30 N.Y.S. 756 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1894
The act of 1867, by which the National Savings I Bank of Buffalo was created, provided that the persons there named I I as trustees and their successors were constituted a body corporate ! I and politic by that name; that its business should be managed by I a board of trustees, 15 of whom, including the president or one of I the vice presidents, should constitute a legal meeting for the trans-I action of business; and that the general business and object of the I corporation should' be to receive on deposit and invest such sums I of money as might be offered therefor. By the general act of 1875 I (chapter 371), relating to savings banks, it was provided that the I number of trustees should not be less than 13. This act was I superseded by chapter 409 of Laws of 1882, which was “An act to I revise the statutes of the state relating to banks, banking and trust I companies.” This act, so far as relates to savings banks, is sub-I stantially the same as that of 1875, and it provided that the busiI ness of the corporation should be managed and directed by a I board of trustees of not less than 13 (section 250); that the board I of trustees should have power from time to time to make such I by-laws, rules, and regulations as they should think proper for the I election of officers, prescribing their powers and duties, and the I manner of discharging the same, for the appointment of committees I for certain purposes, and generally for transacting, managing, and I directing the affairs of the corporation (section 251); that regular I meetings of the board of trustees should be held as often as once in I each month for the purpose of receiving reports of its officers and I committees and for the transaction of other business, and a quorum I to consist of not less than seven trustees (section 252); that the I corporation should, on or before the 1st day of February and August I in each year, make a report to the superintendent of the bank deI partment, stating fully and specifically the situation, condition, I affairs, and transactions of the corporation particularly mentioned I in the statute (sections 270-272), and verified by the oath of its I two principal officers (section 273); that it should be the duty of the I trustees, by a committee of not less than three of such trustees, I on or before the 1st day of January and July in each year to I thoroughly examine the books, vouchers, and assets of the institu
It is, however, urged on the part of the defendants that the complaint contains no allegations of fact to charge them with liability for embezzlement of the funds of the institution. There is no -charge of malfeasance against them. The theory of the action is that the trustees, bv their failure to perform the duties which they by their relation to the bank assumed or undertook to exer-cise, were chargeable with negligence, and its consequences. When the statute nlaced the management and direction of the business of the bank under the control of the board of trustees, it imposed upon them some duties in respect to it. All of those duties are not specificallv defined by the statute. They are such as the nature of the sunervision fairly requires. Negligence is depend-ent upon failure to exercise the care which persons are, by their relation, called unon to exercise, and that is more or less dependent upon circumstances. In Briggs v. Spaulding, 141 U. S. 132, 11 Sup. Ct. 924. which was an action against the directors of a national bank, it was held that they were required to exercise ordinary care and prudence, and, if they did that, they were not chargeable with . negligence. And Mr. Chief Justice Fuller, in the prevailing opinion, said substantially that the degree of care which the defendants were bound to exercise is that which ordinarily diligent and prudent men would exercise under similar circumstances. “What may be negligence in one case may not be want of ordinary care in another, and the question of negligence is therefore ultimately a question of fact to be determined under all the circumstances.” In Hun v. Cary, 82 N. Y. 65, in considering the subject of the measure of diligence required of trustees of a savings bank, Judge Earl, spealdng for the court, said that they are not bound to exercise the highest degree of diligence, nor is their duty discharged by slight care, but that they are to “exercise ordinary care and prudence in the trusts committed to them; the same degree of care an<I prudence that men prompted by self-interest generally exercise in their own affairs.” Pom. Eq. Jur. § 1070; Brinckerhoff v. Bostwick, 88 N. Y. 52.
The objection by the demurrer that the court has no jurisdiction of the subject of the action is made upon the ground that the remedy for damages or losses occasioned by negligence is by action at law. The distinction between causes of action legal and equitable and their appropriate remedies is still to be observed. Peters
“It has always been held that the directors are trustees for the shareholders; that is, for the company. They are managing partners of the company, and if they abuse their powers, which they hold in trust for the company, to the damage of the company, for their own benefit, they are liable to make good the breach of trust to their cestui que trust like any other trustees.”
And in Peabody v. Flint, 6 Allen, 52, it was said:
“As between the corporation itself and its officers, it was long since held that they were trustees, and that a court of equity would hold them responsible for every breach of trust.”
It is in that view that a right of action by a corporation against its directors in equity has been recognized for loss of corporate property occasioned by breach of their fiduciary obligations, whether arising from malfeasance or culpable want of care; and for the pur
But the view taken of the present case renders it unnecessary to determine the question whether, for the purposes of an action against directors for loss of corporate property occasioned by their negligence, they may be treated as its trustees in the sense requisite • to equitable cognizance upon that ground alone. The plaintiff in the complaint alleges that on account of the different periods of time during which the defendants were trustees of the corporation no adequate recovery of damages without a multiplicity of suits can be had to reimburse the losses of the corporation occasioned by reason of the matters charged against them, that such losses can only be properly apportioned by an accounting, and that the object of the action is to apportion such losses justly and equitably among the defendants for the benefit of the depositors and creditors of the plaintiff. The purpose of the action is to reimburse the plaintiff for losses suffered by it during the period of about 14 years, and occasioned by the alleged negligence of the defendants. Some only of them were trustees during the whole time; others of them became such from time to time during that period. The cause of action arises out of the same relation of all the defendants to the plaintiff. Their alleged liability is of the same character, but the extent of it in amount may, as between them, be different, and it seems to be necessarily so. And the nature of their duties as trustees was such that, to charge any one of them, the participation or implication of others of them may be necessary. It seems, then, that the case as presented by the complaint is a proper one for equitable-cognizance to avoid multiplicity of suits, and to apportion between the defendants, as their liabilities respectively may appear, the burden of such reimbursement as the plaintiff may be entitled to-for the causes alleged. Brinkerhoff v. Brown, 6 Johns. Ch. 139; Brinckerhoff v. Bostwick, 105 N. Y. 567, 571, 12 N. E. 58; Railroad Co. v. Schuyler, 17 N. Y. 592.
It is insisted that there is a defect of parties, because the personal representatives of Edward S. Dann, deceased, are not made-
Upon the question of the legal capacity of the plaintiff to sue, raised by the demurrer, it is said that there was at the time the change of the name of the corporation from that of the National Savings Bank of Buffalo to that of the plaintiff is alleged to have been made no power in the court to make the change. The provisions of chapter 518 of Laws of 1887, authorizing the court to change the name of any bank, etc., was repealed by Laws 1892, c. 689, § 215, and our attention is called to no statute thereafter existing which permitted such change by the court. While it may be that the plaintiff has misnamed itself, that is no effectual ground of demurrer. The error is merely formal and amendable. The ' remedy for correction is by motion. Bank v. Magee, 20 N. Y. 355.
The views already indicated, are to the effect that there is no misjoinder of causes of action, and the conclusion follows that the judgment should be affirmed. All concur.