142 N.Y.S. 502 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1913
(1) In his capacity as liquidator, plaintiff does not sue by virtue of his office, but because it was in such capacity that the certificate of stock of the Valveless Company was transferred to him, and he is thus alleged to have legal title thereto.. For this reason the objection to his capacity to sue as liquidator is bad.
(2) No ground is shown for making plaintiff a party in .his capacity as assignee of Travers. It appears from the complaint that the only interest Travers had in the matter in controversy
(3) Does the complaint state any cause of action? The allegation is “ That plaintiff as such liquidator has recovered from said Travers, and now holds by assignment" from said Travers, a certificate for 2,450 shares in the capital stock of the Valveless Inner Tube Company.”
Concededly, such an action as the present cannot be maintained by one not a stockholder. Whether he must be a stockholder of record is a mooted question. It was so held in Heath v. Erie Ry. Co. (8 Blatchf. 347) and Brown v. Duluth, M & N. R. Co. (53 Fed. Rep. 889). To the contrary is Ervin v. Oregon Railway & Nav. Co. (62 How. Pr. 490), and strongly supporting this may be cited the words of Rapallo, J., in McNeil v. Tenth Nat. Bank (46 N. Y. 325, 331), where it was said: “ It has also been settled, by repeated adjudications, that, as between the parties, the delivery of the certificate, with assignment and power endorsed, passes the entire title, legal
The demurrer being good upon the grounds above mentioned, it is not necessary for us to determine whether the complaint shows that the plaintiff suffered damage from the acts complained of.
The order should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements to each respondent, with leave to the plaintiff to
Soott and Dowling, JJ., concurred; Clarke, J., concurred in result.
I concur with Mr. Justice Hotchkiss that there is no ground for making the plaintiff a party in his capacity as “assignee of Travers,” hut I do not think on this complaint that this is an objection to the plaintiff’s maintaining a cause of action if he' alleged one in any other capacity. In the complaint he described himself as liquidator of a Canada bank and also as assignee of Travers. If he owned this stock in any capacity he was entitled to maintain such an action as the ownership of the stock conferred upon him. Whether he held it as assignee of Travers or as liquidator or in any other capacity it added nothing to his cause of action to describe the capacity in which he owned the stock, and I think the court would have had the power on the trial to strike out the words “assignee of Travers” as mere surplusage. The complaint did not attempt to set up two causes of action, one based upon the plaintiff’s ownership of the stock as liquidator and one as the assignee of Travers. What the complaint sought was to enforce a right which vested in him as the owner of the stock, and I agree with Mr. Justice Hotchkiss that it was at least necessary for him to allege such facts as' established such ownership as-would entitle the plaintiff to a judgment requiring the defendant to transfer to him the stock the title to which he claimed. But whether his source of title was through Travers or through the hank was quite immaterial, and, therefore, his alleging that he sued as liquidator and as assignee of Travers was not a ground of demurrer either as an improper joinder of causes of action or as a failure to allege facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. I quite agree with Mr. Justice Hotchkiss that there is no fact alleged in this complaint which would show that Travers had any cause of action to enforce the, claim alleged in this complaint, and that, therefore, no cause of action vested in the plaintiff by virtue of the assignment from Travers; but, as plaintiff does not seek to enforce
Upon the other grounds stated I concur in the affirmance of . the orders appealed from.
Orders affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, with leave to plaintiff to amend on payment of costs.