86 N.Y.S. 370 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
This action seeks to recover damages against the defendant for claimed fraudulent representations whereby the plaintiffs and their assignors, fifteen in number, were induced to purchase shares of stock in the Chicago Zinc Mining Company (hereafter called the
The defendant is a foreign corporation organized under the laws of the State of Missouri. Upon a former appeal to this court from an interlocutory judgment overruling the defendant’s demurrer to the complaint in the action, it was decided that the complaint stated a good cause of action and that damages based upon fraud might be recovered against the defendant if the averments of the complaint were sustained by the proof upon a trial. It was also determined that the causes-of action in favor of the assignor -which were' assigned to the plaintiff were so assignable, and that the action was properly brought in the name of the assignee as plaintiff.. (Bene
It is claimed, however, that the referee adopted an erroneous rule of damage, which calls for a reversal of this judgment. The referee in his conclusion of law stated the rule to be the difference between what would have been the value of the stock of the zinc company
Further claim is made that the assignment and the bringing of the action thereon were prohibited by sections 73 and 77 of the Code of Civil Procedure. That the defendant was guilty of fraudulent misconduct is too plain to admit of dispute. That the plaintiffs by such act -have been defrauded of their money is a necessary consequence, and it would be a very singular thing if the statute, aimed to prevent oppression and fraud, could be invoked as a defense and used as a shield to protect successful fraud. The law has never been so unreasonable. The defrauded parties made joint investigation through a committee appointed for that purpose. When restitution was demanded of the defendant it made absolute refusal, and thereupon, for .the purpose of redressing the wrong with the least possible complication, the several rights of action were consolidated in the plaintiffs, who constituted the committee, and the action brought in a forum where redress for the wrong could be had in a single action. We think this course was commendable, and that it was better to treat this question and dispose of it in one action rather than to multiply it by eighteen. No law interposes to prevent such a proceeding; on the contrary, it supports it.. (Moses v. McDivitt, 88 N. Y. 62; Van Dewater v. Gear, 21 App. Div. 201; Tilden v. Aitkin, 37 id. 28.)
, The judgment should, therefore, be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, Ingraham and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.