This is an appeal from an order sustaining a demurrer and dismissing with prejudice a complaint in equity.
Appellant is trustee in bankruptcy of MW Manufacturing Corporation, which wholly owns appellee Emporium Specialties Co., Inc. Appellees George Erskine, William Erskine, and William Meisel are directors and officers of Specialties. Appellee Emporium Trust is a bank. Appellee Robert Taylor, now deceased, was president of Emporium Trust and a director of Specialties.
Appellant filed his complaint on December 5, 1974. The complaint alleged that as directors, the individual appellees had breached their fiduciary duty to Specialties by approving “unreasonable and excessive” employment contracts with the three of them who were officers of Specialties, and further, by approving two loan agreements between Specialties and Emporium Trust. Appellees filed their preliminary objections, including a demurrer, to the complaint on December 20,1974. No further action occurred until August 8, 1977, when appellees moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to prosecute. After discovery and an evidentiary hearing, the lower court granted appellees’ motion to dismiss for failure to prosecute, and also sustained appellees’ demurrer. We find it necessary to consider only the order sustaining the demurrer.
Pa.R.Civ.P. 1506 provides:
*586 In an action to enforce a secondary right brought by one or more stockholders of a corporation . . . the complaint shall set forth .
(2) the efforts made to secure enforcement by the corporation or similar entity or the reason for not making any such efforts.
The basis of the demurrer, and of the lower court’s order, was that the complaint represented a secondary action brought by MW Manufacturing as the sole stockholder of Specialties, but that it did not set forth, either any effort by MW Manufacturing as sole stockholder to secure enforcement by Specialties of its rights against the individual appellees, or any reason for not making any such effort.
Appellant first argues that the lower court erred in characterizing his action as secondary, or derivative; he submits that his complaint alleged both direct and derivative causes of action, and that at least his direct cause of action survives appellees’ demurrer.
As a matter of form, the complaint does not plead separate causes of action in separate counts.
Hornsby v. Lohmeyer,
Appellant suggests that in
Porter v. Healy,
Appellant next argues that even assuming the derivative nature of his action, he met the requirement of Pa.R.Civ.P. 1506(2) by pleading demands on the directors.
Rule 1506(2) refers only to “efforts made to secure enforcement by the corporation;” it does not state what specific efforts must be pleaded, if a stockholder is to state a derivative cause of action. The cases, however, hold that to recover, a stockholder must demonstrate that “he left nothing undone which he might have done to prevail on the corporation to bring such action.”
Passmore v. Allentown & R. T. Co.,
Here, as sole stockholder of Specialties, appellant had the power to convene a special meeting of the corporation, and at that meeting, to elect new directors and officers who would halt the activities appellant complained of or seek restitution in the name of the corporation.
In his complaint appellant pleaded no reason for not availing himself of what the lower court aptly termed his “complete and sure remedy as a sole shareholder.” (Slip opinion at 5). On appeal he offers the excuse that stockholder action would have been “impractical,” because the removal of Specialties’ directors would have disrupted its operations and impeded efforts to sell it as a “going concern.” Appellant concedes that in a derivative action a
*588
stockholder must demonstrate as a condition precedent that seéking intracorporate action would have been “useless”,
Evans v. Diamond Alkali Co.,
Affirmed.
