39 Cal. 320 | Cal. | 1870
delivered the opinion of the Court :
The demurrer to the complaint was properly sustained. .The general rule is, that an action against trustees of a corporation for a misappropriation of its funds, must be brought in the name of the corporation. The funds which are misapplied are the property of the corporation■—-as such, and the action to recover them, must be brought in its name, unless in exceptional cases. One of the exceptions is, when a corporation, on a proper demand from a stockholder, refuses to institute the action. So long as the corporation is willing to perform its duty towards its stockholders, by instituting and conducting in good faith the necessary legal proceedings to recover moneys misapplied by the trustees, the stockholders have no cause to complain ; but if the corporation, after a proper demand, refuses to institute the action, the stockholders may sue in their own names. If it were otherwise, there would be a failure of justice, and a great many of the stockholders might go without redress. It is therefore necessary, in an action by a stockholder in such cases, to aver a demand and refusal, without which the action will not be sustained. The counsel for the plaintiff admit this to be the general rule, but claims that a demand and refusal are necessary, and would be wholly nugatory, when the trustees, who misapplied the funds, yet remain in
If it be conceded that a demand and refusal are necessary, when the trustees who committed the wrong yet compose the whole or a majority of the Board (on which point we express no opinion), the complaint ought to have averred that fact explicitly, so that issue could have been taken upon it. Instead of this the averment is, that the present Board is composed “nearly, if not entirely,” of the same persons who committed the wrong complained of. This is bad pleading, and lacks the precision which is requisite in an allegation of fact. The term “nearly” is purely relative, and does not define with accuracy how many of the defendants are members of the present Board of Directors, and is not equivalent to an averment, that the defendants compose even a majority of the present Board. The term “nearly, ” in the connection in which it is used in this complaint, presents no issuable fact, and there is no averment in direct terms, that the defendants compose the whole, or even a majority, of the present Board,
Judgment affirmed.