82 N.Y.S. 130 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
The defendants severally demur to the complaint, the demurrers being based upon two grounds, first, that causes of action have been improperly united, and, second, that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the demurring defendant. The Special Term tiled a separate decision upon each of the demurrers sustaining the same upon the grounds that causes of action had been improperly united, and that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the demurring defendant. From the interlocutory judgments entered on these decisions the plaintiff appeals, and these three appeals are united and heard together. The result is that it is decided that the complaint states no cause of action against either of the defendants, and at the same time that causes of action are improperly united in the complaint, conclusions which would appear to be inconsistent, for if no cause of action is stated in the complaint, it certainly could not be said that causes of action were improperly united.
Under subdivision 9 of section 484 of the Code of Civil Procedure the plaintiff may unite in the same complaint two or more causes of action, whether legal or equitable, or both, where they are brought to recover “ upon claims arising out of the same transaction, or transactions connected with the same subject of action,” subject to the condition, however, that “ it must appear upon the face of the complaint that all the causes of action so united belong to one of the foregoing subdivisions of this section ; that they are consistent with each other; and, except as otherwise prescribed by law, that they affect all the parties to the action ; and it must appear upon the face of the complaint that they do not require different places of trial.” Section 488 provides that “ the defendant may demur to the eom plaint where ” it appears upon the face thereof that “ causes of action have been improperly united,” and that “ the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.” The demurrer has been sustained upon the ground that the complaint fails to allege a eause of action
The complaint alleges that the defendant corporation is a foreign corporation with an authorized capital stock of $30,000,000, onelialf of which had been subscribed for, and twenty per cent of the amount of each subscription had been paid thereon, or was then payable thereon to such corporation ; that the defendant Latta was a director of the said corporation and the president thereof, and that the defendant Maloney was a director of said corporation and a member of the executive committee thereof, and these two defendants were the chief promoters of the corporation and were engaged in soliciting the investment of capital in said enterprise by subscription to the capital stock of said corporation; that the defendants and the officers of the said corporation at the times mentioned in the complaint and for a long time prior thereto had been planning and endeavoring to effect a consolidation or amalgamation of the business of some of the principal telephone companies and cable companies in the United States through a purchase by the defendant corporation of the properties or business of some of said other companies, or of their capital stock, or of the controlling interest therein, or by a consolidation in some other lawful manner of their interests with the interests of the defendant corporation ; and that the plaintiff and the defendants herein all believed that great benefits would result to the stockholders of the defendant corporation by effecting the consolidation or amalgamation aforesaid, and that the stock of the defendant corporation would be greatly enhanced in value thereby; that in and about the month of August, 1900, the defendants Latta and Maloney, acting on behalf of the defendant corporation and as promoters of said corporation and of the enterprise before described, and being duly authorized by said corporation, requested the plaintiff to invest money in the enterprise by subscribing for stock of the defendant corporation and paying to said corporation forthwith twenty per cent of such subscription, and that for the purpose of inducing the plaintiff to make such investment and subscription they stated and represented to the plaintiff that the defendant corporation then owned the Erie Telegraph and Telephone Company, a rich dividend earning and dividend paying
The plaintiff having elected to rescind the subscription to the stock of the defendant corporation, and having demanded that relief, the sufficiency of the complaint must depend upon his right to that relief upon the facts alleged. If he had elected to retain the subscription, and recover the damages sustained by the false representations, a different question would be presented. Having elected to rescind the contract, his right to maintain the action depends upon whether he has alleged facts sufficient to justify the rescission, not whether he has alleged facts wdiich would justify a recovery for the damages sustained. The defendant corporation bases its demurrers to the complaint upon the claim that the representations are in the nature of opinions, expectations or belief, rather than of the existence of facts which are alleged to be false; but I think, considering the nature of the representations made, that they are much more than statements of opinion, expectation or belief. The defendant corporation was represented to have acquired and that it then owned the Erie Telegraph and Telephone Company, when as a fact its only interest in the Erie Company was that it had purchased a majority of the stock of the company, to pay for which it had borrowed about $3,700,000, pledging the stock purchased as security. It was further represented that the Postal Telegraph Company was ready to consolidate with the defendant corporation, and that the American Telegraph and Telephone Company had approved the plans of consolidation between itself and the defendant corporation, and that the completion of such consolidation was merely a matter of figures, and had reached such a stage that a complete consolidation and amalgamation proposed would be
It would seem to follow that, if those representations were false- and made for the purpose of inducing the plaintiff to subscribe to the stock of the company, and upon the faith of which he did subscribe, he would be entitled to rescind the subscription and to recover from the defendant corporation the amount that he had paid thereon. Whether the stock was worth the amount that he subscribed for it or not would be immaterial upon this question. What he subscribed for was stock in a corporation having the advantages that these representations, if true, would give to it; and if these representations were untrue, and the corporation was not what it was represented to be, the plaintiff would be entitled to have the subscription canceled. I do not understand that in such an action it is necessary to allege that the stock was not of the value that it was when the plaintiff made the subscription, for it is not the damages sustained by reason of the fraud that is sought to be recovered from the corporation. The question is, whether the-
The plaintiff, however, has made the officers of the corporation who made these representations parties defendant, and asks to recover against them the amount that he paid to the corporation as the damages that he sustained by reason of their false representations. I think that the complaint fails to allege facts sufficient to justify the action against the individual defendants. It is clear, I think, that they are neither necessary nor proper parties in an action -to rescind the subscription and recover back from the corporation the money that has been paid thereon. They were the agents or promoters of the corporation, acting on its behalf to induce the plaintiff to subscribe to the stock of the corporation and to pay to -it his subscription upon the stock. It is not alleged that they individually received any benefit by virtue of the subscription, or that •any of the money paid by the plaintiff to the corporation was paid to or received by them. 3STor does the complaint allege a cause of ■action against them for damages sustained by reason of this sub■scriplion. There is a general allegation that the plaintiff has been damaged by his subscription to the stock of the defendant corporation in the sum of $100,000, with interest thereon from the 13th of August, 1900, that being the sum that he paid, upon subscribing to the stock of the company, as twenty per cent of the par value of the stock subscribed for and which sum he would be entitled to receive from the corporation if the subscription should be rescinded. But there is "no allegation that the right in the corporation which •the plaintiff received was of less value than the amount that he had paid or agreed to pay, or that there was any other loss except that ¡sustained by the payment of the subscription to the stock, and without an allegation that the stock is worthless or of less value than it would have been had the representations been true, I cannot see .how the plaintiff can be said to have sustained damage for which -he would be entitled to recover against the defendants making the
The remaining question is whether the court below correctly sustained' the demurrer interposed by all of the defendants upon the ground that causes of action have been improperly united. It may be conceded, as claimed by the learned counsel for the defendants, that where a complaint alleges facts which tend to sustain two separate causes of action, which is demurrable upon the ground that they are not properly joined, and the complaint is demurred to upon that ground, if the two causes of action thus sought to be enforced cannot be united in one complaint, such demurrer may be sustained, although there may he some objection to one or both of these causes of action which would have entitled one or both of the defendants to demur upon the ground that they were improperly united, and .that is the case of Higgins v. Crichton (11 Daly, 114; affd., 98 N. Y. 626). In that case the plaintiff was an , assignee of a judgment against the defendant Crichton. Two of the defendants who held
It follows that the judgment sustaining the demurrer of the defendant corporation must be reversed and judgment entered overruling the demurrer, with costs in this court and in the court below, with leave to defendant to withdraw demurrer and answer upon payment of such costs, and the judgment appealed from sustaining the demurrer of the individual defendants upon the ground that the complaint states no cause of action against them should be affirmed, with costs to the individual defendants and against the plaintiff.
Van Brunt, P. J., and McLaughlin, J., concurred; Patterson and Laughlin, JJ., concurred in result.
Judgment sustaining demurrer of defendant corporation reversed, with costs, and demurrer overruled, with costs, with leave to defendant to withdraw demurrer and answer on payment of costs' in this court and in the court below, and judgment sustaining demurrer of individual defendants on the ground that the complaint states no cause of action against them affirmed, with costs to the individual defendants against the plaintiff.