134 N.Y.S. 635 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1912
The defendants appeal from an order of the Special Term in Nassau county that denied their motion for judgment against the plaintiffs on the pleadings.. The plaintiffs are stockholders of a domestic corporation known as the Interborough Rapid Transit Company, and as such hold some 300 shares of stock out of a total issue of 350,000 shares with a capitalization of $35,000,000. As such stockholders they seek to maintain this action for the benefit of themselves and such other stockholders as may join with them to recover from the defendants a very large sum of money aggregating several millions of dollars. The law governing generally actions of this character has been declared and applied so repeatedly in recent years as to require no present citation of authorities. The cause of action is not in the plaintiffs themselves but is derivative, that is to say, such cause of action is derived from the right of the corporation itself and can be asserted only when the corporation itself neglects to assert it to the detriment of its stockholders. Therefore, the complaint should set forth such facts as disclose
It is true that it is stated in many standard text books and in the great legal encyclopedias that the general rule applicable to this character of actions requires that the plaintiff stockholder shall plead and prove that he had made a demand upon the managing body of the corporation, and upon its refusal or neglect to comply with such demand that he had appealed to the general body of the stockholders, or that he should allege the existence of such facts which should render either the demand or appeal futile and, therefore, unnecessary.
It is likewise true that in the very great number of reported decisions of this State there is to be found no case in which such rule has been declared and applied as a principle of decision in this character of actions. The chief authority in this country upon which such rule is attempted to be based is the opinion of the United States Supreme Court in Hawes v. Oakland (104 U. S. 450). It is true that it is there declared to be essential to the maintenance of these derivative actions by stockholders that the plaintiff “must show, if he fails with the directors, that he has made an honest effort to obtain action by the stockholders as a body, in the matter of which he complains. And he must show a case, if this is not done, where it could not be done, or it was not reasonable to require it.” This opinion was formulated after a consideration of various English and American authorities which the court considered as supporting its conclusions. It is a cardinal rule in the interpretation of judicial opinions that, in order to measure the scope of the decision, recourse must be had to the precise controversy then before the court. In that case the action was not brought to recover on behalf of the corporation and its stockholders for any alleged fraudulent spoliation of the corporation’s assets. As the court declared as to the complaint then at bar: “ There is no allegation of fraud or of acts ultra vires, or of destruction of property, or of irremediable injury of any kind.” .That action was brought by a dissatisfied stockholder simply to prevent by injunction the continuance by the corporation of a course of business which was alleged to be against the true
Wow in Hawes v. Oakland the acts complained of were not acts of fraudulent spoliation of the corporate assets, but were alleged to be a settled policy of the corporation, through its managing body, in reference to the interpretation of a contract between the corporation itself and a municipal corporation,
That mere errors of judgment in business management, free from fraud, collusion or illegality, will not support such an action, is likewise the settled rule in this State.. (Leslie v. Lorillard, 110 N. Y. 519.)
It may be further pointed out that Hawes v. Oakland has not been followed in this State in some other points of decision, viz., as to the rights of shareholders who have acquired their stock subsequently to the corporate acts complained of, but that, on the contrary, a rule has been declared opposite to that asserted in that case. (Pollitz v. Gould, 202 N. Y. 11.) Did it assert a rule for which the appellants contend, and I have pointed out it did not so intend, then there is no compelling reason why such rule should be adopted in this State, for it is not based upon substantial reason and it could not fail to be oppressive and practically destructive of justice in many instances. Where, as in this case, there are 350,000 shares of stock and doubtless thousands of stockholders who hold large or small blocks of .stock, it would be most costly and time-consuming to endeavor to bring home to them for consideration the facts which should spur them to action on their part as stockholders. If they refused to approve the course of the plaintiffs in their demand on the directors, then such refusal would not alter the plaintiffs’ right to a remedy on behalf of
We are of opinion, therefore, that the complaint states a good cause of action in the plaintiffs, irrespective of any allegations as to the attitude; of the majority of the shareholders.
The order should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
Jenks, P. J.,, Hirschberg, Thomas and Woodward, JJ., concurred.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.