37 N.J. Eq. 356 | New York Court of Chancery | 1883
The bill is filed by Warren Ackerman, a creditor and stockholder of the Mechanics National Bank of Newark, against the persons who were, at the time of the failure of that bank, its directors. The receiver is also a defendant. The suit is brought for the benefit of the complainant and all other creditors and stockholders of the corporation who may come in and contribute to the expenses of the litigation. The bill alleges that the bank is, and for more than fifteen years before the filing of the bill was, a corporation under the national banking act; that seven of the defendant directors, Joseph A. Halsey, Stephen H. Condict, George A. Halsey, Lewis C. Grover, Oscar L. Baldwin, William Clark and Edward H. Wright, were duly elected to their offices, first, in 1873, another, Joseph S. Halsey, in 1878, and the other two, Henry C. Howell and Joseph Hensler, in 1879, and that each of the ten duly accepted the office, and immediately after his election took and filed the oath prescribed by the act that he would, so far as the duty devolved on him, diligently and.honestly administer the affairs of the bank &c.; that from year to year, from the time of their first election down to the time of the failure of the bank, they were duly and regularly elected directors and took and filed that oath; that they are still directors of the bank, and are the sole ■surviving ones; that they were its directors and managers while its money and funds were being abstracted and misapplied by the cashier, as stated in the bill; that the bank failed in October, 1881; that its capital stock was $500,000, divided into ten thousand shares of $50 each; that the complainant before 1873 became, and still is, the owner of one hundred and fifty-five shares of stock, and continued to be so by reason of his reliance on the fact that the defendant directors were such, and ■on their reports published from time to time from the organization of the bank, of the financial condition of the institution; that these reports, which were signed by them or by some of
Under these demurrers are presented the questions whether this court has jurisdiction of the case; whether, if it has, the allegations of the bill (which, on demurrer, are to be taken as true) are sufficient to entitle the complainant to the relief which he seeks; and whether, as to three of the defendants, Messrs. Joseph S. Halsey, Howell and Hensler, there is not a misjoinder, seeing that the period of their directorship is shorter by several years than that of the others, and the bill seeks relief against all, without discrimination or distinction.
That the subject of this litigation is within the jurisdiction of this court, will admit of no question. The suit is brought by a creditor and stockholder of the bank against the directors,, to obtain redress for the waste of the entire capital and surplus of the bank, whereby he has been subjected to loss as a creditor of the bank, and has, as a stockholder, lost not only his stock, but also a sum of money equal to its par value. The ground of the claim is that the directors utterly neglected to discharge any of the duties of their office. For such a wrong there is a remedy in equity. For any willful breach of their trust or misapplication of the corporate funds, or for any gross neglect of, or inattention to, their official duties, directors are
As a general rule, the directors of a corporation are only required, in the management of its affairs, to keep within the limits of its powers, and to exercise good faith and honesty. They only undertake, by virtue of their assumption of the duties incumbent on them, to perform those duties according to the best of their judgment and with reasonable diligence, and a mere error of judgment will not subject them to personal liability for its consequences. And unless there.has been some violation of the charter or the constating instruments of the company, or unless there is shown to be a want of good faith, or a willful abuse of discretion, or negligence, there will be no personal liability
It is urged that the bill, while it states that.false reports of the solvency and flourishing condition of the bank were made from the time of its organization, also states that the bank was insolvent during all that time; and it is urged that if it be true that the bank was in fact insolvent from its organization, no harm was done to the complainant by the false reports. But the statement of the bill is not that the bank was insolvent from the beginning, but for several years before its failure. The injury done by false reports to the creditors and stockholders is, that persons are led to give the bank credit, perhaps, to their ultimate loss, and that of the stockholders. The false reports work injury to the stockholders in another way also. They not only
It remains to consider the objection made by Messrs. Joseph S. Halsey, Howell and Hensler, that the bill charges misconduct which occurred before they were members of the board, and hence they claim that it is as to them multifarious. But in a bill of this peculiar character, where the management of the affairs of a corporation, through a series of years, is the subject of litigation, and it appears on the face of the bill when the administration of each director began, the objection in question is not possessed of much weight. Each director will answer only for the period of his administration, and in making its decree the court will of course discriminate between those who are culpable and those who are not. Citizens B. & L. Assoc. v. Coriell, ubi supra. In Charitable Corp. v. Sutton, 2 Atk. 400, a similar objection was made and considered. The suit was brought to be relieved against the defendants, fifty in number, who were either committeemen or in other offices of the corporation, and to obtain satisfaction for a breach of trust, fraud and mismanagement. It was there urged that the court could make no decree against the defendants which would be just, for it was said that every man’s attendance or omission of his duty was his own default, and that each particular person must bear such a proportion as would be suitable to the loss arising from his particular neglect, which made it (it was argued) a case out of the power of the court. The objection was not sustained. Lord Hardwicke dismissed the bill as to some of the defendants. As to others, he decreed that they were liable in the first place, and their associates secondarily.
Another objection is made that this court cannot assess dam