78 S.E. 66 | N.C. | 1913
The complaint alleges that the defendants were the officers of the Bank of Mitchell, and as such negotiated the merger of said bank with the Mitchell County Bank, and that as a part of the contract of merger and as a consideration and inducement thereto, they contracted with the latter bank that the defendants and plaintiffs, who were all stockholders in said Bank of Mitchell, should guarantee all notes, bonds, and instruments which were transferred by it to said Mitchell County Bank. That the plaintiffs, at the special request of the defendants, as stockholders entered into written agreement, together with one J. B. Boone, to guarantee all such paper and to be liable pro rata among themselves according to the number or value of the shares of stock held by them in the Bank of Mitchell. That the defendants, owning the greater amount of stock in said Bank of Mitchell, procured these plaintiffs to sign said agreement, upon an agreement with these plaintiffs that these defendants would join in said agreement and would be responsible pro rata according to the stock held by each of them, and would sign said agreement; but that, after obtaining the signatures of these plaintiffs to said agreement, as above alleged, they failed (211) and refused to sign the same, and fraudulently delivered them to said Mitchell County Bank without their signatures. It is further alleged that these defendants, being the officers and chief stockholders in the Bank of Mitchell, and in sole control of the same, took for their own advantage, or by negligence in the discharge of their duties, paper which was not sufficiently secured, and, knowing that fact, transferred and assigned said uncollectible paper to the Mitchell County Bank, which has obtained judgment against these plaintiffs by reason of inability to collect said paper, in the sum of $6,393.58, which these plaintiffs have paid off pro rata (except W. L. Young, who has not yet paid), and this action is brought to recover of these defendants, on above grounds, the sums due the plaintiffs by the defendants.
The defendants demur because of alleged misjoinder of parties and misjoinder of causes of action. This contention, if sustained, would logically require that the plaintiffs, eight in number, should each bring his action against each of the three defendants, making twenty-four actions. This view was ably presented, but we cannot assent thereto. It is contrary to the entire spirit of our modern procedure (Revisal, 469), which forbids multiplicity of actions, and, besides, it would be almost impossible to adjust the rights of the parties unless they were *173
all before the court in one action. In Pretzfelder v. Insurance Co.,
This case is stronger, for here there is only one contract or agreement, or at any rate only one transaction that is to be investigated. Besides, in this case there are eight plaintiffs and three defendants, (212) making a total of twenty-four trials of one subject-matter, which ought to be disposed of in one trial and with all the parties in interest, on both sides, represented. The principle laid down in Pretzfelderv. Insurance Co. has often been affirmed, among other cases, inCook v. Smith,
In Morton v. Telegraph Co.,
There was not only no misjoinder, but they are all necessary parties.
If there had been a misjoinder of causes of action, the action should *174
have been divided, and not dismissed. Weeks v. McPhail,
The demurrer should have been overruled. Should the court find that the demurrer was interposed in good faith, as it doubtless was, the defendants are entitled to answer over. Revisal, 506.
(213) Reversed.
Cited: Lee v. Thornton,