Mostly, in order for diversity jurisdiction to apply,
complete diversity is required, where none of the
plaintiffs can be from the same state as any of the
defendants. A corporation is treated as a citizen of the state in which it is incorporated
and the state in which its principal place of business is located. A partnership or limited liability company is considered to have the citizenship of all of its constituent partners/members. Thus, an LLC or partnership with one member or partner sharing citizenship with an opposing party will destroy diversity of jurisdiction. Cities and towns (incorporated municipalities) are also treated as citizens of the states in which they are located, but states themselves are not considered citizens for the purpose of diversity. U.S. citizens are citizens of the state in which they are
domiciled, which is the last state in which they resided and had an intent to remain. A
national bank chartered under the
National Bank Act is treated as a citizen of the state in which it is "located". In 2006, the Supreme Court rejected an approach that would have interpreted the term "located" to mean that a national bank is a citizen of every state in which it maintains a branch. The Supreme Court concluded that "a national bank ... is a citizen of the State in which its main office, as set forth in its articles of association, is located". This remains an open question, with some lower courts holding that a national bank is a citizen of
only the state in which its main office is located, and others holding that a national bank is
also a citizen of the state in which it has its principal place of business. The diversity jurisdiction statute also allows federal courts to hear cases in which: • Citizens of a U.S. state are parties on one side of the case, with nonresident alien(s) as adverse parties; • Complete diversity exists as to the U.S. parties, and nonresident aliens are additional parties; • A foreign state (i.e., country) is the plaintiff, and the defendants are citizens of one or more U.S. states; or • Under the
Class Action Fairness Act of 2005, a
class action can usually be brought in a federal court when there is just
minimal diversity, such that
any plaintiff is a citizen of a different state from
any defendant. Class actions that do not meet the requirement of the Class Action Fairness Act must have complete diversity between class representatives (those named in the lawsuit) and the defendants. A U.S. citizen who is domiciled outside the U.S. is not considered to be a citizen of any U.S. state, and cannot be considered an alien. The presence of such a person as a party completely destroys diversity jurisdiction, except for a class action or mass action in which minimal diversity exists with respect to other parties in the case. If the case requires the presence of a party who is from the same state as an opposing party, or a party who is a U.S. citizen domiciled outside the country, the case must be dismissed, the absent party being deemed "indispensable". The determination of whether a party is indispensable is made by the court following the guidelines set forth in Rule 19 of the
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
Diversity is determined at the time that the action is filed Diversity is determined at the time that federal court jurisdiction is invoked (at time of filing, if directly filed in U.S. district court, or at time of removal, if removed from state court), and on the basis of the state citizenships of the parties at that time. A change in domicile by a natural person before or after that date is irrelevant. However, in
Caterpillar, Inc. v. Lewis (1996), the Supreme Court also held that federal jurisdiction predicated on diversity of citizenship can be sustained even if there did not exist complete diversity at the time of removal to federal court, so long as complete diversity exists at the time the district court enters judgment. The court in Caterpillar sustained diversity as an issue of "fairness" and economy, given a lower court's original mistake that allowed removal.
Corporate citizenship based on principal place of business Before 1958, a corporation for the purpose of diversity jurisdiction was deemed to be a citizen only of the state in which it had been formally incorporated. This was originally not a problem when a corporation could be chartered only by the enacting of a
private bill by the
state legislature (either with the consent of the
governor or over his veto). Thus, corporations were normally headquartered in the same state where they were incorporated, since their
promoters had to be quite well-known and well-connected in that state in order to obtain passage of a private bill. The traditional rule only became a problem when
general incorporation laws were invented around 1896, state legislatures began a
race to the bottom to attract out-of-state corporations, and corporations began to incorporate in one state (
usually Delaware) but set up their headquarters in another state. During the 20th century, the traditional rule came to be seen as extremely unfair in that corporate defendants actually headquartered in a state but incorporated elsewhere could remove diversity cases against them from state courts to federal courts, while individual and unincorporated defendants physically based in that same state (e.g., partnerships) could not. Therefore, during the 1950s, various proposals were introduced to broaden the citizenship of corporations in order to reduce their access to federal courts. In 1957, conservative
Southern Democrats, as part of
their larger agenda to protect
racial segregation and
states' rights by
greatly reducing the power of the federal judiciary, introduced a bill to limit diversity jurisdiction to natural citizens. Liberals in Congress recognized this was actually a form of retaliation by conservative Southerners against the
Warren Court, and prevailed in 1958 with the passage of a relatively narrow bill which deemed corporations to be citizens of both their states of incorporation and principal place of business. The original proposal for this term from the Committee on Jurisdiction and Venue of the
Judicial Conference of the United States recommended that the "principal place of business" should be the state, if any, from which a corporation derived fifty percent or more of its
gross income. ==Amount in controversy==