217 N.W. 930 | Minn. | 1928
Plaintiffs sue in their representative and derivative capacity as the holders of 140 shares of the Eagle Transportation Company, a Delaware corporation domesticated in this state. It is alleged that its sole business and all its property have been, since its incorporation, carried on and located in Minnesota and that all of its officers and directors, including defendant Glynn, its manager, are residents of this state. Its business consisted of the ownership and operation of certain motor bus lines. Plaintiffs claim to own a majority of its valid stock. After setting up the applicable laws of Delaware, it is charged: (1) That 320 shares of stock were issued illegally to defendant Glynn (the details not being important here); and (2) that by means of the voting power and control of the corporation thereby wrongfully put in Glynn the entire business and assets of the Eagle company have been illegally transferred to defendant Northland Transportation Company. In that connection a conspiracy is averred between Glynn, the Northland company and others not parties to the suit, to bring about and confirm the transfer of the assets of the Eagle company to the Northland company.
1. Joinder of causes of action is regulated by statute. G.S. 1923, § 9277, permits the joining of "two or more consistent causes of action, whether legal or equitable," if they "affect all parties to the action," do not require separate places of trial, and are included in one of the seven classes then enumerated. The first class consists of causes of action arising out of "the same transaction, or transactions connected with the same subject of action." This being an equitable action, it is correctly premised for defendants that the test whether several causes of action are improperly united is whether they "could have been included in a bill in equity under the old practice without making it multifarious." State ex rel. Brooks-Scanlon Lbr. Co. v. Knife Falls Boom Corp.
2. There being but one form of civil action, it is no objection to the joinder of causes of action that some are of a legal and others of an equitable nature. If there be but one general right claimed, it is enough that all the parties are affected. It is not required that they should be affected alike or under the same obligation or with the same liability. In the case of State ex rel. Brooks-Scanlon Lbr. Co. v. Knife Falls Boom Corp.
The rules of equity pleading had their origin, and the newer code provisions against multifariousness were formulated, at a time when the present complexity of corporate operation and financing was undreamed of. So they must not be applied in utter disregard of the evolution that has taken place since. Although diverse in results, the conventional schism in a corporation is normally unitary in origin and character, particularly as it affects adversely the complaining minority. And courts would be doing themselves and their constituencies a distinct disservice if they were to use two or more lawsuits for the settlement of such a controversy where one would do the work. "Whilst parties should not be subjected to expense and inconvenience, in litigating matters in which they have no interest, multiplicity of suits should be avoided, by uniting in one bill all who have an interest in the principal matter in controversy," although their interests are in origin different. Brown v. Guarantee Tr. S.D. Co.
It was not the intent of the pleader in the instant case to declare upon separate causes of action, for there is no attempt at the separate statement required by statute where there is an actual joinder. But that is not controlling, for we look at the substance of the pleading and not its form. The gist of the complaint is that enough stock has been unlawfully issued to Glynn to enable him, wrongfully and against the right and opposition of plaintiffs as the owners of a majority of the legal stock of the Eagle company, to transfer its business and property to the Northland company, which is charged with being a party to a conspiracy to that end. "All the defendants are concerned in the main purposes of the litigation, and it is not material that they are not all affected alike. The principal relief demanded is for a recovery of the property, * * *. One general right is demanded, and it is not fatal that defendants are in a measure separately or independently involved." Venner v. G.N. Ry. Co.
Plaintiffs are suing to redress an injury to their common property in the Eagle company. More accurately, the right of the Eagle company as against an unlawful stock issue and the wrongful disposition of all its property thereby accomplished is the one general right sought to be protected. In that view there is but one cause of action. But if perchance we are wrong in that, the result will not be different. For if the complaint be construed as asserting more than one, yet the separate causes of action arise out of transactions connected with the same subject of action. That is so, for the complaint avers a plain and direct connection, as of cause and effect, between the unlawful issue of stock to Glynn and the sale to the Northland company.
The ultimate relief sought being the protection of but one property right, it is immaterial that one sort of remedy is invoked against the Northland company and another against defendant *542
Glynn. It matters not that plaintiffs show a right against the Northland company for an annulment of the sale to it and against defendant Glynn for a cancelation of stock wrongfully issued. Varying forms of relief against different defendants, particularly where, as in this case, one is incidental to and possibly preliminary to the other, characterize equitable procedure, particularly in its operation on corporations and the rights of their stockholders. Compare Palmer v. Tyler,
In Oyster v. Iola Min. Co.
In the instant case the complaint makes it appear plainly that the illegal issue of stock to Glynn and the sale to the Northland company were "a series of transactions tending to one end," which was the unlawful disposition of the business and property of the *543
Eagle company. So also in Northwestern Land Assn. v. Grady,
Order reversed.