148 Misc. 541 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1933
Plaintiffs bring an action to compel the officers and directors of a corporation, of which the plaintiffs are stockholders, to return to the corporation moneys and property claimed to have been wrongfully taken or wasted. The action is a derivative one, being brought on behalf of the corporate debtor, and the complaint alleges that it is brought in that capacity on behalf of all other creditors in addition to the plaintiffs. Some of the defendants have not answered. Instead, they have moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that there is a prior action pending between the same parties, in the same court, to recover upon the same cause of action.
There is no dispute in the facts. Several prior actions have been brought by other stockholders and are still pending, two of them at least having been brought in the Supreme Court in this State, and others in other jurisdictions. The prior actions in this State have been consolidated upon motion. The consolidated action is also a derivative one. Therein practically the same relief is sought as is sought in the present action, and a number of the details alleged are similar. Some matters are pleaded in different forms in the complaints and there may be details in the present one which are not found in the complaints in the earlier actions. Such matters, however, are immaterial. (Grant v. Greene Consolidated
This brings us to the consideration of the next question, which is whether the complaint should be dismissed under subdivision 4 of rule 107 of the Rules of Civil Practice, which says that the defendant may move for judgment dismissing the complaint where “ there is another action pending between the same parties for the same cause.” Having determined that the prior action is for the same cause, it remains to be determined whether it is between the same parties. In derivative actions, such as those in question, the plaintiff cannot obtain any judgment in his favor. He has no right of action in his individual capacity. Any recovery against the miscreant directors would require the payment of the misappropriated or wasted funds to the corporation. The action could be brought by the corporation as it is the party which has been directly damaged by the acts complained of. In fact the cause of action rests in the corporation and not in any stockholder or creditor. The latter is permitted to bring the action only when the corporation is unwilling to do so and then the corporation must be joined as a defendant. The action which the stockholder or creditor thus brings is the action which belongs to the corporation and it is brought on behalf of the corporation. As the stockholder or creditor has no right to bring such an action in the name of the corporation, he is obliged to bring it in his individual name, doing so on behalf of himself and all other stockholders or creditors. This, however, does not make the cause of action his in any sense. It is still the cause of action belonging to the corporation, upon which he is permitted to sue lest he be deprived of his rights. Such an action is sometimes referred to as a representative action but it is that only in the sense that the stockholder or creditor brings it as the representative of the corporation. (13 Fletcher Cyclopedia Corporations 176, § 5860.) It is in fact a derivative action. (Abrahams v. Bachmann, 238 App. Div. 320; Dana v. Morgan, 219 Fed. 313, and note at p. 316; affd., 232 id. 85, see p. 89.) A typical representative action is one brought by a creditor upon a claim existing in all the creditors in their individual right. This is not such an one. It appears clearly, therefore, that the real plaintiff in the action is the corporation, and so when two stockholders or creditors bring separate actions both of them are in effect brought by the corporation. The question is not whether the
The court has not been referred to any decision in this State which holds that the pendency of a prior derivative action, brought by one stockholder or creditor, is a bar to a similar action brought by a different stockholder or creditor; but there are authorities on this point in other jurisdictions. (Warner v. Hopkins, 111 Penn. St. 328; Goodbody v. Delaney, 80 N. J. Eq. 417.) (See, also, Finney v. Smith, 227 Ill. App. 146, 150; Singletary v. Chipstead, 142 Ga. 208; Robertson v. Monroe County, 118 Miss. 541, 546, 547; Commonwealth v. United States Trust Co., [Ky.] 117 S. W. 314; Gamble v. City of San Diego, 79 Fed. 487.) That the pendency of the prior action is a bar also finds support in the fact, admitted by the plaintiffs here, that a judgment in a prior stockholder’s action would be a bar to the maintenance of a subsequent action by another stockholder. (Grant v. Greene Consolidated Copper Co., supra; Dana v. Morgan, 219 Fed. 313; affd., 232 id. 85.) This result is reached because the prior action is deemed to have been between the same parties as the subsequent one, although in fact the plaintiffs were different in name. Its basis is that the prior action though brought in form on behalf of all the stockholders was really brought on behalf of the corporation. As heretofore pointed out, that being so, the judgment obtained in any such action is a bar to any other one. It seems to follow logically that the pendency of the first action prior to the obtaining of judgment is an equal bar to the maintenance of another action to obtain similar relief. Such would be the universal holding if the plaintiffs in the two actions were the same in name. The legal effect can be no different though the
Rogers v. King (8 Paige, 209) was likewise not a derivative action.
Prior to the enactment of the present rule there seems to have been no way of disposing, prior to the trial, of a defendant’s contention that the action was barred because of the pendency of a prior one. Now, however, the rule plainly states that a motion may be made to dismiss the complaint upon that ground and upon affidavits showing the facts.
The plaintiffs refer to the case of Small v. Sullivan (218 App. Div. 612; affd., 245 N. Y. 343). There the question was as to the sufficiency of a defense which alleged there was a prior action pending for the same cause. The Appellate Division held that was not a defense but that the remedy of the defendants was for consolidation and not for dismissal of the complaint (p. 623). The Court of Appeals did not discuss this point but stated that it agreed with the disposition made by the Appellate Division as to all matters save one, and that did not relate to the defense mentioned (p. 355). That action, however, was not a derivative one. It was rather a representative one. The plaintiff was a bondholder of a defendant corporation. He sued on behalf of himself and all others similarly situated. The basis of the action was the charge that the individual defendants had reorganized the corporate defendant in such a way as to make large profits for themselves. It was held that the plaintiff could maintain the action because the liability of the individual defendants would not constitute an asset of the defendant corporation. (See 245 N. Y. 343, at p. 355.) In other words, the action there brought was strictly a representative one. It was not the enforcement of an action which was owned by the corporate defendant and hence it was not derivative. Being
As there is a prior action pending for the same cause and between the same parties, the motions to dismiss the complaint must be granted, with ten dollars costs to each set of attorneys.