263 Mass. 321 | Mass. | 1928
This is a bill in equity under G. L. c. 197, § 10, to recover against the defendants, in their capacity as executors under the will of William M. Wood.
The bill alleges that the American Woolen Company, the plaintiff’s predecessor, was chartered in 1899 under the laws of the State of New Jersey; that it acquired a number of textile rnills located in different eastern States; that its shareholders desired to operate under a Massachusetts charter and in 1916 the plaintiff was organized under the laws of this
The defendants filed an answer which, in substance, contains a demurrer to the bill. The fraud set forth was not committed upon the plaintiff corporation, but is alleged to have been perpetrated upon the New Jersey corporation several years before the present American Woolen Company was chartered. The claim for damages for fraud was not assignable and vested no rights in the plaintiff which the New Jersey corporation might have against the defendants. A mere right to litigate a fraud perpetrated upon a person or corporation is not assignable either in law or equity. To permit an assignee to litigate a fraud practised upon his assignor would be contrary to public policy. United Zinc Co. v. Harwood, 216 Mass. 474, 479. Brocklehurst & Potter Co. v. Marsch, 225 Mass. 3, 11. Mulready v. Pheeny, 252 Mass. 379, 382. Titcomb v. Bay State Grocery Co. 254 Mass. 599, 601.
The case at bar cannot be distinguished in principle from United Zinc Co. v. Harwood, supra. The contention of the plaintiff, that, as it is the owner and holder of all the stock of the New Jersey corporation and has assumed and discharged all debts of that corporation, it is subrogated to the rights of that corporation in the claim, cannot be sustained. These facts do not lead to a different result from that reached in the case above referred to. If the corporation has no power in law or equity to assign a claim for fraud by express
The plaintiff and the original corporation each filed a motion that the latter be permitted to intervene as party plaintiff. The motions were denied by a single justice of this court and decrees were entered accordingly. As the original corporation is not a party to the suit, it had no right of appeal. Whatever right it may have to maintain a suit for redress of an alleged fraud can be brought in its own name and behalf. If the amendments had been allowed, the result would be, not the substitution of the original corporation for the present plaintiff, but the joining of the original corporation with the plaintiff which, for reasons already stated, has no standing to maintain the bill. Whether the motions to amend should have been allowed rested in the discretion of the single justice. There is nothing to show that such discretion was not rightly exercised and, as the plaintiff cannot maintain the bill for the reasons stated, it was properly dismissed.
The plaintiff afterwards presented to the full court a motion to amend the bill which recited, in substance, that the American Woolen Company of New Jersey was dissolved in 1916, under the laws of that State; that under those laws the existence of the corporation continues for the purpose of prosecuting and defending suits against it, and of enabling it to settle and close its affairs, dispose of its property, and divide its capital, but not for the purpose of continuing its business; that upon said dissolution the directors of the corporation and the survivors thereof are constituted trustees with power to settle its affairs. The motion further recites that, under the laws of New Jersey as interpreted by the courts of the United States, a stockholder of a dissolved corporation may, in his own right, maintain a suit against a former director, or his personal representatives in case of
The bill as previously amended alleges that after the organization of the plaintiff it has been and now is the owner of substantially all the outstanding stock of the American Woolen Company (of New Jersey); that as a part of the consideration for the transfer the plaintiff assumed all the debts of the New Jersey corporation and has since discharged them; and that the plaintiff has been by reason of the facts stated subrogated ■ to all the rights of the New Jersey company against the defendants’ testate concerning the matters set forth in the bill as thus amended. The present motion to amend in this particular is therefore unnecessary. The allegations as to the law of New Jersey which recite that a stockholder may maintain the bill are immaterial, as the question whether our courts will entertain such a bill without joining the corporation is governed by the laws of this Commonwealth. The amendment does not purport to join the New Jersey corporation or its trustees as parties'or recite any reason why a stockholder instead of the corporation should bring the suit; on the allegations of the bill it was the New Jersey corporation alone that was defrauded. There is nothing to indicate that the rights of the New Jersey corporation and its stockholders can be litigated only in the present proceeding. In all the circumstances there appears no reason requiring the exercise of the power of amendment conferred upon the full court. It was stated at the argument
Let the entries be
Motion to amend bill presented to the full court denied.
Interlocutory decrees and final decree affirmed.