle, 13 Peters, 591, it must dwell in the place of its creation, and cannot migrate into another sovereignty. But as natural persons, through the intervention of agents, are continually making contracts in countries in which they do not reside, and where they are not personally present when the contract is made, so may this [423]*423artificial person, by its agents, make contracts within the scope of its limited powers, in. a sovereignty in which it does not reside, provided such contracts are permitted to be made- by the laws of the place.

And as the natural person does not transfer his citizenship from one sovereignty to another by such dealings, neither does the artificial. Nor do such dealings constitute, for either the natural person or the corporation, a double citizenship, one in the place of the domicil, and another where business is carried on through agencies.

It is obviously proper, therefore, for me to lay out of view, in the further consideration of this case, all the business arrangements and transactions which the answer charges the company with maintaining in Pennsylvania. A foreign corporation doing business in this State, becomes not thereby a citizen of Pennsylvania, and loses not any citizenship it may have in the State of its creation.

But still the question remains, is this company a citizen of New Jersey ? ' Incorporated solely by that State, doing business therein," its principal officers resident there, and its railroad, the great instrument of all its operations, lying wholly in that State, this company is a citizen of New Jersey, in so far as an artificial being can become such." If any company can be, in one sense of the Constitution, a citizen of a sovereign State, the Camden and Amboy Railroad Company is a citizen of New Jersey, and the plaintiff being confessedly a citizen of Pennsylvania, the jurisdiction of the circuit court would follow as a necessary consequence. The suit might have been brought in that court, in the first instance, and is removable there at the instance of the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Grant 420, 1856 Pa. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeden-v-camden-amboy-railroad-pa-1856.