Where the record plainly shows that to convert a party defendant
into a party plaintiff would be wholly inconsistent with the relief
which it is the object of the suit to obtain, the court will not
realign such defendant as a plaintiff so as to enable another
defendant to remove the case to the federal court.
Where, as in this case, the plaintiffs charge one of the
defendants with repudiation of obligations and ask his removal as
trustee, the claim made at the instance of a codefendant seeking to
remove the case, that he should be realigned as a party plaintiff,
is manifestly frivolous.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 222 U. S. 556
Memorandum opinion by direction of the court. By MR. CHIEF
JUSTICE WHITE.
The object of this suit was to enforce a trust created by the
plaintiff in error for the benefit of his wife and three minor
children, to declare a lien on certain property dedicated to the
purposes of the trust, for the removal of two trustees, etc. Josiah
v. Thompson, one of the trustees, was a plaintiff, and joined with
him were the wife and minor children of Fitz Gerald, the latter
represented by their guardian
ad litem. The remaining
trustees were made defendants, individually and in their capacity
as trustee and as partners.
All the plaintiffs except the minor children were citizens of
Pennsylvania. The minor children were aliens, and resided in
Ireland. Lenhart, one of the defendants, was a citizen of
Pennsylvania, while Fitz Gerald, his codefendant, was an alien and
a British subject. Fitz Gerald applied to remove to the United
States court on the ground that, on properly aligning the parties
to the controversy, his codefendant Lenhart was a plaintiff, and
that, as the residence of the guardian
ad litem was
controlling so far as the interest of the minors was concerned, the
controversy was one between citizens of Pennsylvania, on the one
hand, and Fitz Gerald, an alien, on the other. The further
contention was urged that the cause was embraced in the clause of
§ 1 of the Removal Act of 1887-1888 (March 3, 1887, 24 Stat.
553, c. 373), conferring original jurisdiction
Page 222 U. S. 557
upon circuit courts of controversies "between citizens of a
state and foreign states, citizens, or subjects," and that the
following clause of the second section of the act was
applicable:
"Any other suit of a civil nature at law or in equity, of which
the circuit courts of the United States are given jurisdiction by
the preceding section and which are now pending or which may
hereafter be brought in any state court may be removed into the
circuit court of the United States for the proper district by the
defendant or defendants therein, being nonresidents of that
state."
The trial court denied the application and subsequently granted
the relief prayed by the bill. On appeal, the Supreme Court of the
State of Pennsylvania affirmed the decree, and in the opinion
delivered held that no error was committed in denying the
application to remove. Because of this latter ruling, the cause was
brought here. The defendants in error now move to dismiss the
writ.
The right to remove from the state court which was asserted had
no legal foundation. Lenhart was charged with a repudiation of his
obligations as trustee by a refusal to apply the trust funds as
required by the trust agreement. Not only was an accounting by him
asked and an injunction prayed to prevent him from disposing of the
partnership property which was dedicated to the trust, but his
removal as trustee was also sought. Under these circumstances, it
is plain on the face of the record that no possible rearrangement
of the parties could have been made converting Lenhart into a party
plaintiff which would be consistent with the relief which it was
the object of the suit to obtain. In this state of the case, the
assertion that there was a denial of a federal right by the
overruling of the application to remove is so manifestly frivolous
and devoid of merit as not to form the basis of jurisdiction, and
to render it necessary to grant the motion to dismiss.
Writ of error dismissed.