This bill in equity by a holder of ten shares of the capital stock of the defendant Boston Herald-Traveler Corporation seeks (1) an order that the corporation and its transfer agent, the defendant Old Colony Trust Company, exhibit to him for inspection the stock and transfer books of the corporation; and (2) damages. Gr. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 155, § 22. The corporation filed a motion for jury issues, which was denied after hearing, and the. corporation excepted. After a later hearing on the merits, a final decree was entered by which the books were ordered to be exhibited and the claim for damages was denied. The plaintiff and the defendants appealed. The judge made a report of the material facts found by him. The evidence is reported.
Section 22, so far as material, provides: ‘ 1 The stock and transfer books of every corporation, which shall contain a complete list of all stockholders, their residences and the amount of stock held by each, shall be kept at an office of the corporation in the commonwealth for the inspection of its *276 stockholders. ... If any officer or agent of a corporation having charge of such . . . books or records refuses or neglects to exhibit them or to submit them to examination as aforesaid, he or the corporation shall be liable to any stockholder for all actual damages sustained by reason of such refusal or neglect, and the supreme judicial or superior court shall have jurisdiction in equity, upon petition of a stockholder, to order any or all of said . . . books or records to be exhibited to him ... at such a place and time as may be designated in the order, but in an action for damages or a proceeding in equity under this section for neglect or refusal to exhibit for inspection the stock and transfer books, it shall be a defence that the actual purpose and reason for the inspection sought are to secure a list of stockholders for the purpose of selling said list or copies thereof or of using the same for a purpose other than in the interest of the applicant, as a stockholder, relative to the affairs of the corporation.”
1. The jury issues sought are: “ (1) Whether petitioner [plaintiff] is actually the beneficial owner of the Boston Herald-Traveler stock recorded in his name. (2) Whether petitioner [plaintiff] seeks inspection of the stock and transfer books of Boston Herald-Traveler Corporation to secure a list of stockholders in order to use the same for a purpose other than in the interest of the petitioner [plaintiff], as a stockholder, relative to the affairs of said corporation.”
There was no error in the denial of the motion. The basis of the contention of the corporation that it is entitled as of right to have the issues framed is art. 15 of the Declaration of Bights of the Constitution of the Commonwealth. This reads, “In all controversies concerning property, and in all suits between two or more persons, except in cases in which it has heretofore been otherways used and practised, the parties have a right to a trial by jury; and this method of procedure shall be held sacred, unless, in causes arising on the high seas, and such as relate to mariners ’ wages, the legislature shall hereafter find it necessary to alter it.”
*277 There are fatal flaws in the defendants’ position. To begin with, this is not a controversy “concerning property.” We do not accept the conclusion of the syllogism that the suit “involves a right which, apart from its limitations, is incident to the ownership of corporate stock” and “is therefore a suit concerning property. ” No convincing authority is cited in support of the proposition. The plaintiff’s ownership is not in controversy. The defendants are not trying to take the stock from him. They merely do not propose to allow him, if they can prevent it, to exercise a stockholder’s right of examining corporate books. If this should be held to be a controversy “concerning property,” it would be difficult indeed to determine where a line consistently could be drawn.
In the next place, this is not a case which would have been triable to a jury in 1780 when the Constitution was adopted. The defendants concede that the constitutional guaranty does not extend to such a case. The scope and meaning of the constitutional right have been explained in
Parker
v.
Simpson,
We are not dealing, however, with that type of case. The present equitable proceeding the defendants seek to distinguish from the usual equity suit by saying that the equitable remedy granted by G-. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 155, § 22, was first enacted in St. 1903, c. 437, § 30, long after 1780, and that theretofore the remedy available to a stockholder seeking an inspection of corporate records was a petition for a writ of mandamus.
The defendants urge that there was a right to a jury in mandamus cases. The only Massachusetts decision is to the contrary. In
Casey
v.
Justice of the Superior Court,
At common law the return in a proceeding for a writ of mandamus was conclusive. Hence, there could be no trial by jury, for no issue of fact could be tried. Such a trial was provided by 9 Anne, c. 20 (enacted in 1711), but that statute was not part of the common law and was never in force in this Commonwealth.
Howard
v.
Gage,
2. An implicit requirement of Gr. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 155, § 22, is that in order to invoke its remedy a stockholder must apply for inspection to an officer or agent of the corporation having charge of the books or records.
Hanrahan
v.
Puget Sound Power & Light Co.
We are of opinion that the plaintiff’s request made to the transfer agent was sufficient. The statute is in general terms, and the Old Colony Trust Company, which had custody of the material books and records, fell within the description of an “agent of a corporation having charge of such . . . books or records.” Undoubtedly a corporation may make reasonable regulations as to the time and manner of the inspection of its books by stockholders, but it cannot make a by-law which unreasonably obstructs a stockholder’s right of examination.
Klotz
v.
Pan-American Match Co.
3. The defendants endeavored to show by way of defence, as provided in § 22, that the plaintiff sought the list of stockholders for a purpose other than in his interest as a stockholder relative to the affairs of the corporation. The
*280
judge found that the defendants had not sustained the burden of proof. He also found that the plaintiff had stated to a director that he wished to solicit proxies in order to obtain a measure of control. The judge ruled in substance that the plaintiff was within his rights in so doing. The defendants make the contention that these findings were unsupported in the evidence. We do not uphold that contention. That the plaintiff had no suggestions for improvement in the manner in which the newspaper was being run, or did not wish to talk to the president, or wanted the president’s job
(Varney
v.
Baker,
4. The defendants argue that there was prejudicial error in the admission of evidence as to (1) an earlier suit which was dismissed without prejudice and (2) communications between the plaintiff and the clerk. We do not agree that there was or that any of the judge’s findings were improperly affected, but in the view we have taken that there was a valid demand upon the transfer agent this evidence becomes entirely immaterial. We have not considered it.
5. The plaintiff questions the correctness of the judge’s ruling as to damages. On this issue the judge stated: ‘ 1 The only damages claimed to have been suffered . . . [are] legal fees of $700 which have not been paid but which would be reasonable for the services rendered in prosecuting the present bill in equity. I rule that such expenses are not recoverable as damages under the statute.”
There was no error. While, as an original proposition, further examination might be desirable, the general principle has become firmly established in this Commonwealth that no recovery may be had for counsel fees in the very action to redress a plaintiff’s wrong, as distinguished from
*281
other counsel fees which the plaintiff has been compelled to pay.
Goldberg
v.
Curhan,
The Legislature must be taken to have been aware of this principle. Had the statute been intended to embrace all counsel fees as damages, we are of opinion that an express statement to that effect would have been made.
Defendant Boston Herald-Traveler Corporation’s exceptions overruled.
Final decree affirmed with costs of appeal to the plaintiff.
Notes
We accept the defendants’ construction of the by-laws, which do not expressly contain such a statement.
