Lead Opinion
Even if the provisions of the interlocutory judgment be ambiguous, when construed in the light of the findings and the character of the action, they justify the judgment appealed from. The complaint demanded that the defendants be required to account and “ jointly and severally to pay to the plaintiff company the aggregate amount of all profits received by them, or either of them * * * and such damages as the plaintiff company may have sustained. * * It is of no consequence that the complaint charged conspiracy to cheat and defraud and that there is no finding in terms of" a conspiracy. The facts as found establish a breach of fiduciary duty, participated in by all of the defendants so as to make them jointly and severally liable.
On the "19th of May, 1902, the defendant Kelly, who was the
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Ingraham, P. J., and Clarke, J., concurred; LAUGHLiNand Scott, JJ., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
This appeal from the final judgment brings up nothing for review by this court, except such questions as are involved in the proceedings since an affirmance of the interlocutory judgment, and the only question which seems to call for consideration is as to the amounts for which plaintiff ¡should have judgment against the defendants Bouker.
The action is brought in equity to compel the defendants to account for certain secret profits realized by: them from a contract into which the plaintiff was induced to ¡enter.
The decision upon which the interlocutory ¡decree was based finds that the defendant Kelly was a director and vice-president, and the defendants Bouker were directors of the plaintiff; that Kelly individually held a contract with - a California Corporation under which he was entitled to purchase asphalt at a
It appears from the report of the referee appointed by the interlocutory decree that the defendant Kelly realized as profits from the contract with plaintiff the sum of $23,161.56, of which he paid to the defendants Andrew A. Bouker and De Witt C. Bouker, Jr., each, the sum of $5,270.43. The final decree awards judgment against all three defendants for the whole profit realized by Kelly, and the question raised by the appeal of the defendants Bouker is whether they should be mulcted for anything more than the several amounts which they received.
It is insisted by the respondent that when an interlocutory judgment determines and directs the final judgment to which a party is entitled; the final judgment must follow the interlocutory judgment. This is undoubtedly the rule, when the interlocutory decree is clear and unambiguous. (Reilly v.
“Further ordered and adjudged that on the coming in of said referee’s report, and the confirmation óf the same, the plaintiff recover from the defendants, and each of them, the sum that may be found due to it upon such accounting, and that a final judgment be thereupon entered accordingly in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants for the sum or sums so found due, together with the costs and disbursements to be taxed and entered in said final judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against said defendants, and that the plaintiff have execution therefor.”
If the interlocutory judgment be ambiguous as to the form of final judgment to be entered, it is our duty to construe it in the light of the decision made by the court and the character of the litigation. (Spier v. Hyde, 47 Misc. Rep. 443.) There is a well-recognized distinction between an action in equity against a director of a corporation for an accounting with respect to property of a corporation that has actually come into its hands and an action at law for damages sustained by the corporation in consequence of his willful or negligent acts falling within the terms misfeasance or non-feasance. (People v. Equitable Life Assurance Society, 124 App. Div. 714, 733.) The present action is clearly of the first ■ class. It is true that the complaint charges all the defendants with having conspired for the purpose of cheating and defrauding plaintiff by
The judgment appealed from should, therefore, be modified accordingly, and as modified affirmed, without costs in this court to either party.
Laughlin, J., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.