Thayer v. Life Association of America, 112 U.S. 717 (1885)
U.S. Supreme Court
Thayer v. Life Association of America, 112 U.S. 717 (1885)Thayer v. Life Association of America
Submitted December 16, 1884
Decided January 5, 1885
112 U.S. 717
Syllabus
Two citizens of West Virginia conveyed to a trustee certain real property in that state to secure the payment of notes executed by them to a Missouri corporation which was subsequently dissolved and its assets placed in the hands of a citizen of the latter state. Upon default in the payment of the notes, the trustee, under authority given by the deed, advertised the property for sale. The grantors thereupon instituted a suit in equity in one of the courts of West Virginia to enjoin the sale, making the trustee, the Missouri corporation, and the person who held its assets, defendants. Upon the joint petition of that corporation and the defendant holding its assets, the cause was removed to the circuit court of the United States, and was there finally determined. Held that since the trustee was an indispensable party, his citizenship was material in determining the jurisdiction of the circuit court, and as that was not averred, and did not otherwise affirmatively appear to be such as gave the right of removal, the decree must be reversed and the cause remanded to the state court.
By a duly recorded deed of August 22, 1872, Otis A. Thayer and William T. Thayer conveyed to Edward B. Knight certain real estate in Kanawha County, State of West Virginia, in trust, to secure the payment of several notes executed by the grantors to the Life Association of America, a corporation created and organized under the laws of the State of Missouri. The deed was upon the condition that if the notes were paid at maturity and the covenants therein contained were kept and performed, the property should he released, but if the notes or any of them were not paid as stipulated, or if said covenants were not fully kept, then the deed should remain in full force, with the right in the trustee to take immediate possession of the property; that after such default, the grantors and their heirs and assigns should hold the premises conveyed as tenants only of the trustee from month to month, and the latter might proceed to sell the property at public auction to the highest bidder on the terms and conditions prescribed by the laws of the state, first giving twenty days' notice of the
time, terms, place of sale, and the property to be sold, by advertisement in some newspaper, upon such sale to execute and deliver a deed in fee simple of the property sold, receive the proceeds of sale, out of which shall be paid, first, the cost and expenses of the trust; next, all amounts expended as aforesaid for taxes and other purposes, with interest, as above mentioned, and then, the amount that may remain unpaid on the notes. The deed also provided that any failure to pay the notes at their respective maturities, or to keep its covenants, should cause all of the notes to become and be considered due and payable, for the purpose of the trust at the time of such default.
Knight, the trustee, under the authority given by the deed, having advertised the property for sale on the 25th of April thereafter at public auction to the highest bidder for the purpose of satisfying the debt secured by it to the Life Association of America, this suit was commenced in the Circuit Court of Kanawha County, West Virginia, by the grantors in the deed of trust against the Life Association of America, William S. Relfe, Superintendent of the Department of Insurance of the State of Missouri, and Edward B. Knight, trustee. The bill shows that by a decree of the Circuit Court for the County of St. Louis, Missouri, the Life Association of America was dissolved and its assets placed in the hands of the defendant Relfe, as superintendent of the insurance department of that state. It sets out the consideration of the before-mentioned notes, the execution of the deed of trust, and the proposed sale of the property, by the trustee at the instance of Relfe. The complainants contend, upon grounds which need not be here stated, that the trust debt is paid, and that there is a balance due them of $91.63. Claiming that the sale of the trust property would be unjust and inequitable, they ask that the trustee be enjoined from selling it; also, that the trust debt be decreed to be extinguished.
A temporary injunction against the sale was issued. In due time, the defendants the Life Association and Relfe appeared and filed their joint petition and bond for the removal of the cause into the circuit court of the United States. The petition
avers that at that time, as well as at the commencement of the action, the complainants were citizens of West Virginia, while the Life Association of America and Relfe were citizens of Missouri. There is no allegation of the citizenship of Knight, the trustee. He is alleged, in the petition for removal, to have no interest in the suit, and to be a nominal party only. The right of removal was recognized by the state court. Subsequently, in the circuit court of the United States, a demurrer to the bill was sustained, and, no amendment having been made, the suit was dismissed.