Under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a), a Federal District Court in
Louisiana had jurisdiction over this suit for damages in excess of
$3,000 brought under the Louisiana Direct Action Statute against
the alleged wrongdoer's insurer alone, where diversity of
citizenship existed between the claimant and the defendant insurer
but not between the complainant and the alleged wrongdoer. Pp.
348 U. S.
49-53.
(a) Since the Louisiana courts have construed the Direct Action
Statute as creating a separate and distinct cause of action against
the insurer which an injured party may elect in lieu of his action
against the tortfeasor, the citizenship of the tortfeasor is
disregarded for purposes of federal jurisdiction. Pp.
348 U. S.
50-51.
(b) Neither under the Louisiana statute and practice nor by
federal standards was the tortfeasor an indispensable party to this
litigation, and failure to join her as a defendant did not deprive
the federal court of jurisdiction. Pp.
348 U. S.
51-52.
(c) Notwithstanding the differing standards of review on appeal
of a jury verdict in the Louisiana and federal courts, the latter
should not decline, as a matter of discretion, to exercise their
jurisdiction over a suit such as this against the insurer alone.
Pp.
348 U. S.
52-53.
201 F.2d 500 affirmed.
This suit in a Federal District Court against a foreign
corporation, based on diversity of citizenship, was dismissed for
want of jurisdiction, 107 F. Supp. 299, and a motion for a
rehearing was overruled, 108 F. Supp. 157. The Court of Appeals
reversed, 201 F.2d 500, and denied rehearing, 202 F.2d 744. This
Court granted certiorari, 347 U.S. 965.
Affirmed, p.
348 U. S.
53.
Page 348 U. S. 49
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WARREN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case concerns the Louisiana direct action statute. This
Court has today had occasion to test that statute against certain
claims of unconstitutionality,
Watson v. Employers Liability
Assurance Corp., post, p.
348 U. S. 66.
[
Footnote 1] Questions are
raised here involving the diversity jurisdiction of the federal
courts in cases arising under the statute.
Respondent, a citizen of Louisiana, was injured in an automobile
accident at Shreveport, Louisiana, allegedly because of the
negligence of Mrs. S. W. Bowen, also a Louisiana citizen.
Petitioner, an Illinois corporation, had issued a public liability
policy to Mr. Bowen insuring him and members of his household
against claims arising from their negligent operation of the family
car. The policy was applied for, issued, and delivered within the
State of Louisiana. Petitioner was certificated to do business in
Louisiana, and had, as a legal prerequisite thereto, consented in
writing to be sued directly for damages sustained in Louisiana
accidents involving its policyholders.
The pertinent portion of the direct action statute provides:
"The injured person or his or her heirs,
at their
option, shall have a right of direct action against the
insurer within the terms and limits of the policy in the parish
where the accident or injury occurred or
Page 348 U. S. 50
in the parish where the insured has his domicile, and
said
action may be brought against the insurer alone or against
both the insured and the insurer, jointly and in solido."
La.Rev.Stat., Tit. 22, § 655. (Italics added.) Pursuant to
this provision, respondent brought this action against petitioner
in the United States District Court for the Western District of
Louisiana, alleging diversity of citizenship and damages in excess
of $3,000. Mrs. Bowen, the alleged tortfeasor, was not made a
codefendant. Petitioner moved to dismiss the complaint for lack of
federal jurisdiction; the district judge granted the motion. 107 F.
Supp. 299, 108 F. Supp. 157. The Court of Appeals, 201 F.2d 500;
202 F.2d 744, reversed and remanded the case to the District Court
for trial, one judge dissenting from the denial of a petition for
rehearing. From that decision, this Court granted certiorari, 347
U.S. 965. Thus, the sole question to be decided is whether the
United States District Court in Louisiana has jurisdiction over
this suit for damages brought under the direct action statute
against the wrongdoer's insurer alone, where diversity of
citizenship exists between the complainant and the defendant
insurer but not between the complainant and the wrongdoer.
Section 1332(a) of the Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a),
reads as follows:
"The district courts shall have original jurisdiction of all
civil actions where the matter in controversy exceeds the sum or
value of $3,000 exclusive of interest and costs, and is
between:"
"(1) Citizens of different States. . . ."
It is petitioner's contention that the "matter in controversy"
here is the underlying tort liability of the alleged wrongdoer. If
this were true, of course, no diversity of citizenship would exist
between respondent and Mrs.
Page 348 U. S. 51
Bowen, as the real party defendant in interest. But the
Louisiana courts have differentiated between actions brought by an
injured party against the insurer alone and those brought against
either the tortfeasor alone or together with the insurer. In the
former action, the insurer is foreclosed from asserting defenses
such as coverture, normally available to the tortfeasor.
Edwards v. Royalty Indemnity Co., 182 La. 171, 161 So.
191. Similarly, the insurer is severely restricted in advancing
technical defenses based upon the terms of the policy, such as a
failure of notice, when the injured party brings a direct action.
Jackson v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co., 211 La.
19, 29 So. 2d 177. While either type of action encompasses proof of
the tortfeasor's negligence, in the separate suit against the
insurer, a plaintiff must also establish liability under the
policy. The Louisiana courts have characterized the statute as
creating a separate and distinct cause of action against the
insurer which an injured party may elect in lieu of his action
against the tortfeasor.
West v. Monroe Bakery, 217 La.
189,
46 So. 2d
122;
Jackson v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co.,
supra.
Petitioner is therefore not merely a nominal defendant, but is
the real party in interest here. This conclusion to disregard the
tortfeasor's citizenship in the instant case for purposes of
federal jurisdiction is fortified by cases honoring the states'
characterization of a guardian or other fiduciary as determinative
of the real party in interest in federal litigation.
New
Orleans v. Gaines' Administrator, 138 U.
S. 595;
Mexican Central R. Co. v. Eckman,
187 U. S. 429.
There is even greater justification for disregarding the
tortfeasor's citizenship here than for disregarding the citizenship
of a beneficiary, since the insurer -- unlike a fiduciary -- has a
direct financial interest in the outcome of this litigation.
Petitioner next asserts that the tortfeasor is an indispensable
party to this litigation, and that failure to join
Page 348 U. S. 52
her as a defendant deprives the federal court of jurisdiction.
Clearly, under the Louisiana statute and practice, the argument has
no merit. [
Footnote 2] And the
circumstances which have led the federal courts to findings of
indispensability are not present here. In
Shields v.
Barrow, 17 How. 130,
58 U. S. 139,
indispensable parties were defined as
"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. [
Footnote 3]"
The tortfeasor in a Louisiana direct action against the insurer
is not such a person. The state has created an optional right to
proceed directly against the insurer; by bringing the action
against petitioner, respondent has apparently abandoned her action
against the tortfeasor. [
Footnote
4]
See Miller v. Commercial Standard Ins. Co., 199 La.
155, 526, 6 So. 2d 646, 649. Thus, a complete disposition of the
entire claim may be made in this one action without injustice to
any of the participants.
Finally, petitioner contends that the federal courts should
decline as a matter of discretion to exercise their jurisdiction
over suits against an insurer alone. This argument is based upon
the differing standards of review on appeal of a jury verdict in
the Louisiana and federal
Page 348 U. S. 53
courts. [
Footnote 5]
Petitioner relies upon
Burford v. Sun Oil Co.,
319 U. S. 315, as
authority for the suggested discretionary refusal to exercise
jurisdiction. [
Footnote 6] But,
in
Burford, jurisdiction was declined to avoid a potential
interference with a state's administrative policymaking process, a
consideration not present here. Moreover, traditional equitable
authority, not available here, was relied upon to justify the
holding.
The language of the congressional grant of jurisdiction to the
lower courts, 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a), is clear, and this case
seems to us to fall squarely within the provision. In Louisiana,
the practice of bringing direct actions in the federal courts has
long been recognized.
See, e.g., New Amsterdam Casualty Co. v.
Soileau, 167 F.2d 767,
certiorari denied, 335 U.S.
822;
Bankers Indemnity Ins. Co. v. Green, 181 F.2d 1;
Belanger v. Great American Indemnity Co., 188 F.2d 196.
Neither federal nor Louisiana law suggests any reason to disturb
this practice. The decision of the Court of Appeals is
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
See also McDowell v. National Surety Corp., 68 So. 2d
189,
appeal dismissed, 347 U. S. 995.
[
Footnote 2]
Two proposals for compulsory joinder of insured and insurer as
party defendants have failed of passage in the Louisiana
Legislature within recent years.
See La. Senate Bill 73,
1952 Session; La. House Bill 600, 1954 Session.
[
Footnote 3]
See also 3 Moore's Federal Practice (2d ed. 1948),
� 19.07
et seq.; Note, Indispensable Parties in the
Federal Courts, 65 Harv.L.Rev. 1050 (1952).
[
Footnote 4]
No case has been cited, although there has been nearly a quarter
century of experience under the direct action statute, where an
injured party has attempted to bring suit against the tortfeasor
following an unsuccessful suit against the insurer in either state
or federal courts.
[
Footnote 5]
Appellate review in the federal courts is, of course, limited
ultimately by the Seventh Amendment.
Parsons v.
Bedford, Breedlove & Robeson, 3 Pet. 433. In
Louisiana, appellate review in civil cases extends to both matters
of law and fact.
See La.Const., Art. 7, §§ 10,
29.
[
Footnote 6]
See also Pennsylvania v. Williams, 294 U.
S. 176;
Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co. v.
Huffman, 319 U. S. 293;
Alabama Public Service Commission v. Southern R. Co.,
341 U. S. 341,
cited in the dissenting opinion below.
See Meredith v. Winter
Haven, 320 U. S. 228,
320 U. S. 234,
320 U. S.
236-237.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, concurring.
Not deeming it appropriate now to question
Meredith v.
Winter Haven, 320 U. S. 228, I
join the Court's opinion. But our holding results in such a glaring
perversion of the
Page 348 U. S. 54
purpose to which the original grant of diversity jurisdiction
was directed that it ought not to go without comment, as further
proof of the mounting mischief inflicted on the federal judicial
system by the unjustifiable continuance of diversity
jurisdiction.
The stuff of diversity jurisdiction is state litigation. The
availability of federal tribunals for controversies concerning
matters which, in themselves, are outside federal power and
exclusively within state authority, is the essence of a
jurisdiction solely resting on the fact that a plaintiff and a
defendant are citizens of different States. The power of Congress
to confer such jurisdiction was based on the desire of the Framers
to assure out-of-state litigants courts free from susceptibility to
potential local bias. That the supposed justification for this fear
was not rooted in weighty experience is attested by the fact that
so ardent a nationalist as Marshall gave that proposal of the
Philadelphia Convention only tepid support in the Virginia
Convention. 3 Elliot's Debates 556 (1891). But, in any event,
whatever "fears and apprehensions"
* were entertained
by the Framers and ratifiers, there was fear that parochial
prejudice by the citizens of one State toward those of another, as
well as toward aliens, would lead to unjust treatment of citizens
of other States and foreign countries.
Such was the reason for enabling a citizen of one State to press
a claim or stand on a defense, wholly state-created, against a
citizen of another in a federal court of the
Page 348 U. S. 55
latter's State. The abuses to which this opportunity was put
when, more than a hundred years ago, corporations began their
transforming influence on American economic and social life are
familiar history. Their classic exposition in Gerard C. Henderson's
Position of Foreign Corporations in American Constitutional
Law has lost neither its vividness nor force during the
intervening decades. The short of the matter is that, by resorting
to the federal courts, the out-of-state corporation sought to gain,
and much too frequently did, an advantage as against the local
citizen. Instead of protecting out-of-state litigants against
discrimination by state courts, the effect of diversity
jurisdiction was discrimination against citizens of the State in
favor of litigants from without the State.
Diversity jurisdiction aroused opposition from its very
inception, but the modern manifestation of these evils through
corporate litigation gathered increasing hostility, and led to
repeated congressional attempts at restriction and eventually of
abolition. The proliferation of the doctrine of
Swift v.
Tyson, 16 Pet. 1, brought into lurid light the
discriminatory distortions to which diversity jurisdiction could be
subverted by judicial sanction of professional astuteness. The
growing sense of the injustice of these developments and its
serious hurt to the prestige of the federal courts in the exercise
of their essential jurisdiction came to a head with the decision in
Black & White Taxicab & Transfer Co. v. Brown &
Yellow Taxicab Co., 276 U. S. 518. The
federal courts became the target of acrimonious political
controversy. In the course of our history, this was not the first
time that diversity jurisdiction played the federal courts an ill
turn. Again and again in the 60's and the 70's and the 80's, such a
conflict had flared up, but, in the earlier periods, it was by way
of being a conflict between the financial East and the agrarian
West. This time, President Hoover's Attorney General
Page 348 U. S. 56
and Senator George W. Norris of Nebraska united against the
disclosed evils of diversity jurisdiction.
Attorney General Mitchell urged on Congress a measure whereby a
corporation should be deemed, for diversity purposes, a citizen of
any State in which it carries on business
"as respect all suits brought within that State between itself
and residents thereof and arising out of the business carried on in
such State."
Hearings before Subcommittee of Senate Committee on the
Judiciary on S. 937, S. 939 and S. 3243, 72d Cong., 1st Sess. 4. At
the same time, the Senate Judiciary Committee, under the leadership
of Chairman Norris, went further. Twice it reported bills for the
abolition of diversity jurisdiction. S. Rep. No. 691, 71st Cong.,
2d Sess.; S. Rep. No. 530, 72d Cong., 1st Sess. Legislative
attempts at correction have thus far failed. But, by overruling the
doctrine of
Swift v. Tyson despite its century-old
credentials, this Court uprooted the most noxious weeds that had
grown around diversity jurisdiction. What with the increasing
permeation of national feeling and the mobility of modern life,
little excuse is left for diversity jurisdiction now that
Erie
Railroad Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U. S. 64, has
put a stop to the unwarranted freedom of federal courts to fashion
rules of local law in defiance of local law.
A legal device like that of federal diversity jurisdiction which
is inherently, as I believe it to be, not founded in reason offers
constant temptation to new abuses. This case is an instance. Here,
we have not an out-of-state litigant resorting to a federal court
to be sure of obtaining for himself the same treatment which state
courts mete out to their own citizens. Here we have a Louisiana
citizen resorting to the federal court in Louisiana in order to
avoid consequences of the Louisiana law by which every Louisiana
citizen is bound when suing another Louisiana citizen. If Florence
R. Elbert, the
Page 348 U. S. 57
present plaintiff, had to sue the owner of the offending
automobile which caused her injury, or if she were suing an
insurance company chartered by Louisiana, she would have no choice
but to go, like every other Louisiana plaintiff who sues a fellow
citizen of Louisiana, to a Louisiana state court and receive the
law as administered by the Louisiana courts. But, by the fortuitous
circumstance that this Louisiana litigant could sue directly an
out-of-state insurance company, she can avoid her amenability to
Louisiana law. In concrete terms, she can cash in on the law
governing jury trials in the federal courts, with its restrictive
appellate review of jury verdicts, and escape the rooted
jurisprudence of Louisiana law in reviewing jury verdicts. There
is, to be sure, a kind of irony for corporate defendants to
discover that two can play at the game of working, to use a
colloquial term, the perverse potentialities of diversity
jurisdiction. But it is not the less unreason and no greater
fairness for a citizen of the forum to gain a discriminatory
advantage over fellow citizens of his State than it is for an
out-of-state citizen to secure more than the same treatment given
local citizens by going to a federal court for the adjudication of
state-created rights.
This case, however, stirs anew an issue that cuts deeper than
the natural selfishness of litigants to exploit the law's
weaknesses. My concern is with the bearing of diversity
jurisdiction on the effective functioning of the federal judiciary.
Circuit Judge Rives agreed with the district judge that this kind
of action has no business in a federal court. In dissenting from
denial of the petition for rehearing, he stated with impressive
bluntness the effect on the work of the federal and state courts in
allowing diversity jurisdiction to be put to such purposes:
"On the original hearing, I had strong misgivings which were
submitted to my brothers, but I was
Page 348 U. S. 58
unable to crystallize my thinking clearly enough to justify a
dissent. Continued consideration of the question has convinced me
that there is something fundamentally wrong with our legal theories
when they permit the great bulk of the casualty damage suit
litigation in Louisiana to clog the dockets of the federal courts
while, I understand, some of the state judges actually do not have
enough litigation to keep them busy."
Elbert v. Lumbermen's Mutual Casualty Co., 202 F.2d
744.
In Louisiana, plaintiffs in negligence suits have suddenly found
the federal courts their protectors, and insurance companies have
discovered the virtues of the state courts. In New York, insurance
companies run to cover in the federal courts, and plaintiffs feel
outraged by the process of attrition in enforcing their claims due
to a delay of from three to four years before a case can come to
trial. As to both situations, the vice is the availability of
diversity jurisdiction. What is true of New York is true, in
varying degrees, of every big center.
Diversity cases have long constituted a considerable portion of
all civil cases filed in the federal courts. For the last ten
years, the proportion of diversity cases has greatly increased, so
that it is safe to say that diversity cases are now taking at least
half of the time that the District Courts are devoting to civil
cases. (This is the conclusion of the Division of Procedural
Studies and Statistics of the Administrative Office of the United
States Courts.) The rise in motor vehicle registration from 32
million in 1940 to 56 million in 1953 has inevitably been reflected
in increasing resort to diversity jurisdiction in ordinary
negligence suits. The consequences that this entails for the whole
federal judicial system -- for increase in the business of the
District Courts means increase in the business of the Courts of
Appeals and a swelling of
Page 348 U. S. 59
the petitions for certiorari here -- cannot be met by a steady
increase in the number of federal judges. The business of courts,
particularly of the federal courts, is drastically unlike the
business of factories. The function and role of the federal courts
and the nature of their judicial process involve impalpable
factors, subtle but far-reaching, which cannot be satisfied by
enlarging the judicial plant. A recent report of the House
Committee on the Judiciary proposed an increase of the required
amount in controversy for jurisdiction of the federal courts from
$3,000 to $10,000. Referring to the consequences of "a tremendous
increase in the number of cases filed," it felt that appointment of
additional judges "has done much to alleviate the problem," but
recognized that merely multiplying judges is no solution.
See H.R.Rep. No. 1506, 82d Cong., 2d Sess. 1. In the
farthest reaches of the problem, a steady increase in judges does
not alleviate; in my judgment, it is bound to depreciate the
quality of the federal judiciary, and thereby adversely to affect
the whole system.
Since diversity jurisdiction is increasingly the biggest source
of the civil business of the District Courts, the continuance of
that jurisdiction will necessarily involve inflation of the number
of the district judges. This, in turn, will result, by its own
Gresham's law, in a depreciation of the judicial currency and the
consequent impairment of the prestige and of the efficacy of the
federal courts. Madison believed that Congress would return to the
state courts judicial power entrusted to the federal courts "when
they find the tribunals of the states established on a good
footing." 3 Elliot's Debates 536 (1891). Can it fairly be said that
state tribunals are not now established on a sufficiently "good
footing" to adjudicate state litigation that arises between
citizens of different States, including the artificial corporate
citizens, when they are the only
Page 348 U. S. 60
resort for the much larger volume of the same type of litigation
between their own citizens? Can the state tribunals not yet be
trusted to mete out justice to nonresident litigants; should
resident litigants not be compelled to trust their own state
tribunals? In any event, is it sound public policy to withdraw from
the incentives and energies for reforming state tribunals, where
such reform is needed, the interests of influential groups who
through diversity litigation are now enabled to avoid state
courts?
*
"However true the fact may be that the tribunals of the states
will administer justice as impartially as those of the nation, to
parties of every description, it is not less true that the
Constitution itself either entertains apprehensions on this subject
or views with such indulgence the possible fears and apprehensions
of suitors that it has established national tribunals for the
decision of controversies between aliens and a citizen, or between
citizens of different states."
Bank of the United States v.
Deveaux, 5 Cranch 61,
9 U. S. 87.