65 So. 275 | Miss. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellant, complainant in the court below, is a stockholder in the Planters’ Compress & Bonded Warehouse Company; and appellees, defendants in the court below, are the corporation, its directors, and the Bank of West Point. The bill alleged that during the year 1905 the directors of the Compress Company, without the knowledge or consent of complainant, abandoned the compress and warehouse business and invested the capital stock of the company in the erection of an ice and cold storage
In so far as the Bank of West Point is concerned, no cause of action is stated by this bill. No fraud is charged against the bank, and, in the absence thereof, any knowl-edg’e it may have had of what disposition the company or its directors intended to make of the money borrowed from it is immaterial.
The grounds upon which it is sought to sustain the demurrer, in so far as the directors of the Compress Company are concerned, are:
“It does not appear from said bill that suit would not have been instituted in the name of the corporation, had proper application been made to the stockholders.
“It does not appear from said bill that complainant ever sought to have alleged wrongs redressed by the corporation or board of directors.”
• It is true that ordinarily, before a stockholder can maintain a suit of this character, he must exhaust all reasonable means within his reach to obtain redress within the corporation itself; and should the directors, when requested, decline to institute the suit, an appeal, if practicable, should be made to the stockholders themselves to take such action as they may deem proper and have the power to do. Prom the allegations of this bill,
Reversed and remanded.