284 F. 592 | W.D. Wash. | 1921
The defendant has filed a demurrer, on all statutory grounds, to the fifth amended complaint. The complaint,, so far as material here, in the first count alleges the incorporation of the Pacific Cold Storage Company; ceasing of business of said corporation on May 1, 1918; the adoption of a resolution at a regular
Count 2 alleges the same fact with relation to incorporation and dissolution and relation of stockholder, and states that the defendant while acting as such trustee for the shareholders of said company, after said company had ceased to do business and its dissolution, unlawfully appropriated to his own use from the “capital return” of said corporation various sums of money, of which sums the plaintiff' Denman, and his principals are the owners of $4,851.00, together with interest. It is contended by the defendant that there is a defect of parties plaintiff and defendant, and a misjoinder of causes of action, and that the complaint does not state a cause of action; that if a misappropriation was made the corporation is the proper party plaintiff, and that the indebtedness, if any, is due to the corporation and not to the stockholders; that the corporation should be defendant if it is not plaintiff, and that the other trustees should be parties defendant; that the plaintiff, has not capacity to sue.
An action must be commenced in the name of the real party in interest. Section 179, R. & B. Wash. Code. Miller, a stockholder, had a right to institute an action for transgression of his rights, and thereafter had a right to transfer his interest by reason of being a stockholder, and the beneficial interest accruing thereby, and the purchaser be substituted and prosecute the action to final judgment. Box v. Kelso, 5 Wash. 360, 31 Pac. 973; Baker v. Northwest Bldg. & Inv. Co., 33 Wash. 677, 74 Pac. 825; Trumbull v. Jefferson County, 60 Wash. 479, 111 Pac. 569, 140 Am. St. Rep. 943; Bell v. Jovita Heights Co., 71 Wash. 7, 127 Pac. 289. This action, not being one arising out of a personal tort, may be assigned. Ingersoll v. Gourley, 72 Wash. 462, 130 Pac. 743; State ex rel. Baeder v. Blake, 107 Wash. 294, 181 Pac. 685. And the chose in action might be assigned without first bringing an action.
“Tbe plaintiff may unite several causes of action in the same complaint, * * * but tbe causes of action so united must affect all tbe parties to tbe action, and not require different places of trial, and must be separately stated.”
The plaintiff Frederick L. Denman complains because of wrongs to him personally, and as assignee of the Miller interest in this action,- and complains as agent and attorney in fact for A. H. Denman, and as agent and attorney in fact for Thomas Larson, and as agent and attorney in fact for F. C. Hewson, five different parties, and five individual rights or interests to which Denman has no claim.
In Bell v. Jovita Heights Co., 71 Wash. 7, 127 Pac. 289, the choses in action were all assigned to the plaintiff. Denman and Miller and other stockholders, by reason of being stockholders, have no joint or common interest; their interest is separate, the wrong is distinct, and each must bring his separate action, or assign the chose in action to one who may bring one action by separately stating each.
This being an action at law for money had and received by the defendant, the parties may not unite their several choses in action in one
The demurrer is sustained.