Court Opinion

ID: 9420961
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-02 22:56:28.662344+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:22:27.889834
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Black,
with whom Mr. Justice Jackson joins, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
Polizzi lives in Coral Gables, Florida. He has been in the construction business there for some years. Cowles Magazines, Inc., an Iowa corporation, publishes Look, a magazine circulating nationally. May 23, 1950, Look carried an article branding Polizzi as one of the ringleaders of a national gang of murderous, blackmailing prostitute-pandering criminals. Nearly 50,000 copies covered Florida. Many were displayed and distributed in Polizzi’s home town. He at once wrote the publisher that the charges against him were false, demanding both retraction and apology. It did nothing. Polizzi then *668brought this libel suit in the state circuit court of his home county. Appearing “specially” in the local United States District Court, the Cowles corporation obtained an order for removal of the case from state to federal court. It asked the District Court to dismiss the case without giving Polizzi a chance to have it tried on the merits. The reasons urged were that Cowles was an Iowa corporation, was not and had not been “doing business” in Florida and consequently could not be sued in the Florida court unless it consented to be sued there. The effect of this contention was that while Polizzi could bring his libel suit in a federal district court in the corporation’s home state of Iowa, no such suit could be maintained in a federal court in the state where Polizzi lived and where the criminal charges were likely to do him the most harm. Agreeing with Cowles, the District Court dismissed Polizzi’s suit without giving him a chance to try the case on its merits. The Court of Appeals affirmed. For many reasons I think the dismissal was wrong and therefore concur in this Court’s reversal of that dismissal. From this point on, however, I part company with the Court.
This Court reverses solely because both the District Court and the Court of Appeals in dismissing referred to and relied on the “doing business” provisions of 28 U. S. C. § 1391 (c), a venue statute not applicable to removal cases like this but to suits originally filed against corporations in United States District Courts. For this reason, not suggested by Cowles or Polizzi, the Court refuses to pass on the “doing business” contention which Cowles did make and which both courts below decided.1 *669This means the case goes back for reconsideration of the same old “doing business” question that has been hanging fire for three years. It took three years for Polizzi to get here and have the Court by-pass the “doing business” question this time. If he is lucky enough to get that question back here and decided for him in three more years, he may then look forward to the possibility of having a jury try his case sometime along about 1957.
I think this Court should here and now reject Cowles’ dilatory contentions. There may have been some reason for snarling up lawsuits against foreign corporations a hundred years ago because of newly expanding activities of migratory businesses. But there is no such excuse now. A large part of the business in each and every state is done today by corporations created under the laws of other states. To adjust the practical administration of law to this situation the Court in recent years has refused *670to be bound by old rigid concepts2 about “doing business.” Whether'cases are to be tried in one locality or another is now to be tested by basic principles of fairness,3 unless, as seems possible, this case represents a throwback to what I consider less enlightened practices.
Under any of the concepts, old or new, I think Cowles was doing business in Florida. It had a regular agent there, paid by the month, whose sole job was to carry on activities for Cowles in order to increase Look’s circulation in that state. On this agent, who managed for the publishing corporation all the business it carried on in Florida, process was served. These facts, together with others which I need not labor, show the frivolous nature of the “doing business” question. They show also the lack of merit in the question the Court tells the district judge to pass on: Should the 1950 notice by service on the corporation’s regular Florida representative be held sufficient to require it to defend, or should the District Court now after three years’ litigation quash that service and require that new notice of the suit the corporation is here defending be served on some other company employee? I venture to suggest that if this question were raised anywhere except in a court, it would be dismissed as ludicrous.
But aside from what has been said, there is a new statute which gives an anachronistic flavor, a sort of irrelevance to all of Cowles’ dilatory motions and arguments. I refer to 28 U. S. C. § 1404 (a), which has codified the doctrine of jorum non conveniens. That statute *671gives district judges broad powers to transfer civil actions from one district to another “in the interest of justice.” 4 And the heart of Cowles’ contention is that it would be unfair, inconvenient and unjust to subject it to a suit in the District Court of Florida. But the Iowa corporation has not denied at all that it could be subjected to this libel suit in the federal district court in Iowa or in some other district where the corporation is “doing business.” Therefore, the question Cowles has been raising from the beginning is: In what federal district court does the fair administration of justice require that this lawsuit be tried? This poses precisely the problem which the rule of forum non conveniens is designed to meet and solve. In light of that rule I think we should reject Cowles’ old dilatory motions and direct the District Court in Florida to try this case at once, unless Cowles can show that court that it would be in the interest of justice to try the case in another district. But the Court refuses to discard old outdated concepts for the new rule of convenience and fairness. Instead Polizzi is sent back to the District Court not to try his case on the merits but to listen a few more years to a debate over whether Cowles has had adequate notice of this suit and whether the corporation is “doing business” in Florida. In the meantime, Polizzi stands convicted in the eyes of his community on the basis of an unproved story. At least since Magna Charta some *672people have thought that to delay justice may be to deny justice. I would order that Polizzi be given the trial he seeks.5

 The record makes clear that the “doing business” question was the ground on which Cowles made the motion to dismiss, the ground on which the District Court dismissed the lawsuit, the ground on which the Court of Appeals affirmed, and a ground on which Cowles asked us to affirm the dismissal. The corporation’s motion to dismiss *669asserted that “The defendant is a corporation organized under the laws of Iowa and was not doing or carrying on business in Florida at the time of such purported or attempted service and is not doing and has never done business within the State of Florida so as to be present in Florida . . . Evidence of a number of witnesses was heard on this “doing business” question. The District Court dismissed by finding “as a matter of fact that defendant was not, at the time of the service of the summons, doing business in this district . . and then related the dismissal to 28 U. S. C. § 1391 (c). The Court of Appeals affirmed on the same ground, saying that the company could not “be said to be doing business in the state so as to be subject to suit there.” It reached this conclusion because it thought the company’s activities were not within “the meaning of doing business” as “discussed in the authorities” to which it referred, namely, International Shoe Company v. Washington, 326 U. S. 310, and a number of other cases of this Court cited in footnote 2, 197 F. 2d 74, 76. And in this Court the corporation argued specifically that “. . . the conclusion is inevitable that the courts below in holding that respondent was not transacting business in the State of Florida fairly followed the principles laid down in the International Shoe Co. case.”

 Cf. von Jhering, In the Heaven of Legal Concepts, translated in Cohen and Cohen, Readings in Jurisprudence and Legal Philosophy, 678-689.

 See on this point International Shoe Co. v. Washington, 326 U. S. 310; Travelers Health Assn. v. Virginia, 339 U. S. 643; United States v. Scophony Corp. of America, 333 U. S. 795.

 28 U. S. C. § 1404 (a) provides:
“For the convenience of parties and witnesses, in the interest of justice, a district court may transfer any civil action to any other district or division where it might have been brought.”
A companion statute, 28 U. S. C. § 1406 (a), provides:
“The district court of a district in which is filed a case laying venue in the wrong division or district shall dismiss, or if it be in the interest of justice, transfer such case to any district or division in which it could have been brought.”

 28 U. S. C. § 2106 provides that this Court in reversing judgments may direct the District Court to enter such orders as are “just under the circumstances.”