This action was instituted by Bella Gallup, a resident of New York, as a shareholder of the Indian Territory Illuminating Oil Company, a New Jersey corporation, *92 to recover for the company damages resulting from an alleged waste of its assets and earnings. Indian Oil, two parent corporations and several directors were joined as defendants. The complaint described various methods allegedly employed by the defendants to divert the assets of Indian Oil over a period of years beginning with 1930. Certain acts were alleged to have taken place in November of 1937, April of 1939, and one practice complained of was alleged to be continuing at the time the complaint was filed, August 16, 1939. It was averred that the plaintiff was a shareholder of Indian Oil at the time of the transactions complained of, but in paragraph 16(c), which complained of certain specific transactions, plaintiff stated that she did not know whether or not those transactions took place prior to the time that she became a shareholder. The corporate defendants filed motions for a more definite statement or for a bill of particulars with respect to parts of the complaint and to dismiss paragraph 16(c) as not complying with Rule 23(b) of the Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A. following section 723c. 1 Thereafter the plaintiff filed a motion for discovery and leave to take depositions.
Upon the hearing on these motions the defendants submitted an affidavit dated De-. cember 13, 1939, by the assistant secretary of Indian Oil that no stock of the company stood of record in the name of Bella Gallup or Bella Gallup Freedman or Bertha Freedman. Thereafter the plaintiff filed an affidavit stating that she had been the owner of 100 shares of stock in the company from April 27, 1937 “continuously to date” and in support thereof submitted photostatic copies of a confirmation slip and a letter from Ira Haupt & Co., brokers, showing the purchase for the account of Bertha Freedman of 100 shares of Indian Oil and stating that certificates therefor, registered in brokers’ names, had been delivered to the purchaser. Photostatic copies of these certificates, which had been endorsed in blank (two on November 27, 1936, and one on May 5, 1937) were also submitted. In her affidavit plaintiff swore that the account at Ira Haupt & Co., although carried for “reasons of convenience” in the name of her daughter, Bertha Freedman, was her account and that the securities were at all times her property. Attached was a photostatic copy of an affidavit by Bertha Freedman confirming this statement.
The court below, D.C.,
The case presents several problems, not all of which were raised at the argument, and some of which appear to us in a different fashion than they apparently did to counsel for either side, or the court below. To their consideration we pass.
Speaking Motion.
First. We are met at the outset by the question whether it was proper for the court below to make a preliminary investigation, which carried it outside of the pleadings, as to the plaintiff’s stock ownership. It is to be noted that the question involved is not one going to the jurisdiction of the court. Venner v. Great Northern Ry., 1908,
In so holding, we do not indicate that disputed questions of fact involved in the merits of claim or defense may necessarily be fought out as preliminary issues raised upon motions. The affidavits filed by the parties here raised no fact controversy, but a question of law. No problem arising out of a possible claim to jury trial is involved. The question of law thus raised is the next point for consideration.
Second. Does the applicable law require that the plaintiff be a stockholder of record ? It is established that this plaintiff was not a registered shareholder, at the time the action was begun. The question is not merely a procedural one, such as whether an action may be maintained by the real party in interest who is not the owner of a legal title (Goodrich, Conflict of Laws, 2d Ed. 1938, 191), but the substantive one whether one who is not a shareholder of record may assert shareholder’s rights either on behalf of or against the corporation. That is a question of the law of New Jersey, the state under the law of which this company was incorporated. Section 182 of the Restatement of Conflict of Laws provides that “Whether a person is a shareholder or other member of a corporation is determined by the law of the state of incorporation”.
Preliminarily we must determine whether that law is known to us.
Judicial Notice.
Third. The rule is well established that federal courts in exercising original jurisdiction take judicial notice of the law of every state. Thus in Owings v. Hull,
The point was stated concisely in Lamar v. Micou,
And in Hanley v. Donoghue,
“When exercising an original jurisdiction under the consitution and laws of the United States, this court, as well as every other court of the National Government, doubtless takes notice, without proof, of the laws of each of the United States.
Sj! SÍ* * % * *
“In the exercise of its general appellate jurisdiction from a lower court of the United States, this court takes judicial notice of the laws of every state of the Union, because those laws are known to the court below as laws alone, needing no averment or proof.”
*94 The rule stated in these decisions has been expressed many times by text-writers; Wigmore on Evidence, 3d Ed., § 2573; 3 Beale, The Conflict of Laws § 624.1; Goodrich on Conflict of Laws, 2d Ed. 1938, § 80; 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, Lewis’ Ed. 1899, § 6; 1 Chamberlayne, The Modern Law of Evidence (1911) § 585.
We are not here concerned with the rule that on appeal to the United States Supreme Court from a state court, the Supreme Court knows as law only what was so known to the state court. Adam v. Saenger, 1938,
This rule as to judicial notice is not affected by Erie R. R. v. Tompkins, 1938,
The Law of New Jersey.
Fourth. Since New Jersey law applies and since this court takes judicial notice of the law of New Jerséy, the next question is, What is the law of New Jersey on the point involved? This question is more easily asked than answered, for we find some apparent contradictions in the New Jersey decisions. In Mateer v. New Jersey Telephone Co., 1927,
Fifth. This brings us to the last and perhaps the most difficult point in the case. Of what acts may the shareholder complain? Is she limited to those which have occurred since she became a shareholder or may her action reach those which took place before that time? At the argument the court was presented with a conflict between Delaware decisions which, it was said, adopted the latter view and the provisions of Rule 23(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure which require an averment “that the plaintiff was a shareholder at the time of the transaction of which he complains * * This par *95 ticular problem the court is not compelled to meet because we think that the plaintiff’s rights here are not determined by the law of Delaware, where the action was brought in the federal District Court, but by the law of New Jersey, the state of incorporation. “The right of a shareholder to object to conduct occurring in the operation of the corporate enterprise is determined by the law of the state of incorporation. This includes acts that are beyond the purposes of the corporation, acts which are prohibited either by the state of incorporation or by the state where the acts are to be performed and acts which are alleged to be beyond the authority of the officers or directors.” Restatement, Conflict of Laws § 183, comment b.
It is when we come to examine the law of New Jersey that the difficulty arises. In Pollitz v. Gould, 1911,
The conclusion is that the point is not a settled one under the law of New Jersey. Under such circumstances the proper course seems to be to follow the rule laid down in Rule 23(b). The discussion of this Rule in Moore’s Federal Practice indicates some considerable basis for argument that the rule is substantive in character. If it is, Moore states, “It is subject to challenge in the Federal Courts in those states which have no such requirement * * Moore’s Federal Practice, p. 2250 et seq. On this interesting point we express no opinion one way or the other. Until the state law is found to be in conflict it seems clearly the duty of a lower federal court to follow the rules which the Supreme Court has promulgated for its guidance. 3
We conclude, therefore, that the plaintiff may complain only of acts occurring subsequent to her becoming the owner of shares in the defendant company.
The order of the District Court is reversed and the case is remanded, with directions that it be reinstated for further proceedings, not inconsistent with this opinion.
JONES, Circuit Judge, concurs in the result.
Notes
“Secondary Action by Shareholders. In an action brought to enforce a secondary right on the part of one or more shareholders in an association, incorporated or unincorporated, Because the association refuses to enforce rights which ■may properly be asserted by it, the complaint shall be verified by oath and shall aver (1) that the plaintiff was a shareholder at the time of the transaction of which he complains or that his share thereafter devolved on him by operation of law and (2) that the action is not a collusive one to confer on a court of the United States jurisdiction of any action of which it would not otherwise have jurisdiction. The complaint shall also set forth with particularity the efforts of the plaintiff to secure from the managing directors or trustees and, if necessary, from the shareholders such action as he desires, and the reasons for his failure to obtain such action or the reasons for not making such effort.”
See, also, to the same effect: Price v. Union Land Co., 8 Cir., 1911,
In the article by Judge Charles E. Clark (who is Reporter for the Committee which drafted the Rules), “The Tompkins case and the Federal Rules”, Journal of the American Judicature Society, February, 1941, the author says: “From the nature of the federal rules and the manner of their adoption as a result of long study and careful consideration, a strong presumption should be indulged in that matters incLded in them as procedural are to be so held by the courts.” One need not even go that far in order to uphold the result reached in the instant case.
