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- SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
- --------
- No. 91-594
- --------
- AMERICAN NATIONAL RED CROSS, PETITIONER v.
- S. G. and A. E.
- on writ of certiorari to the united states court of
- appeals for the first circuit
- [June 19, 1992]
-
- Justice Scalia, with whom The Chief Justice, Justice
- O'Connor, and Justice Kennedy join, dissenting.
- The Court today concludes that whenever a statute
- granting a federally chartered corporation the -power to sue
- and be sued- specifically mentions the federal courts (as
- opposed to merely embracing them within general lan-
- guage), the law will be deemed not only to confer on the
- corporation the capacity to bring and suffer suit (which is
- all that the words say), but also to confer on federal district
- courts jurisdiction over any and all controversies to which
- that corporation is a party. This wonderland of linguistic
- confusion-in which words are sometimes read to mean
- only what they say and other times read also to mean what
- they do not say-is based on the erroneous premise that our
- cases in this area establish a -magic words- jurisprudence
- that departs from ordinary rules of English usage. In fact,
- our cases simply reflect the fact that the natural reading of
- some -sue and be sued- clauses is that they confer both
- capacity and jurisdiction. Since the natural reading of the
- Red Cross charter is that it confers only capacity, I respect-
- fully dissent.
- I
- Section 2 of the Red Cross Charter, 36 U. S. C. 2, sets
- forth the various powers of the corporation, such as the
- power -to have and to hold . . . real and personal estate-; -to
- adopt a seal-; -to ordain and establish bylaws and regula-
- tions-; and to -do all such acts and things as may be neces-
- sary to . . . promote [its] purposes.- The second item on
- this list is -the power to sue and be sued in courts of law
- and equity, State or Federal, within the jurisdiction of the
- United States.- Ibid. The presence of this language amidst
- a list of more or less ordinary corporate powers confirms
- what the words themselves suggest: It merely establishes
- that the Red Cross is a juridical person which may be party
- to a lawsuit in an American court, and that the Red
- Cross-despite its status as a federally chartered corpora-
- tion-does not share the Government's general immunity
- from suit. Cf. Fed. Rule Civ. Proc. 17(b) (-The capacity of
- a corporation to sue or be sued shall be determined by the
- law under which it was organized-); 4 Thompson on Cor-
- porations 3161, p. 975 (3d ed. 1927) (-[The power to sue
- and be sued] is expressly conferred in practically every
- incorporating act-); Loeffler v. Frank, 486 U. S. 549,
- 554-557 (1988) (-sue and be sued- clause waives sovereign
- immunity).
- It is beyond question that nothing in the language of this
- provision suggests that it has anything to do with regulat-
- ing the jurisdiction of the federal courts. The grant of
- corporate power to sue and be sued in no way implies a
- grant of federal-court jurisdiction; it merely places the
- corporation on the same footing as a natural person, who
- must look elsewhere to establish grounds for getting his
- case into court. Words conferring authority upon a corpora-
- tion are a most illogical means of conferring jurisdiction
- upon a court, and would not normally be understood that
- way. Moreover, it would be extraordinary to confer a new
- subject-matter jurisdiction upon -federal courts- in general,
- rather than upon a particular federal court or courts.
- The Court apparently believes, see ante, at 9, n. 8, that
- the language of 2 is functionally equivalent to a specific
- reference to the district courts, since no other court could
- reasonably have been intended to be the recipient of the
- jurisdictional grant. Perhaps so, but applying that intuition
- requires such a random butchering of the text that it is
- much more reasonable to assume that no court was the
- intended recipient. The Red Cross is clearly granted the
- capacity to sue and be sued in all federal courts, so that it
- could appear, for example, as a party in a third-party action
- in the Court of International Trade, see 28 U. S. C. 1583,
- and in an action before the United States Claims Court, see
- Claims Court Rule 14(a) (Mar. 15, 1991). There is simply
- no textual basis, and no legal basis except legal intuition,
- for saying that it must in addition establish an independent
- basis of jurisdiction to proceed in those courts, though it
- does not in the district courts.
- In fact, the language of this provision not only does not
- distinguish among federal courts, it also does not treat
- federal courts differently from state courts; the Red Cross
- is granted the -power- to sue in both. This parallel treat-
- ment of state and federal courts even further undermines
- a jurisdictional reading of the statute, since the provision
- cannot reasonably be read as allowing the Red Cross to
- enter a state court without establishing the independent
- basis of jurisdiction appropriate under state law. Such a
- reading would present serious constitutional questions, cf.
- Brown v. Gerdes, 321 U. S. 178, 188 (1944) (Frankfurter, J.,
- concurring); Howlett v. Rose, 496 U. S. 356, 372 (1990);
- Herb v. Pitcairn, 324 U. S. 117, 120-121 (1945); Minneapo-
- lis & St. Louis R. Co. v. Bombolis, 241 U. S. 211, 222-223
- (1916); but cf. Sandalow, Henry v. Mississippi and the
- Adequate State Ground: Proposals for a Revised Doctrine,
- 1965 S. Ct. Rev. 187, 207, n. 84. Since the language of the
- Red Cross charter cannot fairly be read to create federal
- jurisdiction but not state jurisdiction, we should not
- construe it as creating either. Edward J. DeBartolo Corp.
- v. NLRB, 463 U. S. 147, 157 (1983); NLRB v. Catholic
- Bishop of Chicago, 440 U. S. 490, 500-501 (1979).
- I therefore conclude-indeed, I do not think it seriously
- contestable-that the natural reading of the -sue and be
- sued- clause of 36 U. S. C. 2 confers upon the Red Cross
- only the capacity to -sue and be sued- in state and federal
- courts; it does not confer jurisdiction upon any court, state
- or federal.
- II
- I do not understand the Court to disagree with my
- analysis of the ordinary meaning of the statutory language.
- Its theory is that, regardless of ordinary meaning, our cases
- have created what might be termed a -phrase of art,-
- whereby a -sue and be sued- clause confers federal jurisdic-
- tion -if, but only if, it specifically mentions the federal
- courts,- ante, at 8. Thus, while the uninitiate would
- consider the phrase -sue and be sued in any court in the
- United States- to mean the same thing as -sue and be sued
- in any court, state or federal,- the Court believes that our
- cases have established the latter (but not the former) as a
- shorthand for -sue and be sued in any court, state or
- federal, and the federal district courts shall have jurisdic-
- tion over any such action.- Congress is assumed to have
- used this cleverly crafted code in enacting the charter
- provision at issue here, ante, at 4-5. In my view, our cases
- do not establish the cryptology the Court attributes to them.
- Rather, the four prior cases in which we have considered
- the jurisdictional implications of -sue and be sued- clauses
- are best understood as simply applications of conventional
- rules of statutory construction.
- In Bank of the United States v. Deveaux, 5 Cranch 61
- (1809), we held that a provision of the Act establishing the
- first Bank of the United States which stated that the Bank
- was -made able and capable in law . . . to sue and be sued
- . . . in courts of record, or any other place whatsoever,-
- 1 Stat. 192, did not confer jurisdiction on the federal courts
- to adjudicate suits brought by the Bank. Construing the
- statutory terms in accordance with their ordinary meaning,
- we concluded (as I conclude with respect to the Red Cross
- charter) that the provision merely gave -a capacity to the
- corporation to appear, as a corporation, in any court which
- would, by law, have cognisance of the cause, if brought by
- individuals.- 5 Cranch, at 85-86 (emphasis added). We
- expressly noted (as I have in this case) that the Act's
- undifferentiated mention of all courts compelled the
- conclusion that the provision was not jurisdictional: -If
- jurisdiction is given by this clause to the federal courts, it is
- equally given to all courts having original jurisdiction, and
- for all sums however small they may be,- id., at 86 (empha-
- sis added). That statement is immediately followed by
- contrasting this provision with another section of the Act
- which provided that certain actions against the directors of
- the Bank -may . . . be brought . . . in any court of record of
- the United States, or of either of them,- 1 Stat. 194. That
- provision, we said, -expressly authorizes the bringing of
- that action in the federal or state courts,- which -evinces
- the opinion of congress, that the right to sue does not imply
- a right to sue in the courts of the union, unless it be
- expressed.- 5 Cranch, at 86. It is clear, I think, that the
- reason the Court thought the right to have been -expressed-
- under the directors-suit provision, but not -expressed-
- under the provision before it, was not that the former
- happened to mention courts -of the United States.- For
- that would have provided no contrast to the argument
- against jurisdiction (italicized above) that the Court had
- just made. Reference to suits -in any court of record of the
- United States, or of either of them,- is no less universal in
- its operative scope than reference to suits -in courts of
- record,- and hence is subject to the same objection (to which
- the Court was presumably giving a contrasting example)
- that jurisdiction was indiscriminately conferred on all
- courts of original jurisdiction and for any and all amounts.
- Deveaux establishes not, as the Court claims, the weird
- principle that mention of the federal courts in a -sue and be
- sued- clause confers jurisdiction; but rather, the quite
- different (and quite reasonable) proposition that mention of
- the federal courts in a provision allowing a particular cause
- of action to be brought does so. The contrast between the
- -sue and be sued- clause and the provision authorizing
- certain suits against the directors lay, not in the mere
- substitution of one broad phrase for another, but in the fact
- that the latter provision, by authorizing particular actions
- to be brought in federal court, could not reasonably be read
- not to confer jurisdiction. A provision merely conferring a
- general capacity to bring actions, however, cannot reason-
- ably be read to confer jurisdiction.
- This reading of Deveaux is fully consistent with our
- subsequent decision in Osborn v. Bank of the United States,
- 9 Wheat. 738 (1824), which construed the -sue and be sued-
- clause of the second Bank's charter as conferring jurisdic-
- tion on federal circuit courts. The second charter provided
- that the Bank was -made able and capable, in law . . . to
- sue and be sued . . . in all state courts having competent
- jurisdiction, and in any circuit court of the United States,-
- 3 Stat. 269. By granting the Bank power to sue, not in all
- courts generally (as in Deveaux), but in particular federal
- courts, this suggested a grant of jurisdiction rather than
- merely of capacity to sue. And that suggestion was strongly
- confirmed by the fact that the Bank was empowered to sue
- in state courts -having competent jurisdiction,- but in
- federal circuit courts simpliciter. If the statute had jurisdic-
- tion in mind as to the one, it must as to the other as well.
- Our opinion in Osborn did not invoke the -magic words- ap-
- proach adopted by the Court today, but concluded that the
- charter language -admit[ted] of but one interpretation- and
- could not -be made plainer by explanation.- 9 Wheat., at
- 817.
- In distinguishing Deveaux, Osborn noted, and apparently
- misunderstood as the Court today does, that case's contrast
- between the -express grant of jurisdiction to the federal
- Courts- over suits against directors and the -general words-
- of the -sue and be sued- clause, -which [did] not mention
- those Courts.- Id., at 818. All it concluded from that,
- however, was that Deveaux established that -a general
- capacity in the Bank to sue, without mentioning the Courts
- of the Union, may not give a right to sue in those Courts.-
- Ibid. There does not logically follow from that the rule
- which the Court announces today: that any grant of a
- general capacity to sue with mention of federal courts will
- suffice to confer jurisdiction. The Court's reading of this
-
- language from Osborn as giving talismanic significance to
- any -mention- of federal courts is simply inconsistent with
- the fact that Osborn (like Deveaux) did not purport to confer
- on the words of the clause any meaning other than that
- suggested by their natural import.
- This reading of Deveaux and Osborn is confirmed by our
- later decision in Bankers Trust Co. v. Texas & Pacific R.
- Co., 241 U. S. 295 (1916). There we held it to be -plain-
- that a railroad charter provision stating that the corpora-
- tion -shall be able to sue and be sued . . . in all courts of
- law and equity within the United States,- 16 Stat. 574, did
- not confer jurisdiction on any court. 241 U. S., at 303. Had
- our earlier cases stood for the -magic words- rule adopted
- by the Court today, we could have reached that conclusion
- simply by noting that the clause at issue did not contain a
- specific reference to the federal courts. That is not,
- however, what we did. Indeed, the absence of such specific
- reference was not even mentioned in the opinion. See id.,
- at 303-305. Instead, as before, we sought to determine the
- sense of the provision by considering the ordinary meaning
- of its language in context. We concluded that -Congress
- would have expressed [a] purpose [to confer jurisdiction] in
- altogether different words- than these, 241 U. S., at 303,
- which had -the same generality and natural import as did
- those in the earlier bank act [in Deveaux],- id., at 304
- (emphasis added). Considered in their context of a listing
- of corporate powers, these words established that
- -Congress was not then concerned with the jurisdiction
- of courts but with the faculties and powers of the
- corporation which it was creating; and evidently all
- that was intended was to render this corporation
- capable of suing and being sued by its corporate name
- in any court of law or equity-Federal, state, or territo-
- rial-whose jurisdiction as otherwise competently
- defined was adequate to the occasion.- Id., at 303
- (emphasis added).
- That paraphrasing of the railroad charter, in terms that
- would spell jurisdiction under the key the Court adopts
- today, belies any notion that Bankers Trust was using the
- same code-book.
- The fourth and final case relied upon by the Court is
- D'Oench Duhme & Co. v. Federal Deposit Ins. Corp., 315
- U. S. 447 (1942). In that case, we granted certiorari to
- consider whether a federal court in a nondiversity action
- must apply the conflict-of-laws rules of the forum State.
- We ultimately did not address that question (because we
- concluded that the rule of decision was provided by federal,
- rather than state law, see id., at 456), but in the course of
- setting forth the question presented, we noted that, as all
- parties had conceded, the jurisdiction of the federal district
- court did not rest on diversity:
- -Respondent, a federal corporation, brings this suit
- under an Act of Congress authorizing it to sue or be
- sued `in any court of law or equity, State or Federal.'
- Sec. 12 B, Federal Reserve Act; 12 U. S. C. 264(j).2
- -2That subdivision of the Act further provides: `All suits of a civil
- nature at common law or in equity to which the Corporation shall be
- a party shall be deemed to arise under the laws of the United States
- . . . .'-
- Id., at 455.
- The Court relies heavily on this case, which it views as
- holding that a statute granting a corporation the power -to
- sue or be sued in any court of law or equity, State or
- Federal- establishes jurisdiction in federal district courts.
- Ante, at 6-7. Even if the quoted language did say that, it
- would be remarkable to attribute such great significance to
- a passing comment on a conceded point. But in my view it
- does not say that anyway, since the footnote must be read
- together with the text as explaining the single basis of
- jurisdiction (rather than, as the Court would have it,
- explaining two separate bases of jurisdiction in a case
- where even the explanation of one is obiter). The language
- quoted in the footnote is not, as the Court says, from
- -another part of the same statute,- ante, at 7, but is the
- continuation of the provision quoted in the text. See 12
- U. S. C. 264(j) (1940 ed.). And the complaint in D'Oench
- Duhme expressly predicated jurisdiction on the fact that the
- action was one -aris[ing] under the laws of the United
- States,- Tr. of Record in D'Oench Duhme & Co. v. Federal
- Deposit Ins. Corp., O. T. 1941, No. 206, p. 3. The language
- in this case is a thin reed upon which to rest abandonment
- of the rudimentary principle (followed even in other -sue
- and be sued- cases) that a statute should be given the
- meaning suggested by the -natural import- of its terms,
- Bankers Trust, supra, at 304.
- III
- Finally, the Court argues that a jurisdictional reading of
- the Red Cross Charter is required by the canon of construc-
- tion that an amendment to a statute ordinarily should not
- be read as having no effect. Ante, at 16. The original -sue
- and be sued- clause in the Red Cross charter did not
- contain the phrase -State or Federal,- and the Court argues
- that its reading-which gives decisive weight to that
- addition-is therefore strongly to be preferred. Ibid. I do
- not agree. Even if it were the case that my reading of the
- clause rendered this phrase superfluous, I would consider
- that a small price to pay for adhering to the competing (and
- more important) canon that statutory language should be
- construed in accordance with its ordinary meaning. And it
- would seem particularly appropriate to run the risk of
- surplusage here, since the amendment in question was one
- of a number of technical changes in a comprehensive
- revision. Ch. 50, 3, 61 Stat. 80, 81 (1947).
- But in any event, a natural-meaning construction of the
- -sue and be sued- clause does not render the 1947 amend-
- ment superfluous. The addition of the words -State or
- Federal- eliminates the possibility that the language -courts
- of law and equity within the jurisdiction of the United
- States- that was contained in the original charter, see
- ch. 23, 2, 33 Stat. 600 (emphasis added), might be read to
- limit the grant of capacity to sue to federal court. State
- courts are not within the -jurisdiction- of the United States
- unless -jurisdiction- is taken in the relatively rare sense of
- referring to territory rather than power. The addition of
- the words -State or Federal- removes this ambiguity.
- The Court rejects this argument on the ground that there
- is -no evidence of such an intent,- ante, at 16, n. 15. The
- best answer to that assertion is that it is irrelevant: To
- satisfy the canon the Court has invoked, it is enough that
- there be a reasonable construction of the old and amended
- statutes that would explain why the amendment is not
- superfluous. Another answer to the assertion is that it is
- wrong. As the Court notes elsewhere in its opinion, ante,
- at 14, n. 13, one of the only comments made by a member
- of Congress on this amendment was Senator George's
- statement, during the hearings, that the purpose of the
- provision was to confirm the Red Cross's capacity to sue in
- state court. See Hearings on S. 591 before the Senate
- Committee on Foreign Relations, 80th Cong., 1st Sess., 11
- (1947).
- * * *
- Because the Red Cross charter contains no language
- suggesting a grant of jurisdiction, I conclude that it grants
- only the capacity to -sue or be sued- in a state or federal
- court of appropriate jurisdiction. In light of this conclusion,
- I find it unnecessary to reach the constitutional question
- addressed in Part V of the Court's opinion. I would affirm
- the judgment of the Court of Appeals.
-