108 Misc. 20 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1919
(1) It is evident from the complaint that the pleader desired to state a direct, individual cause of action in favor of the plaintiff; but it is also evident that in so far as plaintiff sues as a stockholder, the acts complained of would give rise to a derivative action. The alleged wrongful acts of the individual defendants so far as they injured the furnace company were such as would give the furnace company a cause of action. In seeking to enforce that right of action, plaintiff must rely on a derivative as distinguished from an individual or direct right of action. That the wrongs are alleged to have been the result of a conspiracy does not change their essential character or the character of the action which the law affords as a remedy. Such allegations could be inserted in nearly every complaint against directors, based on corporate acts, which acts in the usual course are planned and agreed upon between the directors. By adopting the expedient of alleging that the corporate acts performed by the directors were performed pursuant to a conspiracy plaintiff cannot overturn the established principles of law relating to derivative actions. Brock v. Poor, 216 N. Y. 387.
(2) The complaint is insufficient to state such an
(3) Plaintiff’s brief indicates that he seeks to recover the damages resulting from a breach of contract. (a) No action on contract can be maintained against the defendant directors who were not parties to the contract, (b) It seems plaintiff, vaguely and indefinitely, relies on an alleged tort akin to the tort of interfering with a contract right. The limits within which that doctrine will be confined have not been worked out. See 18 Harv. Law Rev. 423; Elliott Cont. chap. 56. The briefs do not refer to any case in which an attempt was made to hold the members of a directorate liable on that theory for having caused their corporation to breach its contract. Such an extension of the doctrine would tend to leave the directors open to tort claims whenever the corporation had failed to perform a contract. In the exercise of their discretion and in acting on their judgment for the benefit of their corporation, the directors should be free from possible liability of that kind. Moreover, it would not seem feasible to draw a line between directors’" acts which are dictated by no other motive than the performance of their duties as directors and their acts which, though they may be performed in transacting the business of the corporation, are actuated by ulterior motives — such as the motive to bring about a breach of a corporate contract. But even were directors to be held liable for so conducting their corporation as to cause it to fail to perform its con
(4) No violation of plaintiff’s rights is set forth unless it be a violation of his rights as a stockholder or his rights as a creditor, or of his rights based, directly or indirectly, on the contract referred to in the complaint. It is apparent that no cause of action against the defendant directors has been stated. Does the complaint state a cause of action against either of the corporate defendants % It has been shown above that no cause of action in tort against either corporation has been set forth. The failure of the plaintiff to make the contract of June, 1912, a part of the complaint and his failure to clearly differentiate between the undertakings which were to be performed by the engineering company and those which were to be performed by the new company, the furnace company, gives rise to difficulty in considering whether a cause of action for breach of contract against either corporation has been stated. Evidently, it was the pleader’s idea to set forth that the parties to the contract contemplated that it would be adopted by the furnace company and that the furnace company would undertake to carry out some of the provisions affecting plaintiff and Grenfell. That is made very clear from subdivisions 4 and 5 of paragraph II of the complaint. Subdivision 4 provides that plaintiff and Greenfell were to be appointed the sole representatives of the new company in Europe. They could be so appointed only by the new company. Subdivision 5 provides that they were to receive as commissions a percentage of the first $200,000 received by the new company on account of the sale of preferred stock or the sale of foreign patents. The fair inference from the complaint is that the undertakings in said sub
In deciding this motion on the pleadings it would be improper for me to consider the proposed second amended complaint. It is not part of the pleadings. Moreover, it would seem that this court should not be called on to further consider the case until plaintiff, deciding on and proceeding on some definite theory, scientifically sets forth the elements of a cause of action. The complaint should be made up of allegations of ultimate facts, conclusions of law and mere evidentiary facts being omitted. It should also be noted that the written instruments referred to in the complaint are not made parts of it by the statement that they are incorporated in it when in fact no copies thereof are attached. The motion for judgment on the pleadings is granted in favor of each of the moving defendants. ‘ Plaintiff may have leave to plead over on payment of ten dollars costs.
Ordered accordingly.