Toste Farm Corp. v. Hadbury, Inc.

USCA1 Opinion












UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
____________________
No. 95-1506

TOSTE FARM CORPORATION, ET AL.,

Plaintiffs, Appellees,

v.

HADBURY, INC., ET AL.,

Defendants, Appellants.

______________________
No. 95-1544

TOSTE FARM CORPORATION, ET AL.,

Plaintiffs, Appellants,

v.

HADBURY, INC., ET AL.,

Defendants, Appellees.

____________________

APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

[Hon. Raymond J. Pettine, Senior U.S. District Judge] __________________________

____________________

Before

Lynch, Circuit Judge, _____________
Aldrich and Campbell, Senior Circuit Judges. _____________________
____________________

John Blish with whom Stephen J. Reid, Jr., Raymond A. Marcaccio __________ _____________________ ____________________
and Blish & Cavanagh were on brief for plaintiffs. ________________
John William Ranucci for defendants. ____________________
____________________
December 4, 1995
____________________















CAMPBELL, Senior Circuit Judge. These cross ______________________

appeals are from orders of the United States District Court

for the District of Rhode Island dismissing the respective

claims of plaintiffs and defendants for lack of subject

matter jurisdiction. Toste Farm Corp. v. Hadbury, Inc., 882 _________________ _____________

F. Supp. 240 (D.R.I. 1995). Plaintiffs are two entities

wholly controlled by Carl Acebes, namely, Toste Farm

Corporation ("TFC") and PaineWebber, Inc. Custodian/Trustee

of IRA FBO Carl Acebes, account numbered JG12642-69

("PaineWebber IRA"). Defendants are Richard N. Morash and

his corporation Hadbury, Inc. ("Hadbury").1 At issue is

whether the court below correctly concluded that diversity

jurisdiction over the plaintiffs' claim failed for violation

of 28 U.S.C. 1359, and whether, in the circumstances,

diversity jurisdiction over defendants' counterclaim also

failed. We affirm the district court's dismissal of both

claims.



I. I.

Factual Background Factual Background

In June of 1991, Richard Morash obtained the

exclusive right to acquire 417 acres of land in Rhode Island

known as Toste Farm. Intending to purchase and develop the

____________________

1. Raymond C. Holland, Jr., an attorney and Rhode Island
citizen, was also named as a defendant in the district court.
However, he has not appealed from the orders below.

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property, Morash and Carl Acebes, on November 4, 1991, formed

the Toste Farm Limited Partnership composed of the "Morash

Partners" and the "Acebes Partners." The Morash Partners

consisted of Hadbury, an entity incorporated under the laws

of Rhode Island with a principal place of business in

Massachusetts, and Morash, a Massachusetts citizen. The

Acebes Partners consisted of PaineWebber IRA, an entity

incorporated under the laws of Delaware with a principal

place of business in New York, and Toste Farm Corporation,

Inc. ("TFCI"), a corporation newly formed under the laws of

Rhode Island with a principal place of business in Rhode

Island.2

According to Carl Acebes, TFCI was formed "for a

single purpose -- to act as a general partner of the Toste

Farm Limited Partnership." Acebes' attorney stated that

TFCI's "principal asset" was its partnership interest and

added that TFCI "may have had an incidental bank account as

well." TFCI was capitalized with a bank account valued at a

little over $200,000, of which about $12,000 was invested in

the partnership. Acebes gave two reasons for overfunding

TFCI. First, he wanted to avoid having to request additional

funds from PaineWebber IRA in the event the thinly


____________________

2. TFCI was later merged into TFC, a plaintiff in this case.
The sole stockholder of both corporations was Acebes'
PaineWebber IRA account, which was itself a partner of Toste
Farm Limited Partnership and also a plaintiff in this action.

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capitalized partnership required cash. Second, the extra

funds were available for "other business opportunities

. . . quite outside of the . . . partnership."3

During 1992, Acebes announced his intention to

retire from the partnership. Pursuant to the partnership

agreement, Morash and Acebes conducted a buy-sell procedure

in which each party bid to purchase the partnership interests

of the other. This procedure ended in a dispute with each

party claiming to have purchased the other's interests.

In November of 1992, the Acebes Partners brought an

action against the Morash Partners and Raymond Holland, the

attorney for the partnership, in the District Court for the

District of Rhode Island seeking a declaration of the

parties' rights and duties under the partnership agreement.

See 28 U.S.C. 2201-2202; Fed. R. Civ. P. 57. They ___

asserted diversity jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 1332,

but later voluntarily dismissed the suit when the Morash

Partners pointed out that the parties were not fully diverse

because plaintiff TFCI, like defendants Hadbury and Holland,

was a citizen of Rhode Island.4

____________________

3. Acebes also asserted that TFC, the successor to TFCI,
"has bid on other real estate and has prepared to bid on real
estate located in Massachusetts."

4. The citizenship of a corporation is determined pursuant
to 28 U.S.C. 1332(c)(1), which provides:

"[A] corporation shall be deemed to be a
citizen of any State by which it has been

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In December of 1992, TFCI was merged into TFC, a

New York corporate shell that had been created earlier in the

year. Presumably, TFC's principal place of business also

became New York, rather than Rhode Island where TFCI was

based, although the record is not absolutely clear.5

Pursuant to the merger, TFC received all of TFCI's assets.

Plaintiffs concede that one purpose of creating TFC and

dissolving TFCI was to manufacture diversity for this action,

although they also contend, without specifics, that the

merger served the administrative convenience of Acebes whose

residence and other business activities were in New York.

Defendants allege that the merger was effected solely to

create diversity in this action.

Having created diversity via the merger, TFC and

PaineWebber IRA refiled their action in January of 1993.

Defendants filed a counterclaim. During the trial,

defendants moved to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. The

district court dismissed both the claim and the counterclaim

for lack of subject matter jurisdiction after the trial on

the merits.

____________________

incorporated and of the State where it
hasits principalplace ofbusiness . . . ."

TFCI and Hadbury were citizens of Rhode Island because they
were incorporated under the laws of Rhode Island.

5. TFC's certificate of incorporation states: "The office
of the Corporation in the State of New York is to be located
in the County of New York, State of New York."

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II. II.

This court reviews de novo the legal question of

whether the district court had subject matter jurisdiction

over the parties' claims. Murphy v. United States, 45 F.3d ______ _____________

520, 522 (1st Cir. 1995). However, the district court's

factual findings made in conjunction with its jurisdictional

determination receive deference unless clearly erroneous.

Dweck v. Japan CBM Corp., 877 F.2d 790, 792 (9th Cir. 1989). _____ _______________

The district courts have original jurisdiction over

civil actions between citizens of different states in which

the amount in controversy exceeds $50,000. 28 U.S.C.

1332(a). Diversity must be complete: the citizenship of each

plaintiff must be shown to be diverse from that of each

defendant. Owen Equip. & Erection Co. v. Kroger, 437 U.S. ___________________________ ______

365, 373-74 (1978). For purposes of diversity jurisdiction,

a corporation is deemed to be a citizen of both the state

where it is incorporated and the state where it maintains its

principal place of business, 28 U.S.C. 1332(c)(1), and

citizenship is determined as of the date of the commencement

of the lawsuit. See, e.g., Taber Partners, I v. Merit ___ ____ __________________ _____

Builders, Inc., 987 F.2d 57, 59 n.1 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, ______________ ____________

Desarrollos Metropolitanos, Inc. v. Taber Partners, I, ___ ________________________________ __________________

U.S. ___, 114 S. Ct. 82 (1993); Rodriguez-Diaz v. Sierra- ______________ _______

Martinez, 853 F.2d 1027, 1029 (1st Cir. 1988). The burden of ________

proof is on the party attempting to sustain diversity



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jurisdiction. Thomson v. Gaskill, 315 U.S. 442, 446 (1942); _______ _______

Media Duplication Servs., Ltd. v. HDG Software, Inc., 928 ________________________________ ___________________

F.2d 1228, 1235 (1st Cir. 1991).

It is undisputed that plaintiffs satisfied the

requirements of 1332. By the time this action was brought,

TFCI had effectively merged into TFC, a New York corporate

citizen. Defendants, however, sought dismissal of

plaintiffs' claim under 28 U.S.C. 1359, which provides:

A district court shall not have
jurisdiction of a civil action in which
any party, by assignment or otherwise,
has been improperly or collusively made
or joined to invoke the jurisdiction of
such court.

The district court held that 1359 barred jurisdiction

not only over plaintiffs' claim but over the entire action

including defendants' counterclaim. The court reasoned that

although "[t]he merger was real enough, . . . it did not

create diversity jurisdiction" because there was "a

manufactured assignment." Toste Farm, 882 F. Supp. at 247. __________

For over a century, Congress has denied

jurisdiction of suits where a party is "improperly or

collusively made or joined to invoke . . . jurisdiction."6

____________________

6. Section 5 of the Act of March 3, 1875, a predecessor to
1359, stated:

. . . if in any suit commenced in a
circuit court [which then had original
diversity jurisdiction] . . . it shall
appear to the satisfaction of said
circuit court, at any time after such

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The Supreme Court in Williams v. Nottawa, 104 U.S. 209, 211 ________ _______

(1881), described transfers to create diversity jurisdiction

as "frauds upon the court." Commentators and courts have

construed "improper or collusive" as "confer[ring]

jurisdiction not justified by aims of diversity." O'Brien v. _______

AVCO Corp., 425 F.2d 1030, 1034 (2d Cir. 1969); 14 Charles A. __________

Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Edward D. Cooper, Federal Practice

and Procedure: Jurisdiction 2d 3637, at 93 (1985 & Supp.

1995). See also Airlines Reporting Co. v. S and N Travel, _________ ______________________ ______________

58 F.3d 857, 862 (2d Cir. 1995) ("[W]e construe section 1359

broadly to bar any agreement whose 'primary aim' is to

concoct federal diversity jurisdiction"); Amoco Rocmount Co. __________________

v. Anschutz Corp., 7 F.3d 909, 916 (10th Cir. 1993); Yokeno _______________ ______

v. Mafnas, 973 F.2d 803, 809 (9th Cir. 1992) ("The federal ______

anti-collusion statute is aimed at preventing parties from

manufacturing diversity jurisdiction to inappropriately

channel ordinary business litigation into federal courts");

Nolan v. Boeing Co., 919 F.2d 1058, 1067 (5th Cir. 1990), _____ ___________

cert. denied, 499 U.S. 962 (1991). The district court in the ____________

present case found that "Section 1359's policy against


____________________

suit has been brought . . . that the
parties to said suit have been improperly
or collusively made or joined, . . . for
the purpose of creating a case cognizable
. . . under this act; the said circuit
court . . . shall dismiss the suit.

Act of March 3, 1875, c. 137, 5, 18 Stat. 470.

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improper or collusive manufacture of diversity jurisdiction

would be completely undermined if a corporate merger

involving a transfer of the chose in action and some amount

of money could create diversity jurisdiction." Toste Farm, __________

882 F. Supp. at 247.

In its most recent pronouncement, the Supreme Court

has construed 1359 in a similarly broad manner. In Kramer ______

v. Caribbean Mills, Inc., 394 U.S. 823 (1969), the Court _______________________

noted that "Kramer candidly admits that the 'assignment was

in substantial part motivated by a desire ... to make

diversity jurisdiction available.'" Id. at 828. Holding ___

that the otherwise valid assignment of the claim to a diverse

party was improper or collusive under 1359, the Court

reasoned that the mere legality of an assignment cannot make

it valid for purposes of federal jurisdiction because such a

ruling "would render 1359 largely incapable of

accomplishing its purpose." Id. at 829. The Court was ___

concerned that "the ease with which a party may 'manufacture'

federal jurisdiction" could lead to "a vast quantity of

ordinary contract and tort litigation . . . channeled into

the federal courts" which is "the very thing which Congress

intended to prevent when it enacted 1359 and its

predecessors." Id. at 828-29. ___

In applying Kramer, lower courts have often ______

determined an improper or collusive assignment from whether



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or not the parties have shown an independent business

justification for assigning the claim to a diverse party.7

Courts have also applied elevated scrutiny to assignments

between affiliated parties. In these situations, "[s]imply

articulating a business reason is insufficient; the burden of

proof is with the party asserting diversity to establish that

the reason is legitimate and not pretextual." Yokeno, 973 ______

F.2d at 810. See also Airlines Reporting, 58 F.3d at 862-63; ________ __________________

Nike, Inc. v. Comercial Iberica de Exclusivas Deportivas, __________ _____________________________________________

S.A., 20 F.3d 987, 991-93 (9th Cir. 1994); Dweck, 877 F.2d ____ _____

at 792-93; Prudential Oil Corp. v. Phillips Petroleum Co., ____________________ _______________________

546 F.2d 469, 475 (2d Cir. 1969) ("The scrutiny normally

applied to transfers or assignments of claims which have the

effect of creating diversity must be doubled in the case of


____________________

7. See Western Farm Credit Bank v. Hamakua Sugar Co., 841 F. ___ ________________________ _________________
Supp. 976, 981 (D. Haw. 1994) ("[O]nce a party has stated a
legitimate business purpose for the assignment and has shown
the assignment is absolute, district courts need not explore
whether one motivating factor behind the assignment was to
create diversity jurisdiction"); Baker v. Latham Sparrowbush _____ __________________
Assocs., 808 F. Supp. 992, 1002 (S.D.N.Y. 1992) (assignment _______
for "facially valid business purpose" not collusive or
improper); AmeriFirst Bank v. Bomar, 757 F. Supp. 1365, 1372 _______________ _____
(S.D. Fla. 1991); Blythe Indus., Inc. v. Puerto Rico ____________________ ______________
Aqueduct and Sewer Auth., 573 F. Supp. 563, 564 (D.P.R. 1983) ________________________
(diversity jurisdiction denied where "[n]o legitimate
commercial interest is apparent from the assignment"). But ___
see Haskin v. Corporacion Insular de Seguros, 666 F. Supp. ___ ______ _______________________________
349, 354 (D.P.R. 1987) ("In examining a Section 1359 claim of
collusion . . . motive must be considered but given less
weight than the determinations of whether the assignment was
real or colorable and, most important, whether or not the
assignee has some independent, pre-existing legitimate
interest in the causes of action assigned to him").

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assignments between related or affiliated corporations since

common ownership . . . only serves to increase the

possibility of collusion and compound the difficulty

encountered in detecting the real purpose of the

assignment"); Western Farm Credit Bank v. Hamakua Sugar Co., ________________________ _________________

841 F. Supp. 976, 981 (D. Haw. 1994); Blythe Indus., Inc. v. ___________________

Puerto Rico Aqueduct & Sewer Auth., 573 F. Supp. 563, 564 ____________________________________

(D.P.R. 1983).

The above authorities, as well as the clear

language of 1359, are consistent with the district court's

analysis here. Plaintiffs rely, for a contrary view, upon a

Supreme Court case decided in the 1920s that seemingly points

in a different direction. In Black & White Taxicab & __________________________

Transfer Co. v. Brown & Yellow Taxicab & Transfer Co., 276 _____________ _______________________________________

U.S. 518 (1928), a Kentucky taxi company created diversity by

reincorporating in Tennessee. Otherwise, the company

continued its taxi business in Kentucky.8 The newly created

____________________

8. When Black & White Taxicab was decided a corporation was ______________________
considered a citizen of the state in which it was
incorporated, regardless of the location of its principal
place of business. This definition of citizenship allowed
corporations to change citizenship very easily, as Black & _______
White Taxicab demonstrates. The enactment of 28 U.S.C. _____________
1332(c) in 1958 redefined the citizenship of a corporation to
include the state where its principal place of business is
located, in addition to the state in which it is
incorporated. Thus, today, a corporation with its principal
place of business in Kentucky could not create diversity
jurisdiction with a Kentucky opposing party by merely
reincorporating in Tennessee. Its principal place of
business would also have to move away from Kentucky, a more
difficult feat for an active business.

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Tennessee company brought suit in federal court. The Supreme

Court upheld diversity jurisdiction stating: "The succession

and transfer were actual, not feigned or merely colorable.

In these circumstances, courts will not inquire into motives

when deciding concerning their jurisdiction." Id. at 524. ___

Cf. Mecom v. Fitzsimmons Drilling Co., 284 U.S. 183, 190 ___ _____ _________________________

(1931); Cross v. Allen, 141 U.S. 528, 533 (1891). _____ _____

Black & White Taxicab has been sharply criticized ______________________

for allowing the manufacture of diversity in conflict with

1359's purpose. Charles A. Wright, Law of Federal Courts 373

(1994) ("The reincorporation . . . to create diversity verged

on fraud, and it was not necessary to hold that diversity

jurisdiction could be so readily abused"); American Law

Institute, Study of the Division of Jurisdiction Between

State and Federal Courts 159 (1969) ("One of the most cited

examples of improper creation of diversity jurisdiction

involved a corporation which simply reincorporated in another

state for the purpose of creating diversity jurisdiction

[citing Black & White Taxicab]"). _____________________

This court has interpreted 1359 in light both of

Black & White Taxicab and Kramer in a case strikingly similar _____________________ ______

to the one at hand. Greater Dev. Co. v. Amelung, 471 F.2d ________________ _______

338 (1st Cir. 1973) (per curiam). In Amelung, the district _______

court dismissed the original claim of a Massachusetts

____________________



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corporation for lack of jurisdiction. To create diversity,

the corporation's controlling stockholder formed a

Connecticut shell corporation which purchased the assets of

the Massachusetts corporation. The Connecticut corporation

then refiled the suit. The district court dismissed the

action relying on 1359, and this court summarily affirmed,

stating in part:

[W]e think . . . that when a corporation
conducting an on-going business transfers
all its assets and its business to
another corporation, and the transferor
is dissolved, diversity jurisdiction will
exist, even though the shareholders of
the two corporations are the same, and
the purpose of the transfer is to obtain
diversity of citizenship. Here
admittedly the transfer is real, the
transferor has been dissolved and the
shareholder is the same. However, the
claim which is the basis of this suit was
the only asset transferred, and, as far
as the record shows, the only asset of
the new corporation, which apparently has
no payroll and no other activities. To
extend an already eroded case like Black _____
& White, see Kramer . . . to this _________ ___ ______
situation would be to destroy the meaning
of this salutary and long-standing
statute [28 U.S.C. 1359].
















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Id. at 339.9 Amelung has been praised for refusing to ___ _______

extend Black & White Taxicab beyond its facts.10 _____________________

In the instant case, the district court concluded

that the factual situation "approximates that in Amelung." _______

Toste Farm, 882 F. Supp. at 246. We agree. As in Amelung, ___________ _______

the principal asset transferred was a legal claim. As the

district court found, TFCI had no employees nor did it have

ongoing activities beyond its interest in the Toste Farm

Limited Partnership. It was formed for the single purpose of

acting as a general partner in the partnership. After Acebes

determined to leave the partnership and the buy-sell

negotiations foundered, resulting in this lawsuit, TFCI and,

after the merger, TFC were left mainly with a legal dispute.

Unlike the transferred taxi business in Black & White _______________

Taxicab, there was no ongoing business to operate separate _______


____________________

9. Another court has taken a similar approach to that in
Amelung. In Piermont Heights, Inc. v. Dorfman, 820 F. Supp. _______ ______________________ _______
99, 100 (S.D.N.Y. 1993), the District Court for the Southern
District of New York held: "If a plaintiff assigns a claim or
takes a similar action [in this case a merger] solely for the
purpose of manufacturing diversity jurisdiction, and without
a legitimate business purpose apart from the creation of such
jurisdiction, [section 1359] is violated."

10. 14 Charles A. Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Edward D.
Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure: Jurisdiction 2d
3638, at 99 (1985) ("The approach taken in the Amelung case _______
seems sound . . . . To ignore the obvious purpose behind
what had been done, as some language in the Black & White ______________
Taxicab case . . . could be read as requiring, would be _______
contrary to the objectives of Section 1359 and inconsistent
with the principle that federal courts are courts of limited
jurisdiction") (footnotes omitted).

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from the legal claim. Had TFCI assigned its interest in the

claim to TFC in New York, 1359 would plainly, under Kramer, ______

have overridden the existing diversity. We see no reason for

a different outcome merely because the merger route was used

to accomplish essentially the same result. Section 1359

proscribes the improper or collusive making of a party to

invoke jurisdiction, "by assignment or otherwise" (emphasis ____________

added).

It is true, as plaintiffs argue, that the assets

transferred to TFC included besides the partnership

interest a bank account containing under $200,000. While

plaintiffs concede that one purpose of the merger was to

manufacture diversity, they note the availability of the bank

account for possible future investments and contend that the

transfer to New York served Acebes' convenience, as his other

business activities were also in New York. But, on this

record, the district court could reasonably view these

assertions as make-weights. Acebes would scarcely be deeply

concerned as to where the state of incorporation and

principal office of this paper corporation were located,

given that there were no employees and no ongoing operations.

Nor does the placing of an amount of cash in TFC for possible

future use seem significant. The record does not indicate

the existence of active outside business investments at the

time of transfer. None of these factors, by themselves,



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suggests a likely reason for the move to New York. The

significant reason appears to be the improper one: "to invoke

the jurisdiction" of the federal court, 1359.

The district court justifiably concluded that there

was "a manufactured assignment concocted and designed by a

single individual using the diversity statute as a ploy to

create jurisdiction." Toste Farm, 882 F. Supp. at 247. To __________

be sure, the court elsewhere said that creating diversity was

"at least one of the reasons for the merger," id. at 245, but ___

the tenor of the court's opinion, including the "manufactured

assignment" statement, indicates that the creation of

diversity was the principal indeed, one might suppose the

sole purpose for the merger. There was no error in this

factual analysis.

We recognize, as plaintiffs argue, that the Supreme

Court, in the circumstances of Black & White Taxicab, ________________________

declined to inquire into motives. Id. at 524. Black & White ___ _____________

Taxicab, however, involved the transfer of an ongoing taxi _______

business, not a paper corporation whose single purpose had

been to act as a general partner in a partnership now

embroiled in litigation. Viewing cases of this nature on a

continuum defined by Kramer on one side, and Black & White ______ _____________

Taxicab on the other, the present case falls well to the _______

Kramer side. And in this circuit the instant case is further ______

controlled as the district court correctly found by our



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Amelung decision. We, therefore, affirm the district court's _______

finding that 1359 bars jurisdiction over plaintiffs' claim.



III. III.

We turn next to the issue of whether any portion of

defendants' counterclaim can survive the jurisdictional

failure of plaintiffs' claim.

There are two ways for district courts to acquire

jurisdiction over counterclaims: (1) pursuant to an

independent basis for federal jurisdiction present in the

counterclaim; or (2) pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 1367 which

provides supplemental jurisdiction over counterclaims that

are part of the same case or controversy as the original

claim. Only those counterclaims that have an independent

basis for jurisdiction can survive a dismissal of the

original claim for lack of jurisdiction.11 6 Charles A.

Wright, Arthur R. Miller, Mary K. Kane, Federal Practice and

Procedure: Civil 2d 1414, at 112 (1990). See also Scott ________ _____

v. Long Island Savings Bank, FSB, 937 F.2d 738, 743 (2d Cir. ______________________________

1991); Kuehne & Nagel (AG & CO) v. Geosource, Inc., 874 F.2d ________________________ _______________

283, 291 (5th Cir. 1989); DHL Corp. v. Loomis Courier Serv., _________ _____________________

Inc., 522 F.2d 982, 985 (9th Cir. 1975). ____


____________________

11. Supplemental jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. 1367, is, in
effect, derivative of the original claim's jurisdiction and
thus cannot survive the jurisdictional failure of the
original claim.

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Defendants urge this court to find that the

district court has mandatory jurisdiction over Count III of

their counterclaim because jurisdiction exists independently

within the scope of its allegation.12 Count III alleges

that the TFCI-TFC merger violated sections 11.2 and 11.3 of

the partnership agreement, which prohibit the transfer of a

partner's interest without giving notice and a right of first

refusal to the other partners.

Defendants argue that the district court has

mandatory jurisdiction over Count III because they have met

all the requirements of diversity under 1332. Section 1359

which destroyed diversity in plaintiffs' claim does

not apply to them, defendants say, because they themselves

did not engage in the collusive or improper acts that

defeated diversity jurisdiction over plaintiffs' claim. In

defendants' view, the district court's holding penalizes them

for losing "the race to the courthouse" since if they had

sued plaintiffs, instead of vice versa, jurisdiction would

exist.



____________________

12. Defendants' counterclaim consists of three counts: Count
I requests a declaration of rights under the partnership
agreement; Count II requests injunctive relief instructing
the parties to abide by the rights and duties of the
partnership agreement; Count III requests damages for an
alleged breach of the partnership agreement. The parties
agree that Counts I and II must be dismissed because they are
not independent of plaintiffs' claim, and therefore do not
survive that claim's jurisdictional failure.

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We are not persuaded. Section 1359, by its terms,

destroys diversity not only for the original claim, but for

the entire action. Section 1359 provides: "A district court

shall not have jurisdiction of a civil action in which any ____________ ___

party . . . has been improperly or collusively made . . . to _____

invoke [federal] jurisdiction" (emphasis added).13 The

district court's lack of jurisdiction is not limited to the

claim of a collusive plaintiff but extends to any portion of

the civil action whose jurisdictional basis depends in fact

upon the plaintiff's improper or collusive act.14 We can

see no reason not to construe the statute as written. It

could well be unfair, within the contours of the same

lawsuit, to find that diversity jurisdiction exists for

purposes of defendants' claim after dismissing plaintiffs'

claim for want of diversity. To bifurcate jurisdiction in

this manner would be to fragment the case. One aspect of the

partnership agreement here might have to be determined in





____________________

13. The term "action" has been used in the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure to include counterclaims. See Fed. R. Civ. ___
P. 54(b) ("When more than one claim for relief is presented
in an action, whether as a claim, counterclaim, cross-claim ______ ____________
or third party claim, ... the court may direct the entry of a
[partial] final judgement ...") (emphasis added).

14. We do not reach the question of whether 1359 would
require dismissal of a counterclaim supported by a
jurisdictional basis that would have existed even if
plaintiffs had not improperly manufactured jurisdiction.

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federal court and another in state court,15 causing

friction between state and federal courts, the wasting of

judicial resources, and a greater likelihood of unfair and

inconsistent outcomes. It could also be unfair to allow

defendants, who successfully challenged jurisdiction over

plaintiffs' claim, to use the same improperly achieved

jurisdictional basis for their counterclaim. In any case,

the statute seems clear. We affirm the district court's

refusal to assert jurisdiction over defendants' counterclaim.



Affirmed. Each party bears its own costs. Affirmed. Each party bears its own costs. __________________________________________



















____________________

15. Defendants argue that it is not at all clear that the
case would be bifurcated because if they are successful in
Count III and the federal court awards them TFCI partnership
interest as a remedy, they would have control over the
partnership and plaintiffs' claim would be moot. We are not
persuaded by this argument because it is unclear whether
defendants would be successful and whether the district court
would award TFC's partnership interest to defendants as a
remedy in the event that they were successful.

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