National Equipment Rental, Ltd. v. Sanders

Decision Date12 July 1967
Docket NumberNo. 67 C 281,67 C 311.,67 C 281
Citation271 F. Supp. 756
PartiesNATIONAL EQUIPMENT RENTAL, LTD., Plaintiff, v. Richard SANDERS and Betty Sanders, Defendants. NATIONAL EQUIPMENT RENTAL, LTD., Plaintiff, v. Robert F. KUNS, Marvin C. Kuns and Grace I. Kuns, Defendants.
CourtU.S. District Court — Eastern District of New York

Harry M. Weisberg, Elmont, N. Y. (Barry Feltingoff, Elmont, N. Y., of counsel), for plaintiff.

Bertram Zweibon, New York City (Bernard L. Seligman, New York City, of counsel), for defendants.

MEMORANDUM

DOOLING, District Judge.

Some time before February 1966, plaintiff had leased certain vehicular equipment to one Vincent Kemp in California. Thereafter plaintiff repossessed the equipment and, under date of February 18, 1966, leased part of it to defendant Robert F. Kuns (whose wife Loretta Kuns co-signed the lease); defendants Marvin and Grace Kuns, under date of February 5, 1966, guaranteed Robert Kuns' lease payments. Under date of June 8, 1966, plaintiff leased other of the Kemp equipment to defendant Richard Sanders (whose wife, defendant Betty Sanders, guaranteed her husband's lease payments). Some time between July 28 and August 3, 1966, it appears that the State Board of Equalization of California served on defendant Richard Sanders a "Notice to Withhold" advising Sanders that Kemp was delinquent to the extent of $81,775.22 (inclusive of interest and penalty) in paying amounts required to be paid under State and local sales and use tax laws; the notice required Sanders for the next 60 days not to transfer any property of Kemp's that he had without the Board's consent, and required Sanders also forthwith to advise the Board of all property of Kemp's that he had.

Thereafter, under date of November 10, 1966, with plaintiff's consent, defendant Robert Kuns transferred to defendant Richard Sanders the equipment theretofore leased Kuns, and Loretta Kuns, Marvin Kuns, Grace Kuns and Betty Sanders also signed the instrument of transfer.

Claiming that the State of California declined, because of the Kemp tax debt, to issue licenses required for the use of the leased vehicles in California, Sanders stopped making payments on the leases. Plaintiff on March 28, 1967, filed suit in this Court against Richard Sanders and his wife and on April 6, 1967, filed suit in this Court against Robert Kuns and Marvin and Grace Kuns.

All the defendants are citizens and residents of California and plaintiff is a Delaware corporation; plaintiff's only and principal place of business is in the Eastern District of New York. Jurisdiction was obtained under the following clause contained in the leases, transfer and assumption agreement, and guaranty:

"21. THIS AGREEMENT SHALL BE DEEMED TO HAVE BEEN MADE IN NASSAU COUNTY, NEW YORK, REGARDLESS OF THE ORDER IN WHICH THE SIGNATURES OF THE PARTIES SHALL BE AFFIXED HERETO, AND SHALL BE INTERPRETED, AND THE RIGHTS AND LIABILITIES OF THE PARTIES HERE DETERMINED, IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE LAWS OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, AND AS PART OF THE CONSIDERATION FOR THE LESSOR'S EXECUTING THIS LEASE, LESSEE HEREBY AGREES THAT ALL ACTIONS OR PROCEEDINGS ARISING DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY FROM THIS LEASE SHALL BE LITGATED ONLY IN COURTS HAVING SITUS* WITHIN THE STATE OF NEW YORK, AND LESSEE HEREBY CONSENTS TO THE JURISDICTION OF ANY LOCAL STATE OR FEDERAL COURT LOCATED WITHIN THE STATE OF NEW YORK, AND WAIVES THE PERSONAL SERVICE OF ANY AND ALL PROCESS UPON THE LESSEE HEREIN, AND CONSENTS THAT ALL SUCH SERVICE OF PROCESS MAY BE MADE BY CERTIFIED OR REGISTERED MAIL, RETURN RECEIPT REQUESTED, DIRECTED TO THE LESSEE AT THE ADDRESS HEREINABOVE STATED: AND SERVICE TO MADE SHALL BE COMPLETE TWO (2) DAYS AFTER THE SAME SHALL HAVE BEEN POSTED AS AFORESAID."

On April 18, 1967, Richard Sanders and his wife sued plaintiff in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California, and thereafter Robert, Marvin and Grace Kuns sued plaintiff in the United States District Court for the Southern District of California; the suits seek to recover of plaintiff the amounts paid under the leases on the ground that the consideration for the payments (usable vehicles) had failed, and on the ground that the leases, transfer agreement and guaranty were procured by fraud in that plaintiff knew when it entered into the transactions that the State Board had a lien on the vehicles for the Kemp tax debt. On the motion of plaintiff (defendant in that case) Sanders v. National Equipment Rental, Ltd., was by order of June 13, 1967, transferred from the Eastern District of California to this Court, and, similarly, the Kuns case has now been ordered to be transferred to this Court.

Defendants move to dismiss (i) on the ground that there is no diversity of citizenship, (ii) on the ground that to maintain the suit here deprives them of due process, (iii) on the ground that service under the quoted clause is bad, and (iv) on the ground that an indispensable party whose presence would destroy diversity has been omitted, and, alternatively, they move (v) to transfer to California for the convenience of the parties and witnesses. The motions are in all respects denied without prejudice to the renewal of the alternative motion to change venue if the development of the case indicates that the interests of justice require reconsideration of the propriety of transfer.

Defendants' objections are linked to the fact that although their contracts were with plaintiff their business was solicited and their discussions conducted in California with employees of a California corporation which is a wholly-owned subsidiary of plaintiff and bears the name "National Equipment Rental, Ltd. of California." Defendants challenge diversity by arguing that the plaintiff must be identified in citizenship with the subsidiary through which it acted. Defendants argue alternatively that the California corporation is an indispensable party, the joinder of which will destroy diversity, thus again requiring a dismissal on the ground of diversity.

Defendants rely for both arguments on Niles-Bement-Pond Co. v. Iron Moulders' Union, 1920, 254 U.S. 77, 41 S.Ct. 39, 65 L.Ed. 145. There the question was of the realignment of an indispensable party and the Court held that realignment was required and that it destroyed diversity, requiring a dismissal. The California corporation is not here an indispensable party. Defendants recognized that much when they sued plaintiff alone in the California federal courts. Plaintiff states, without contradiction, that the California subsidiary is an incorporated salesman, and that it has no power to bind the parent, which centralizes all its leasing controls in the Eastern District of New York. The California corporation's absence from these cases does not prevent defendants from obtaining against plaintiff the same relief for the alleged fraud that they would be entitled to against the California company; if that company cannot disclaim any fraudulent acts of its servants acting in the scope of their authority, neither can plaintiff deny its responsibility for the alleged fraud of the California corporation which performed its sales agency service through those same persons' acts. It is not necessary at this time to consider whether defendants are, in addition, free to sue the California company for fraud in the California state court notwithstanding paragraph 21 quoted above.

Nothing of substance is advanced to support the argument that plaintiff must be identified in citizenship with its subsidiary. The suggestion that plaintiff cannot, as a Delaware corporation, sue a Californian in a New York federal court (Cf. Seaboard Rice Milling Co. v. Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry., 1926, 270 U.S. 363, 46 S.Ct. 247, 70 L.Ed. 633) fails because it has been adequately shown that plaintiff's sole business office and its principal place of business is in the Eastern District of New York, so that it is a citizen of New York 28 U.S.C. § 1332(c) if not, in its character of plaintiff, a "resident" of New York purely by virtue of the language of 28 U.S.C. § 1391 (c) (for that section has been treated as equating corporate "doing business" with residence only in the case of defendant corporations, see Robert E. Lee & Co., v. Veatch, 4th Cir. 1962, 301 F.2d 434, 96 A.L.R.2d 619; see further, Lumbermens Mut. Cas. Co. v. South Portland Engineering Co., S.D.N.Y.1966, 252 F.Supp. 149, commenting on earlier diverse holdings in the Southern District of New York and elsewhere). The "citizenship" arising from having the principal place of a corporate business in a particular state appears still to be sufficient to meet the "residence" requirement for venue purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 1391(a). In Section 1391(a) the "residence" of natural persons restricts venue to the state of citizenship (and to a particular district within a particular state), since under the Fourteenth Amendment natural persons are citizens of the states in which they reside; analogously, before the predecessor of Section 1391(c) was enacted, the predecessor of Section 1391(a) confined the corporate plaintiff to the state of its incorporation as the sole state of its citizenship and, therefore, of its "residence." Cf. Suttle v. Reich Bros. Const. Co., 1948, 333 U.S. 163, 68 S.Ct. 587, 92 L.Ed. 614. That identification, in Section 1391(a), of corporate citizenship with corporate venue right should endure despite the limited reference of Section 1332(c) to the removal section and its omission of any reference to the venue section.

But in any case, defendants could and did, at least subject to change of venue under Sections 1404 and 1406, waive their threshold venue objection so far as it is equated in effect with an objection to jurisdiction. See Neirbo Co. v. Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corp., 1939, 308 U.S. 165, 174-175, 60 S.Ct. 153, 84 L.Ed. 167.

The cases cannot, in view of National Equipment Rental, Ltd., v. Szukhent, 1964, 375 U.S. 311, 84 S.Ct. 411, 11 L.Ed. 2d 354 and National...

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