143 Mich. 277 | Mich. | 1906
The complainants filed their bill of complaint in the Kent circuit court, in chancery, against the
The bill of complaint states that: The defendant American Hulled Bean Company, Limited,is a partnership association organized on or about June 19, 1901. In the latter part of August, 1901, the company filed amended articles which providedfor a capital stock of $5,000,000, $3,000,000 of which was paid in, and the remainder was to be treasury stock. No money was actually paid in but the $3,000,000 purported to have been paid in by the assignment of letters patent issued by the United States of America on March 12, 1901, to defendant Charles D. Fuller. Between August 28, 1901, when the amended articles were filed, and September 4, 1901, all the subscribers to the articles of association agreed that $500,000 of the treasury stock should be perferred stock, and $1,500,000 common stock, and that the $3,000,000 paid in by the assignment of the patents should be common stock. On or about the 4th day of September, 1901, the defendant, American Hulled Bean Company, Limited, entered into an agreement with defendant Fuller to sell him $150,000 par value of the treasury preferred stock, and a like amount of the treasury common stock of the company, for the sum of $75,000 in cash, and the assignment of his Canadian patents on the process mentioned above, and as a further inducement to him to purchase the same, agreed to aid him in disposing of the stock at a profit to himself, and in pursuance of the agreement it was understood that Fuller would undertake to interest the general public in the sale of the stock, and that he might solicit subscriptions for preferred stock in the company in the name of the company, offering two shares of the common stock as-a bonus with each share of the preferred stock, and it was further agreed that he might represent that the preferred
Shortly after this agreement was made between Fuller and the company, Fuller called upon the complainants at Grand Rapids, Mich., and solicited them to subscribe for preferred stock in the company, and represented to them the things which it was agreed between him and the company that he might represent, as stated above, and, in addition, he represented that he had invented a process for hulling beans, and that he had sold and transferred all his right, title, and interest in that-invention, and everything else pertaining thereto which he might invent or
Defendant Fuller succeeded in securing subscriptions for the preferred stock of the company amounting to 850 shares, or $85,000. Fuller reported his success to the company and directed them to collect in the money and apply $75,000 on the cash payment which he was required to make by the terms of his contract with the company, and'return the balance to him. The company agreed to do this. Complainants paid their subscriptions direct to the company, and it was applied, together with the sums, of money received from other subscribers, in satisfaction of the debt of Fuller, of $75,000, to the company, and the balance in excess of that amount was returned to defendant Fuller, without the knowledge or consent of the complainants.
It is alleged and charged that the action of the officers, and the board of managers of said Hulled Bean Company in applying and paying the funds received from the complainants and the other subscribers mentioned, in the matter aforesaid, constituted a gross violation of their duties to the members of the said company; that it was a. wrongful and illegal, diversion of funds belonging to said, company; that it amounted to a fraud upon the complainant which, in équity, should vitiate and warrant cancellation of said subscription contract; and that the entire scheme and plan of said defendants, through the active
The complainants’ prayer for relief is as follows:
*284 “Tour orators therefore ask the aid of the court in the premises:
“1. That the above-named defendants, the American Hulled Bean Company, Limited, and Charles D. Fuller, may appear and answer this, your orators’ bill, without oath (answer on oath being hereby expressly waived), and that said Charles D. Fuller may come to a just and fair account touching the amount due to your orators for said money paid to him as aforesaid.
“ 2. That their subscription to said stock of the American Hulled Bean Company, Limited, may be canceled.
“3. That said defendant, Charles D. Fuller, may be decreed to accept said stock herewith deposited with said clerk and to pay forthwith to your orators the amounts which they paid for stock so transferred to them as aforesaid, with interest thereon from the dates of payment, together with your orators’ reasonable costs and charges in this behalf sustained.
“ 4. And that your orators may have such other relief or such further relief in the premises as shall be agreeable to equity and good conscience.
“5. May it please the court, the premises being considered, to grant to your orators the writ of subpoena, to be issued out of and under the seal of this court, to be directed to the said American Hulled Bean Company, Limited, and Charles D. Fuller, defendants herein, and thereby commanding them and each of them, on a certain day and under a certain penalty to be therein inserted, personally to be and appear before this court, then and there to answer, all and singular, the said premises, and to stand to, abide and perform such order and decree as this court shall make therein and shall be agreeable to equity and good conscience. And your orators will ever pray, etc.”
The defendants’ demurrer reads as follows:
“Now comes the above-named defendant, Charles D. Fuller, by Howard & Howard, his solicitors, and says that the complainants have not stated such a case in their amended bill as entitles them to relief in a court of equity, for the following reasons:
“1. Because there is no equity in the amended bill.
“2. Because the allegations in the amended bill show that if the complainants are entitled to any remedy at all, it is in a court of law.
*285 “ 3. Because the allegations in the amended bill show that if the complainants ever had any right or claim for a rescission of their alleged contract, they have lost the same by their laches.
“ 4. Because the complainants are not jointly interested. The allegations of the amended bill, if they show any rights at all in the complainants, show a several and individual right and not a joint right.
“5. Because, under the allegations of the amended bill, the complainants are not entitled to any relief in a court of equity.
“6. Because the amended bill sets up no ground for equitable relief.”
The important questions for consideration in this case are, first, whether the complainants have such a community of interests as authorizes their joining in the bill of complaint; and, second, whether complainants have not such an adequate remedy at law as to oust equity of jurisdiction. '
We thinkffhe first question must be answered in the affirmative. Sherman v. Stove Co., 85 Mich 169; Bosher v. Land Co., 89 Va. 455. It is true that in Sherman v. Stove Co. the complainants were, at the time of the subscription, partners in business, and the representations were either made to both at the same time or to one acting for both, and the money was drawn out of the partnership, but their interests in the corporation and in the shares of stock for which they subscribed were as several and distinct as in the case before us. It should make no difference in principle whether the representations are made to the prospective shareholders at the same time when they are gathered together or to them separately at different times, provided the representations are identical, the interests and subject-matter are identical, and the relief sought is identical. As said by the court in the case of Bosher v. Land Co., supra:
" Where the parties allege in the bill that the fraudulent acts are exactly the same and perpetrated by the same means and the injury identical as to all, except only in*286 the amount of the injury — as where the same false statements are distributed to all and the same false and deceitful prospectus is operated upon all alike and all have been defrauded by the same means, and the relief sought is the same and the subject-matter identically the same — there is a community of interest and right and such persons may unite as coplaintiffs against the common wrong-doer.”
Counsel for the defendants stated upon the oral argument in this court that the demurrer was sustained by the learned circuit judge upon the ground that complainants had an adequate remedy at law, thereby bringing the suit within the principle of Mack v. Village of Frankfort, 123 Mich. 421. The case last cited is distinguishable from the present in that complainants merely sought a money judgment and there was no prayer for cancellation or other relief peculiar to courts of equity. We think the case falls within the principle of John Hancock Mut. Life-Ins. Co. v. Dick, 114 Mich. 337 (43 L. R. A. 566). This question is discussed in Fred Macey Co. v. Macey, ante, 138, to which we refer for a full discussion of our own cases.
We do not think that the complainants were guilty of laches under the circumstances disclosed by their bill of complaint, and the order sustaining the demurrer is reversed, with leave to defendant to answer in accordance with the rules of court.