Originally published by David Coale.
Moss and Keating sued Princip, Martin, and the partnership to which the four of them belonged. The defendants removed the case, but after an adverse verdict, raised a problem with subject matter jurisdiction: Moss and Keating were diverse from Princip and Martin – but the partnership, as a citizen of every place the partners lived, was not. The district court dismissed the partnership from the case, finding it necessary but dispensable, and the Fifth Circuit affirmed:
“Although the plaintiffs raised claims for damages derivative of the partnership’s rights, the partnership’s presence in the suit was not necessary to protect the partnership or any of the parties from prejudice. The partnership was a party throughout the litigation, but its role was purely passive, reflecting the reality that its interests did not diverge from the interests represented by the four individual partners and that its presence played no distinct role in the outcome of the suit against the individuals.”
Moss v. Princip, No. 16-10605 (Jan. 16, 2019).
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from Texas Bar Today http://bit.ly/2CSUfOd
via Abogado Aly Website
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