Taber Partners, I v. Merit Builders, Inc. , 987 F.2d 57 ( 1993 )


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  • March 3, 1993
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 92-1921
    TABER PARTNERS, I, A NEW YORK GENERAL PARTNERSHIP,
    Plaintiff, Appellant,
    v.
    MERIT BUILDERS, INC., A PUERTO RICO CORP., ET AL.,
    Defendants, Appellees.
    No. 92-1922
    TABER PARTNERS, I, A NEW YORK GENERAL PARTNERSHIP,
    Plaintiff, Appellee,
    v.
    MERIT BUILDERS, INC., A PUERTO RICO CORP.,
    Defendant, Appellant.
    APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO
    [Hon. Jaime Pieras, Jr., U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Selya, Circuit Judge,
    Coffin, Senior Circuit Judge, and
    Stahl, Circuit Judge.
    Harvey B. Nachman with whom Joan  Schlump Peters was on  brief for
    Merit Builders, Inc.  and Arch Stokes with  whom John R.  Hunt, Stokes
    and Murphy,  Ruben T. Nigaglioni and  Ledsma, Palou & Miranda  were on
    brief for Taber Partners I.
    Jay A.  Garcia-Gregory with whom  Rafael R. Vizcarrondo,  Humberto
    Guzman-Rodriguez and Fiddler, Gonzalez &  Rodriguez were on brief  for
    appellees.
    March 3, 1993
    STAHL, Circuit  Judge.  This appeal  requires us to
    decide whether,  for  purposes of  diversity jurisdiction,  a
    partnership's  business activities  should  be considered  in
    determining the principal  place of business  of each of  its
    corporate partners.  We hold that, in the absence of evidence
    that  the partnership  and its  corporate partners  failed to
    maintain   their   separate  identities,   the  partnership's
    activities  ordinarily  should  not  be considered  for  this
    purpose.
    I.
    PROCEDURAL POSTURE
    Plaintiff Taber  Partners I  ("Taber"), a New  York
    general  partnership whose  sole  partners are  two New  York
    corporations, Lerfer  San Juan Corp. ("Lerfer"),  and Calumet
    Corp.  ("Calumet"),  owns and  operates the  Ambassador Plaza
    Hotel  &   Casino  ("Hotel")   in  San  Juan,   Puerto  Rico.
    Defendants  Merit Builders,  Inc.,  and Merit  Builders, S.E.
    (hereinafter  referred to collectively as "Merit") are Puerto
    Rico-based construction  companies.  Beginning in March 1988,
    Taber and  Merit  entered into  a  series of  consulting  and
    construction contracts involving the renovation and expansion
    of  the Hotel.    Disputes arose  during  the course  of  the
    project, and  in February  1991, Taber commenced  a diversity
    action against Merit in the United States District  Court for
    the District of  Puerto Rico asserting, inter alia, breach of
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    contract,  fraud,  and  negligence.    Merit  responded  with
    several counterclaims  against  Taber and  filed  third-party
    complaints  against  appellees  Victor  Torres  &  Associates
    ("VTA"),   the   inspecting   architect,    and   Desarrollos
    Metropolitanos,  Inc.  ("Desarrollos"),  one  of  the project
    subcontractors.   Like  Merit, both  VTA and  Desarrollos are
    citizens of Puerto Rico.
    On the eve of trial,  VTA and Desarrollos moved  to
    dismiss, asserting that --  because Taber was also a  citizen
    of Puerto Rico --  diversity of citizenship was lacking.   As
    the  citizenship of Taber depends upon the citizenship of its
    partners, Lerfer and Calumet, the district court first had to
    determine Lerfer's and Calumet's  citizenship.  See Carden v.
    Arkoma Assocs., 
    494 U.S. 185
    , 195-96 (1990) (reaffirming the
    "oft-repeated rule  that diversity jurisdiction in  a suit by
    or against [a partnership] depends on the citizenship of `all
    the  [partners]' . . .") (quoting Chapman v. Barney, 
    129 U.S. 677
    ,  682   (1889)).    As   Lerfer  and  Calumet   are  both
    incorporated in New York, the sole  issue before the district
    court   was  the   principal  place   of  business   of  both
    corporations.  See 28 U.S.C.    1332(c)(1) ("For the purposes
    of  [diversity,] . . . a corporation  shall be deemed to be a
    citizen  of any [s]tate by which it has been incorporated and
    of the [s]tate where it has its principal place of business")
    (emphasis supplied).            The district court ultimately
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    agreed  with  VTA's   and  Desarrollos'  argument  that   the
    principal  place of business  of both Lerfer  and Calumet was
    Puerto  Rico.   Thus, on  July, 8,  1992, the  district court
    granted  their  motion and  dismissed  the case  for  lack of
    subject  matter  jurisdiction.    See  Taber  Partners  I  v.
    Insurance Co. of North  America, Inc., 
    798 F. Supp. 904
    , 912
    (D.P.R. 1992).
    In this appeal, Taber and Merit, adversaries below,
    mount a  joint challenge to the district court's dismissal of
    their case.   In so doing,  they argue that, in  light of the
    undisputed evidence  that  Lerfer's and  Calumet's  corporate
    activities  occurred almost  exclusively  in  New  York,  the
    district court's  selection of  Puerto Rico as  the principal
    place of business of  both corporations is clearly erroneous.
    Before  addressing   appellants'  argument,  we   sketch  the
    relevant facts.
    II.
    FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    In  December 1986,  Mr.  F. Eugene  Romano and  Ms.
    Linda E.  Romano, citizens  of New York,  incorporated Lerfer
    and  Calumet in  New York.   At  all relevant  times,1 Eugene
    1.  For  purposes of  diversity jurisdiction,  citizenship is
    determined as of the  date of the initiation of  the lawsuit.
    See, e.g., Freeport-McMoRan, Inc. v. K N Energy, Inc., 
    111 S. Ct. 858
    , 859  (1991); Media Duplication  Servs., Ltd. v.  HDG
    Software, Inc., 
    928 F.2d 1228
    , 1236 (1st Cir. 1991).   Thus,
    we  recite relevant  facts as  they  existed on  February 15,
    1991, the date Taber filed its complaint.
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    Romano owned all the outstanding shares  of Lerfer, and Linda
    Romano  owned all the  outstanding shares of  Calumet.  Linda
    Romano  and Mrs.  Jeanne  Romano served  as  the officers  of
    Lerfer, while  Eugene Romano and Jeanne Romano  served as the
    officers of Calumet.  The  same three individuals also served
    as the directors of both corporations.
    Lerfer and Calumet are "Subchapter S" corporations,
    a status entitling them to favorable tax treatment under both
    federal  law, see  generally 26  U.S.C.    1361 et  seq., and
    state law.  See generally New York Tax Law   660(a) (McKinney
    1987).   See also Taber  Partners I,  
    798 F. Supp. at 907-09
    (explaining the  legal and  practical underpinnings of  an "S
    Corporation").   The  Certificates of  Incorporation of  both
    companies contain  a broad  declaration of  corporate purpose
    "to  engage  in  any  lawful  acts  or  activities for  which
    corporations may be organized under the  Business Corporation
    Law of the State of New York . . . ."
    The   headquarters  (and   sole  office)   of  both
    corporations is located at 501 Main  Street, Utica, New York.
    All  corporate  books  and  records  are  maintained  at  the
    headquarters, and all accounting, auditing, and legal work is
    handled for both corporations in the state of New York by New
    York  accountants and attorneys.   Both corporations maintain
    their  bank accounts in New York, and Lerfer also maintains a
    working capital account  with an investment firm in New York.
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    Each files federal income tax returns from New York and state
    income tax returns  in New  York.  Neither  files income  tax
    returns in Puerto Rico.
    On   December   29,  1986,   shortly   after  their
    incorporation, Lerfer  and Calumet entered into a partnership
    agreement ("the Agreement") that formed Taber.  The Agreement
    lists  New  York,  or "such  other  place  or  places as  the
    [p]artners may determine[,]"  as Taber's  principal place  of
    business.2    Under  the  Agreement, Lerfer  obtained  a  99%
    ownership  interest  in  Taber,  and Calumet  obtained  a  1%
    ownership  interest.  Lerfer  and Calumet agreed  to share in
    Taber's net profits and losses under a formula which mirrored
    their respective ownership interests.
    Article IV  of the Agreement states:   "The primary
    and  specific purpose of [Taber] is  to acquire, own, operate
    and  manage [the Hotel in Puerto Rico]."  Pursuant to section
    7.01 of the Agreement, Lerfer and Calumet  delegated the day-
    to-day  management of  Taber to  Eugene Romano,  as executive
    director,  and  Linda Romano,  as  assistant  director.   All
    responsibilities   not  enumerated   in  section   7.01  were
    delegated  to  the  partnership  generally.    The  Agreement
    2.  While the Agreement was negotiated, drafted, and recorded
    in New York,  it was  "protocolized" in Puerto  Rico for  the
    purpose of recording the deed to the Hotel at the Registry of
    Property  in San Juan.  The  protocol procedure was necessary
    to establish  Taber's authority to own  property under Puerto
    Rico law.  See P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 31,   4313 (1991).
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    specifically  granted  Taber the  authority,  inter  alia, to
    borrow money,  enter into  contracts, bring and  defend legal
    actions,  and  "[d]o  any  and  all  other  acts  and  things
    necessary or  proper  in  furtherance  of  the  [p]artnership
    business."
    Since  their  incorporation  in  1986,  Lerfer  and
    Calumet have  both described themselves on  their federal and
    state tax returns as "holding compan[ies]."  Eugene and Linda
    Romano testified in their depositions that each corporation's
    sole  function  is  to  hold  or  administer  its  respective
    interest in Taber.  To this  end, Lerfer and Calumet employ a
    "control-group"  of  twelve  individuals  to  maintain  their
    corporate  records   and  financial   accounts.     All  such
    maintenance occurs  exclusively in New  York.  An  example of
    the type  of New York-centered  activity in which  Lerfer and
    Calumet  engage  is  their  management  of loan  transactions
    designed to secure their ownership  interests in Taber.   For
    instance, Eugene Romano has made substantial loans (totalling
    approximately $8,000,000) to Lerfer, which, in turn, reloaned
    these funds to Taber.  Each of these loans consisted of funds
    that originated in New York  and were evidenced by promissory
    notes prepared, executed, and delivered in New York.
    The  record reveals that  all policy  decisions for
    Lerfer and  Calumet are made in  New York.   For example, the
    decision  to invest  in  Taber was  made in  New  York.   The
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    election  of  corporate  officers  and   the  appointment  of
    accountants occur  at the annual Board  of Directors meetings
    held  in New  York.   Indeed, the  record contains  almost no
    evidence of  corporate activity on the part  of either Lerfer
    or Calumet taking place outside of New York.3
    Despite  these  uncontroverted facts,  the district
    court concluded that  the principal place of business of both
    Lerfer  and Calumet was Puerto Rico.   In so doing, the court
    rejected appellants'  characterization of Lerfer  and Calumet
    as "passive"  holding companies  and found that  their raison
    d'etre included the operation of the Hotel:
    Only a[n] unrealistically narrow  view of
    the orientation of  the corporations  and
    their  partnership  could  yield  such  a
    conclusion.  The corporations were formed
    to act  as owners  of the [Hotel].   They
    devote  almost  all  of  their  corporate
    activity  to  administer their  assets in
    the    partnership.       They   actively
    authorized the formation of Taber and the
    obtaining  of a  bond  to  assist in  the
    financing of  the  projects.   They  have
    loaned  substantial  amounts of  money to
    Taber.     And   the  directors   of  the
    partnership, Mr. and Ms. Romano,  are the
    directors  of  the  corporations.   Under
    these  circumstances,  the  Court  cannot
    accept   the   characterization  of   the
    corporations'   interests  in   Taber  as
    passive.  The  Court therefore  considers
    of greater significance  the location  of
    the corporations' primary activity.  This
    activity is the renovation  and operation
    3.  The record reveals that  Lerfer's and Calumet's Boards of
    Directors  held two  "special meetings"  in San  Juan, Puerto
    Rico, in connection with  the initial purchase and subsequent
    refinancing of the Hotel.
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    of  the  [Hotel],  which  is  located  in
    Puerto Rico.
    Taber Partners  I, 
    798 F. Supp. at 912
    .   We do not concur in
    the district court's analysis.
    III.
    DISCUSSION
    A district court's determination of citizenship for
    purposes of diversity jurisdiction is a mixed question of law
    and  fact.   As such,  we  will not  set  aside the  district
    court's decision unless it is "clearly erroneous."  Lundquist
    v.  Precision Valley Aviation, Inc., 
    946 F.2d 8
    , 11 (1st Cir.
    1991);  Media Duplication, 
    928 F.2d at 1237
    .  In addition, we
    review the facts of this case mindful that the party invoking
    the jurisdiction  of a  federal court carries  the burden  of
    proving its existence.  See, e.g., Lundquist, 
    946 F.2d at 10
    .
    In this  circuit, we  utilize "three  distinct, but
    not   necessarily  inconsistent  tests"   for  determining  a
    corporation's principal  place of  business:  (1)  the "nerve
    center" test, which  searches for the location from which the
    corporation's activities are controlled and directed; (2) the
    "center of  corporate activity" test, which  searches for the
    location of the corporation's  day-to-day management; and (3)
    the  "locus of the operations of the corporation" test, which
    searches  for  the  location  of   the  corporation's  actual
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    physical operations.  Topp v. CompAir Inc., 
    814 F.2d 830
    , 834
    (1st Cir. 1987).
    While we have not had occasion to apply these tests
    to a general partnership  whose partners are corporations, we
    frequently  have  applied  them to  corporations  involved in
    parent-subsidiary   relationships.      See,   e.g.,   U.S.I.
    Properties Corp. v.  M.D. Constr.  Co., Inc., 
    860 F.2d 1
    ,  7
    (1st  Cir.  1988),  cert.   denied,  
    490 U.S. 1065
      (1989);
    Rodriguez v. SK & F Co., 
    833 F.2d 8
    , 9 (1st Cir. 1987); Topp,
    
    814 F.2d at 833-39
    ; Lugo-Vina v. Pueblo Int'l, Inc., 
    574 F.2d 41
    , 43-44 (1st Cir.  1978); de Walker v. Pueblo  Int'l, Inc.,
    
    569 F.2d 1169
    , 1170-73 (1st Cir. 1978).  In  this context, we
    have repeatedly held  that, where there  is no evidence  that
    the integrity  of the corporate  form has been  violated, the
    separate  corporate  identities of  a  parent  and subsidiary
    should be  honored  when determining  either one's  principal
    place  of business.   See  U.S.I. Properties,  
    860 F.2d at 7
    (recognizing  separate  corporate   identity  of   subsidiary
    despite   evidence  that   subsidiary  was   wholly-owned  by
    "grandparent"  corporation,  shared  all  its   officers  and
    directors with grandparent, was grossly undercapitalized, and
    did not prepare its own budget, construction requirements, or
    policies  and   procedures);   Rodriguez,  
    833 F.2d at 9
    (recognizing separate corporate  identity of subsidiary where
    evidence showed  that  it  operated  independently  from  its
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    parent);  Topp,  
    814 F.2d at 833
      (recognizing   separate
    corporate  identity  of  subsidiary  holding  company despite
    evidence that it could not act without the express permission
    of its parent,  and that its  sole function was  to serve  as
    financial  conduit for  parent);  Lugo-Vina, 
    574 F.2d at 43
    (recognizing  separate  corporate  identity of  parent  where
    evidence  showed  it operated  independently  of wholly-owned
    subsidiary);  de  Walker,  
    569 F.2d at 1173
      (recognizing
    separate  corporate identity of  parent despite evidence that
    parent consolidated its profits  and losses with that  of its
    wholly-owned  subsidiary  in  presenting  parent's  financial
    reports  to shareholders,  that subsidiary  was  considered a
    "division" of  parent, and that subsidiary  accounted for 60%
    of parent's  and subsidiary's  combined operations).   Accord
    Danjaq,  S.A. v.  Pathe Communications  Corp., 
    979 F.2d 772
    ,
    774-75   (9th  Cir.  1992)  (recognizing  separate  corporate
    identity  of   parent   despite  evidence   that   subsidiary
    "perform[ed] the lion's share" of the film production for the
    parent)  (citing  Lugo-Vina,  
    574 F.2d at 43-44
    );  Pyramid
    Securities Ltd. v.  IB Resolution, Inc., 
    924 F.2d 1114
    , 1120
    (D.C.  Cir.)  (recognizing  separate  corporate  identity  of
    parent despite  evidence that  parent was "alter-ego"  of its
    subsidiary and  was being  sued for  acts of  its subsidiary)
    (citing  U.S.I.  Properties  Corp.,  
    860 F.2d at 7
    ),  cert.
    denied, 
    112 S. Ct. 85
     (1991);  Schwartz v. Electronic  Data
    -11-
    11
    Sys., Inc., 
    913 F.2d 279
    , 283  (6th Cir. 1990)  (recognizing
    separate  corporate  identity  of  subsidiary  where evidence
    showed "formal  separation [was] maintained")  (citing U.S.I.
    Properties  Corp., 
    860 F.2d at 7
    ; Topp,  
    814 F.2d at 835
    ).
    Contra Freeman  v. Northwest Acceptance Corp.,  
    754 F.2d 553
    ,
    557 (5th Cir. 1985) (imputing citizenship of a  subsidiary to
    its parent  and alleged "alter-ego") (citing  Toms v. Country
    Quality Meats, Inc., 
    610 F.2d 313
    , 315-16 (5th Cir.  1980));
    Bonar, Inc. v. Schottland, 
    631 F. Supp. 990
    , 997-98 (E.D. Pa.
    1986)  (imputing citizenship  of  parent to  subsidiary where
    evidence showed that the business of both was "identical" and
    court determined  that their formal separation  was "merely a
    corporate fiction").
    For instance,  in Topp,  we held that  the district
    court erred in applying  the "nerve center" test in  a manner
    which  "ignore[d]  the  separate  corporate  identity of  the
    corporation whose citizenship [was] being sought."  Topp, 
    814 F.2d at 835
    .   In  that case, the  district court  determined
    that the principal  place of business  of the subsidiary  was
    England, the  location  of the  parent.   
    Id. at 832
    .    The
    subsidiary   in  Topp   was   a  holding   company  with   no
    manufacturing, purchasing,  or sales facilities.   
    Id.
     at 834
    n.3.   Its  principal  function was  to  act as  a  financial
    conduit   for  its   parent,  providing   administrative  and
    financial services to  various other subsidiaries  across the
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    United  States.  
    Id. at 834
    .   The district court found that,
    although  the subsidiary maintained  an office  and conducted
    its business  activities in New Hampshire,  it was controlled
    by the parent  who made  all of the  major policy  decisions,
    including  the hiring  and  firing of  the  employees of  the
    subsidiary.   As a result,  the district court  reasoned that
    England was the subsidiary's "nerve center."  
    Id. at 832
    .
    We  reversed the  district court  and held  that it
    erroneously merged  the activities of the  subsidiary and the
    parent in  determining the subsidiary's "nerve  center."  
    Id. at 834
    .  We  made clear that, in determining  a corporation's
    principal place  of business,  the activities of  the company
    whose citizenship is  at issue are  those that are  relevant.
    
    Id.
       Moreover,  we  held  that  as  long  as  the  corporate
    formalities are preserved by  the parent and subsidiary, they
    are entitled to recognition:
    [D]efendants   presented   uncontradicted
    evidence     that     [the    subsidiary]
    maintained,  in  New  Hampshire, its  own
    general  ledger,  corporate minutes  book
    and register of  unissued stock, its  own
    bank  accounts,  and  its  own  executive
    offices.  [The subsidiary] filed  its own
    federal and state income and unemployment
    taxes, social  security contributions and
    excise  taxes.   This  evidence indicates
    that the separate  corporate identity  of
    [the  subsidiary]  is   entitled  to   be
    recognized.
    
    Id. at 837
    .   We therefore concluded that, while  "the shots"
    may  have been called by the parent in England, the principal
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    place of business  of the subsidiary  was New Hampshire,  the
    "operational  center of the corporation in question."  
    Id.
     at
    835 n.4.
    Likewise,  in de  Walker, we  held that  a parent's
    principal place of business was Puerto Rico, the situs of its
    "day-to-day management and operations," rather than New York,
    the  place  where   its  wholly-owned  subsidiary   conducted
    business.  de Walker,  
    569 F.2d at 1172
    .   Despite compelling
    evidence  that the  parent and  subsidiary in de  Walker were
    closely intertwined, see 
    id. at 1171
    , we were  not persuaded
    to  ignore their separate corporate identities.  
    Id. at 1172
    .
    The critical  factual question in de  Walker, as in
    Topp, was not the degree of control the parent exercised over
    the  subsidiary,  but whether  the  two  businesses preserved
    their separate corporate identities.  We reasoned that:
    While the  documents . .  . indicate that
    [the  parent]  was  ultimately  the  sole
    beneficiary   and    director   of   [the
    subsidiary's] corporate activities, there
    is  nothing  in the  record  to undermine
    [the   parent's]   claim  that   the  two
    corporations        were       separately
    incorporated,  had   separate  boards  of
    directors,  kept separate  accounting and
    tax records, and had  separate facilities
    and operational personnel.   And, leaving
    aside the activities  of [the  subsidiary
    in New York], there is next to nothing in
    the   record   to  establish   that  [the
    parent],   in  its   corporate  capacity,
    conducted  any  business  outside  Puerto
    Rico.
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    de  Walker, 
    569 F.2d at 1171
     (emphasis supplied).  We further
    reasoned that the close interrelationship of the corporations
    was  incidental to  the  parent's ownership  of  100% of  the
    subsidiary's  stock  and   did  "not  justify   ignoring  the
    otherwise separate character of  the two corporations."4  
    Id. at 1173
    .
    Thus, pertinent circuit authority, particularly our
    opinions in Topp and  de Walker, stand for the  following two
    unremarkable  propositions:    (1)  that  in   determining  a
    corporation's principal place of business, a district court's
    inquiry must focus  solely on the business activities  of the
    corporation whose  principal place  of business is  at issue;
    and  (2) that an exception to this general rule applies where
    there is evidence that the separate corporate identities of a
    parent and subsidiary have  been ignored.  We can  discern no
    reason  why these  propositions should  not apply  with equal
    force where the entities at issue are corporate partners.5
    4.  An exception to this  general rule exists in cases  where
    there  is  evidence  that  the  parent  and  subsidiary  have
    violated  the  integrity of  the corporate  formalities which
    they selected.  E.g., de Walker, 
    569 F.2d at 1173
    .
    5.  The  appellees attempt  to justify  the district  court's
    treatment of  Taber, Lerfer,  and Calumet  as one  entity for
    diversity  purposes by  relying almost  exclusively upon  New
    York partnership law, which they contend regards the partners
    and  a  partnership  as a  single  entity.    Whether or  not
    appellees are  correct in their characterization  of New York
    partnership  law,  a  proposition  on  which  we  express  no
    opinion,  such law is not controlling in light of federal law
    which distinguishes  between a partnership  and its  partners
    for purposes  of diversity jurisdiction.   See, e.g., Carden,
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    Here, the uncontroverted facts reveal that the sole
    corporate  "activities"  of  Lerfer  and  Calumet consist  of
    holding or administering their assets  in Taber, and that all
    such administering occurs exclusively in New York.  Moreover,
    there  is no evidence that  Lerfer and Calumet  engage in the
    operation  and/or management  of  the Hotel.   Indeed,  it is
    uncontroverted that Taber was expressly created by Lerfer and
    Calumet,  as  stated  in  the Agreement,  "to  acquire,  own,
    operate and manage [the Hotel in Puerto Rico]."  See also 
    798 F. Supp. at 905, 906
     (characterizing as undisputed  the fact
    that "Taber's business is the operation and management of the
    [Hotel]").   It  is  also apparent  from  the Agreement  that
    Lerfer  and Calumet  delegated the  day-to-day management  of
    Taber  to   Taber's  officers,   Eugene  and   Linda  Romano.
    Appellees have introduced no  evidence to suggest that either
    Lerfer or Calumet ever usurped that role.6
    
    494 U.S. at 195-96
    .  We  therefore find appellees'  argument
    unpersuasive.
    6.  We are aware that the district  court found that Lerfer's
    and Calumet's "primary activity  . . . is the  renovation and
    operation of the  [Hotel], which is located in  Puerto Rico."
    See Taber Partners I, 
    798 F. Supp. at 912
    .   However, we have
    not  found any evidence to  support such a  finding.  Indeed,
    the district  court itself  found that "[Lerfer  and Calumet]
    devote almost  all of their corporate  activity to administer
    their assets in the  partnership," 
    id.,
     activity which occurs
    almost  exclusively  in New  York.    It further  found  that
    "Taber's  business is  the  operation and  management of  the
    [Hotel]." 
    Id. at 906
    .  Given that the district court  made no
    attempt to reconcile  these findings, we are not  inclined to
    accord them any deference.
    -16-
    16
    In sum, the record  reveals that Lerfer and Calumet
    serve  as  holding companies  which  manage  their assets  in
    Taber, a separate, and legally distinct, partnership  entity,
    and that  all their  "activities" as holding  companies occur
    exclusively in  New York.   We  need go  no  further.   Under
    either the  "nerve center" test  or the "center  of corporate
    activity"  test,7 the  principal  place of  business of  both
    Lerfer  and Calumet is New York.8   Cf. Vareka Invs., N.V. v.
    American Inv. Properties, Inc., 
    724 F.2d 907
    , 910 (11th Cir.)
    (holding that  Ecuador corporation which  served as  "passive
    investment vehicle"  for  Florida  real  estate  venture  had
    principal place  of business  in Ecuador where  it maintained
    its  corporate   books  and   records,  made   all  corporate
    decisions, held all corporate  meetings, hired its employees,
    and obtained loans for the initial purchase of  the venture),
    cert.  denied, 
    469 U.S. 826
     (1984).9  Both Lerfer and Calumet
    7.  Because Lerfer  and Calumet  have no  physical operations
    (i.e., factories, warehouses, sales offices, etc.) the "locus
    of  the operations  of  the corporation"  test  would not  be
    helpful.  See Topp, 
    814 F.2d at
    834 n.3 (rejecting utility of
    a "locus of physical operations of  the corporation" test for
    a holding company).
    8.  Because we find that  New York is the principal  place of
    business of both  Lerfer and Calumet under  either the "nerve
    center" or "center of corporate  activity" test, we need  not
    determine which of  the two tests  is most appropriate  under
    these facts.
    9.  In  so holding, we are not unaware  of a line of cases in
    which district courts, in  determining the principal place of
    business of a holding company, have looked to the business of
    the entity whose  assets are  being held rather  than to  the
    -17-
    17
    business of the holding company.  See Bonar,  
    631 F. Supp. at 996
     ("[the holding  company] was created to hold  and operate
    [parent's] interest in [Pennsylvania  company], and it has no
    business other  than this  venture.  Therefore,  [the holding
    company's]   principal   place   of   business   is   clearly
    Pennsylvania,  not  the  state  in which  its  executive  and
    administrative offices may be located . . . ."); Hanna Mining
    Co. v. Minnesota  Power & Light Co., 
    573 F. Supp. 1395
    , 1400
    (D. Minn. 1983) ("[The  holding company] was created  to hold
    and  operate [parent's] interest  in [Minnesota venture], and
    it  has no business other than this venture.  Therefore, [the
    holding company's] principal place  of business is clearly in
    Minnesota,  not  in the  state  in  which its  executive  and
    administrative offices may be  located . . . ."),  aff'd, 
    739 F.2d 1368
     (8th Cir. 1984); Hereth v. Jones, 
    544 F. Supp. 111
    ,
    112  (E.D. Va.  1982) ("[The  holding company's]  sole raison
    d'etre is to be the corporate general partner in [a] Virginia
    nursing home venture.   Thus[,]  such activity  as exists  in
    Virginia  is  greater  than  the non-activity  in  any  other
    [s]tate.").
    While  we were unable to discern from the facts of Hanna
    Mining exactly what level of activity took place in the state
    where the  holding company's offices were  located, the facts
    of both Bonar and Hereth reveal that the holding companies at
    issue  in each  case performed  no corporate activity  of any
    kind in the states where their offices were located.  Indeed,
    in Bonar, the evidence revealed that  the "office" was merely
    a mailing  address, and that  the company  had no  employees,
    executives,  officers, or  directors in  the state  where the
    "office"  was located.  Bonar, 
    631 F. Supp. at 994-95
    .  As a
    result, the court  was persuaded to look  to Minnesota, where
    the holding company's attorney  resided and worked, where its
    officers and  directors resided, and  where the  negotiations
    over  the  initial  stock purchase  occurred.    
    Id. at 995
    .
    Likewise, in Hereth, the court found that the holding company
    had  "absolutely  no function  or activity"  in the  state of
    incorporation, and had "no  employees anywhere."  Hereth, 
    544 F. Supp. at 112
    .   As  a result,  the  court looked  to the
    activities  of the  business venture  that was  owned  by the
    partnership  in  which  the  holding company  was  a  general
    partner.  
    Id.
    The   instant  case,   however,  presents   an  entirely
    different  fact  pattern.    As detailed  above,  Lerfer  and
    Calumet  operate out  of  New York.    They have  an  office,
    employees,   bank  accounts,   a  working   capital  account,
    corporate books and records,  and Board of Directors meetings
    in New York.  The corporate officers and directors all reside
    in New York,  and almost all  of the corporations'  decisions
    -18-
    18
    are  therefore  citizens  of   New  York.    And   because  a
    partnership is  a  citizen  of  those  states  in  which  its
    partners  are citizens, see supra p. 3, it follows that Taber
    is also a citizen of New York, and that the  district court's
    contrary determination was clearly erroneous.
    IV.  CONCLUSION
    As  Taber is a citizen  of New York,  the amount in
    controversy is ample, and  none of the entities on  the other
    side  of  the  lawsuit  shares  Taber's citizenship,  subject
    matter  jurisdiction is  present.   We therefore  reverse and
    remand the case for  further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
    Reversed and remanded.
    are made  in New York.   As such, Lerfer and  Calumet, unlike
    the  holding  companies at  issue  in Bonar  and  Hereth, are
    holding  companies with  corporate  operations distinct  from
    those of the company whose assets they hold.  As a result, we
    find the reasoning in the above line of cases inapposite.
    -19-
    19
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 92-1921, 92-1922

Citation Numbers: 987 F.2d 57

Judges: Coffin, Selya, Stahl

Filed Date: 3/3/1993

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/3/2023

Authorities (19)

Russell A. Lugo-Vina v. Pueblo International, Inc. , 574 F.2d 41 ( 1978 )

Candida Merino De Walker v. Pueblo International, Inc., and ... , 569 F.2d 1169 ( 1978 )

Fernando Rodriguez v. Sk & F Co. , 833 F.2d 8 ( 1987 )

Lee J. Topp v. Compair Incorporated, Compair Limited, Siebe ... , 814 F.2d 830 ( 1987 )

Media Duplication Services, Ltd. v. Hdg Software, Inc., ... , 928 F.2d 1228 ( 1991 )

U.S.I. Properties Corp. v. M.D. Construction Company, Inc., ... , 860 F.2d 1 ( 1988 )

Ed Freeman and Wife Sharon Freeman, Cross-Appellants v. ... , 754 F.2d 553 ( 1985 )

Hanna Mining Company v. Minnesota Power and Light Company , 739 F.2d 1368 ( 1984 )

Danjaq, S.A. v. Pathe Communications Corporation Mgm-Pathe ... , 979 F.2d 772 ( 1992 )

Mrs. Georgia Ann Toms v. Country Quality Meats, Inc., Etc., ... , 610 F.2d 313 ( 1980 )

Mark Schwartz v. Electronic Data Systems, Inc. , 913 F.2d 279 ( 1990 )

Courtney J. Lundquist v. Precision Valley Aviation, Inc. , 946 F.2d 8 ( 1991 )

Bonar, Inc. v. Schottland , 631 F. Supp. 990 ( 1986 )

Hanna Mining Co. v. Minnesota Power and Light Co. , 573 F. Supp. 1395 ( 1983 )

Chapman v. Barney , 9 S. Ct. 426 ( 1889 )

Carden v. Arkoma Associates , 110 S. Ct. 1015 ( 1990 )

Freeport-McMoRan Inc. v. K N Energy, Inc. , 111 S. Ct. 858 ( 1991 )

Taber Partners I v. Insurance Co. of North America , 798 F. Supp. 904 ( 1992 )

Hereth v. Jones , 544 F. Supp. 111 ( 1982 )

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