11 N.E.2d 883 | NY | 1937
The plaintiff herein is a stockholder of Elkay Reflector Corporation. A temporary receiver of the estate and property has been appointed and has been made a party defendant with the permission of the court. *217 In his complaint the plaintiff has sought to allege facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action for damages caused to the corporation by the defendants, named in the complaint, other than the receiver. The plaintiff does not allege in his complaint that the defendants have invaded his personal rights of property or caused any damage to him individually. He complains of alleged wrongs done to the corporation and he asks that the damages for such wrongs be paid to the corporation or its receiver.
A cause of action for wrong done to the corporation belongs to the corporation. If no receiver had been appointed, the corporation could have brought an action to enforce it, and the question whether the corporation should "seek to enforce in the courts a cause of action for damages is, like other business questions, ordinarily a matter of internal management and is left to the discretion of the directors, in the absence of instruction by vote of the stockholders. Courts interfere seldom to control such discretion intra vires the corporation, except where the directors are guilty of misconduct equivalent to a breach of trust, or where they stand in a dual relation which prevents an unprejudiced exercise of judgment." (United Copper SecuritiesCo. v. Amalgamated Copper Co.,
The right of a stockholder of a corporation to bring suit to enforce, for the benefit of the corporation, a cause of action, which belongs to the corporation, is purely equitable. The equity suit, when permitted, is in effect a combination of two causes of action which the stockholder asserts: "namely, one against his own company, of which he is a corporator, for refusing to do what he has requested them to do; and the other against the party which contests the matter in controversy with that corporation." (Hawes v. Oakland,
"Courts of equity will, at the suit of a stockholder, interpose their powers to remedy or prevent a wrong to a corporation by its officers or directors when the corporation, because it is controlled by the wrongdoers or for other reason, fails and refuses to take appropriate action for its own protection." (Isaac v. Marcus,
Since in this case the alleged wrongdoers are not in control of the corporation, the plaintiff must in his complaint allege other facts which justify the intervention of a court of equity in the administration of corporate officers where in the first instance, at least, discretion is vested in the receiver. We have held that where the receiver is himself one of the alleged wrongdoers a stockholder may bring an action in equity to remedy the wrong. (Brinckerhoff v. Bostwick,
Failure by a corporation or its receiver to bring suit against persons who have wrongfully caused damage to the corporation will, it is plain, injure the corporation and its stockholders, to the extent that by such suit damages might have been collected from the wrongdoers. Even so, a refusal to bring such a suit constitutes no wrong to the stockholders of the corporation if the refusal is based upon the honest exercise of a discretion vested in those who control the corporation. A court of equity may interfere, however, in cases where there is no "unprejudiced exercise of judgment." (United Copper Securities Co. v.Amalgamated Copper Co., supra.) Here the complaint alleges facts which if true show that the refusal is not due to an "unprejudiced exercise of judgment," but on the contrary that the receiver is a clerk in the office of the attorneys for the defendants and that his primary interest is to prevent the corporation from redressing the wrongs committed by the clients of his employer.
It is plain that a refusal to bring suit in such circumstances would constitute a wrong to the corporation and its stockholders which calls for action by a court of equity if redress cannot be had through an action at law. The Appellate Division has pointed out that if these allegations are true the court which appointed the receiver should remove him and appoint a new receiver who would bring an action at law. We may assume that the court could remove the receiver or, perhaps, direct the present receiver to bring an action at law if his judgment, though exercised honestly, is improvident. These are matters which concern the administration of the corporate affairs under the supervision and direction of the court, and the court which exercises the powers of supervision might determine that it would be for the best interests of the corporation that the receiver should not be removed or *221 directed to bring suit, but rather that it should permit a stockholder to maintain the action in behalf of the corporation making the receiver a party defendant. (Cf. Isaac v. Marcus,supra.)
The court has given such permission here. The plaintiff in the complaint, served pursuant to that permission, alleges facts which show, prima facie, a wrong against the corporation committed by the persons named as defendants; that the affairs of the corporation are now in the control of the court acting through the receiver; that the receiver has refused to bring an action to redress such wrong, and that the refusal of the receiver is not based upon an unprejudiced exercise of judgment. These allegations bring this case within the principles upon which a stockholder's derivative equitable action is based. The effect of these allegations is not weakened or destroyed because another branch of the court might, if it saw fit, assert powers of control over the affairs of the corporation and overrule the refusal of the receiver to bring suit, but instead has given permission to a stockholder to bring the suit in behalf of the corporation. Choice there lies with the court. The alleged wrongdoers may not dictate how the choice should be exercised.
The judgment of the Appellate Division should be reversed and the order of the Special Term affirmed, with costs in this court and in the Appellate Division.
CRANE, Ch. J., O'BRIEN, HUBBS, LOUGHRAN and FINCH, JJ., concur; RIPPEY, J., taking no part.
Judgment accordingly. *222