100 N.Y.S. 818 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1906
The complaint alleges that the defendant is a foreign fire insurance corporation; that .the plaintiff, on or about the 25th day 'of Janu
It further alleges that, after destroying the value of said stock, the "said defendant .pretended to sell, assign and transfer said three notes . with the collateral to the Mortgage Banking Company of Pittsburgh and that said company, after becoming the owner and holder of said notes, demanded payment thereof, of the maker, and such payment not having been made by the maker as therein .provided, caused said collateral to be sold, and said .collateral, including the 100 shares of stock of the Bremer, Du Four, Pinkney & Dudley Company, 'was sold to a party unknown to the plaintiff, for the use and benefit, of the defendant for the sum of $200 or some such nominal sum, and that by reason of the facts aforesaid the .plaintiff . has been damaged in the sum of $17,000. I
Section 635 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that “ A . warrant of attachment against the property of one or more defendants in án action may be granted upon the application-of the plaintiff, as specified in the next section, where the action is to 'recover a sum of money only as damages for one or more of the following ■ Causes:: 1. Breach" of contract, express or implied, other than a-‘contract to marry. 2. ■ Wrongful conversion of personal property. 3. An injury to" person or property in consequence of negligence,, fraud or other wrongful act.” Section 636 provides that “ To entitle the plaintiff to such a warrant he must show by affidavit to the satisfaction of the judge granting the same as follows :1 1. That one of the causes, of action specified in the last section exists against the defendant.”
Has the plaintiff one of the causes of actions specified in section 635 (supra) against the defendant ? If he has not, the attachment was improvidently issued. The gravamen of his action is that, by the acts of defendant -set out in the complaint in taking possession of the office and business of the Bremer, Du Four, Pinkney & Dud-' - ley Company the defendant destroyed the business of said company and so destroyed the value of twenty-five shares of stock of said,
It seems quite clear that however wrongful the acts of the defendant in taking possession of the office and business of the Bremer, Du Four, Pinkney & Dudley Company may have been, that wrong was committed against the company, and if action existed therefor it was in the name and for the benefit of the company. I do not understand that for a wrong perpetrated upon a corporation as a consequence of which the value of its stock is depreciated, an action lies in the first instance in behalf of a stockholder. (Niles v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 69 App. Div. 144; affd., 176 N. Y. 119.) In cases where the wrong complained of has been that of an officer of the company, it has been frequently held that the right of action is lodged in the corporation, and that while a stockholder may in some instances sue, he can only do so after a demand and a refusal by the controlling officers of the company to sue in its own name, or by showing the existence of such a condition of affairs as establishes that such demand would be useless, and when a stockholder does thus sue, he sues for the benefit of the corporation and not directly for his own. (Greaves v. Gouge, 69 N. Y. 154; Flynn v. Brooklyn City R. R. Co., 158 id. 493.) But as the complaint nowhere alleges that plaintiff is now a stockholder, it appears to be. an action by an outsider
It further appears that the action being at best for unliquidated damages, there was not sufficient evidence thereof. The papers allege that' the authorized capital stock of the corporation was $50,000, of which stock to the amount of $10,000 had-been issued, of which. the . plaintiff’s 25 shares represented the par value of $2,500. It further appears that all the capital stock issued of $10,000 par value had been deposited as collateral upon a subsequent call for additional security upon notes of a preceding company, aggregating $9,000; that is to say, if plaintiff’s claim as to value is true,. $68,000 additional to secure $9,000. The extravagance of the estimate destroys its probative effect. There are no statements of fact from which a court in the exercise of judicial discretion could determine that the" value of these 25 shares was $17,000, or any other sum; Before an attachment can issue, there must be some facts set up upon which the court can exercise its judgment as to. value and the. amount for which the attachment should issue. As said by this Court in Delafield v. Armsby Co. (62 App. Div. 262), “ It should be borne in mind * ' * * that it is only within a comparatively limited period of time that it has been possible to issue an attachment in an action to recover unliquidated damages. Hence, it is the duty of the court to give fair construction to-the provisions of the Code, which properly require, before a man’s property 'shall be taken in execution before’ judgment upon an unliquidated claim, that the papers shall contain evidence that the plaintiff has sustained the damages which he demands.”
The order appealed from should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion to vacate the attachment granted, with ten dollars costs.
O’Brien, P. J., Ingraham, Laughlin and Scott, JJ„ concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion to vacate attachment granted, with ten dollars costs.