In a suit by a corporation, a citizen of one state, against
another corporation, of another state, and it former employees and
their labor unions wherein the plaintiff, praying no relief against
the defendant corporation, sought to enjoin the other defendants
from molesting the workmen employed by that corporation and thereby
delaying or preventing the performance of contracts with the
government for war supplies entered into by the plaintiff and by it
turned over to the defendant corporation for manufacture and
delivery, and wherein it appeared that the defendant corporation
was subject to the control of the plaintiff through majority stock
ownership and through the identity of some of their officers and
directors,
Held: (1) that the plaintiff's right, if any, was a
right to protect the contract between the defendant corporation and
its workmen from the interference complained of, that the defendant
corporation was an indispensable party to the controversy, and
that, having no interest in conflict with the plaintiff's, it must
be aligned as a plaintiff in determining whether the district court
had jurisdiction through diverse citizenship (p.
254 U. S. 80);
(2) that certain allegations of the bill that the government
contracts had priority under the National Defense Act, and involved
interstate commerce, were insufficient to render the suit one
arising under the laws of the United States. P.
254 U.S. 82.
258 F. 408 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 254 U. S. 78
MR. JUSTICE CLARKE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The controversy involved in this suit originated in a strike by
employees of the defendant the Niles Tool Works Company,
hereinafter designated the Tool Company, and the sole question
presented for decision is one of jurisdiction.
The petitioner, a corporation of New Jersey, filed its bill in
the District Court for the Southern District of Ohio, making the
Tool Company, an Ohio corporation, several local labor unions, and
many of the striking employees of the Tool Company (in the bill and
hereinafter designated "former employees") parties defendant, it
being averred that all of the defendants were citizens of Ohio and
residents of the Southern district. The jurisdiction of the court
was thus invoked on the ground of diverse citizenship.
The relief prayed for was an injunction, restraining the
striking former employees of the Tool Company from molesting
workmen employed by that company to take their places, upon the
ground that petitioner had contracts with the Tool Company the
performance of which was being delayed by such interference. No
case was stated, or relief asked for, against the Tool Company.
The district court overruled a motion to dismiss for want of
jurisdiction and granted a preliminary injunction as prayed for,
but, on appeal, the circuit court of appeals found that the Tool
Company was so essentially a subsidiary of the petitioner, and its
interest in the controversy was so certainly on the same side, that
it should be treated as a plaintiff, that any decision of the case
must necessarily so involve rights of the Tool Company as to render
it an indispensable party to the case, and that giving that company
its proper classification as a plaintiff resulted in the
disappearance of the jurisdictional diversity of citizenship and
required the dismissal of the bill, which was
Page 254 U. S. 79
ordered. The case was brought here for review by writ of
certiorari.
The facts essential to be considered, which were stipulated or
sufficiently proved on the hearing of the application for an
injunction, may be epitomized as follows:
The petitioner was a corporation of New Jersey, the defendant
Tool Company a corporation of Ohio, the petitioner owned a
controlling interest in the capital stock of the Tool Company, and
the same men were president and vice-president, respectively, of
both companies. The president was invested with authority to fix
prices for the two companies, three of the five directors of the
Tool Company were directors of the petitioner, and more than 95
percent of the business of that company was obtained through the
petitioner, acting as its general sales agent. The customary mode
of transacting business between the two companies was for the
petitioner to make contracts for machinery, which it passed to the
Tool Company for manufacture and delivery.
Before the filing of the bill, the petitioner had entered into
many contracts with the United States government to furnish it, as
quickly as possible, with machinery, tools, and equipment for
arsenals and for navy and ship yards, all of which contracts were
necessary for the successful prosecution of the war, and were to be
given priority over other work. These contracts had been passed to
the Tool Company for manufacture, the petitioner remaining liable
for their performance. It was averred and sufficiently proved that
the defendants other than the Tool Company had conspired together
for the purpose of hindering, delaying, and preventing the
petitioner from performing, through the Tool Company, the contracts
thus obtained by it from the government, and for the purpose of
intimidating workmen in the employ of the Tool Company by threats,
violence, and coercion when going to and from their places of work
and when at their homes.
Page 254 U. S. 80
Such defendants, assembled about the plant of the Tool Company,
had at times by threats and violence prevented employees from
entering its factory to work, and had threatened to prevent, and
unless restrained would have prevented, that company from freely
carrying forward its business, and thereby the petitioner from
fulfilling its contracts with the government and with others.
On this record, the questions presented for decision are: was
the Tool Company an indispensable party to the suit? and, properly
classified, should it be treated as a plaintiff? If these questions
are both answered in the affirmative, the decree of the circuit
court of appeals must be affirmed; otherwise, it must be
reversed.
There is no prescribed formula for determining in every case
whether a person or corporation is an indispensable party or not,
but a rule early announced and often applied by this Court is
sharply applicable to the case at bar. In
Shields v.
Barrow, 17 How. 130,
58 U. S. 139,
this language, quoted with approval in
Barney v.
Baltimore City, 6 Wall. 280,
73 U. S. 284,
and again in
Waterman v. Canal-Louisiana Bank, &c.
Co., 215 U. S. 33,
215 U. S. 48 --
was used to describe parties so indispensable that a court of
equity will not proceed to final decision without them,
viz.:
"Persons who not only have an interest in the controversy, but
an interest of such a nature that a final decree cannot be made
without either affecting that interest or leaving the controversy
in such a condition that its final termination may be wholly
inconsistent with equity and good conscience."
The case we are considering is essentially one on the part of
the petitioner to protect from interference by striking former
employees of the Tool Company the contract which that company had
with the men employed by it to take their places. Petitioner's
claim of right, the validity of which we are not called upon to
determine, is rested wholly upon the contract of the Tool Company
with its
Page 254 U. S. 81
employes, and the character and construction of that contract of
employment must inevitably be passed upon in any decision of the
case, and obviously, if the petitioner should fail in such a suit
as this, with the Tool Company not a party, any decree rendered
would not prevent a relitigating of the same questions in the same
or in any other proper court, and it would settle nothing.
Thus, if the Tool Company be considered as having any corporate
existence whatever separate from that of the petitioner, it must
have an interest in the controversy, involved in such a case as we
have here, of a nature such that a final decree could not be made
without affecting that interest, and perhaps not without leaving
the controversy in a condition wholly inconsistent with that equity
which seeks to put an end to litigation by doing complete and final
justice, and therefore it must be concluded that it was an
indispensable party, within the quoted long established rule.
Plainly the appellant was not mistaken when it made the Tool
Company a party to the suit. But making it a party defendant could
not give to the district court jurisdiction against the objection
of another party, or over the court's own scrutiny of the record,
unless there existed a genuine controversy between it and the
plaintiff, the petitioner. Judicial Code, § 24. That there was
not and could not be any substantial controversy, and "collision of
interest," between the petitioner and the Tool Company, is, of
course, obvious from the potential control which the ownership of
stock by the former gave it over the latter company, and from the
actual control effected by the membership of the boards of
directors and by the selection of executive officers of the two
companies, which have been described.
Looking, as the Court must, beyond the pleadings, and arranging
the parties according to their real interest in the dispute
involved in the case,
Dawson v. Columbia
Trust
Page 254 U. S. 82
Co., 197 U. S. 178,
197 U. S. 180,
Steele v. Culver, 211 U. S. 26,
211 U. S. 29, it
is clear that the identity of interest of the Tool Company with the
petitioner required that the two be aligned as plaintiffs, and
that, with them so classified, the case did not present a
controversy wholly between citizens of different states within the
jurisdiction of the district court.
Coal Co.
v. Blatchford, 11 Wall. 172;
Hooe v.
Jamieson, 166 U. S. 395.
The allegations of the bill that the contracts which the
petitioner had with the United States government were of a
character which must be given priority under § 120 of the
National Defense Act, approved June 3, 1916, and that they involved
interstate commerce are much too casual and meager to give serious
color to the claim now made that the cause of action asserted is
one arising under the laws of the United States. The contention is
an afterthought, and plainly was not in the mind of the writer of
the bill of complaint.
It results that the decree of the circuit court of appeals must
be affirmed.
Appeal dismissed, petition for writ of certiorari granted,
and decree of the circuit court of appeals affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY and MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS dissent.