26 Wash. 541 | Wash. | 1901
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Plaintiff, Morrison, commenced suit to recover the sum of $1,500 alleged to be due him for wages as purser on a vessel of the defendant Blue Star navigation Company. Pie also made defendants in the action, appellants Duval and Pitch, who were, respectively, the president and general manag’er of the corporation Blue Star navigation Company. The complaint alleged the incorporation of the navigation company under the laws of Heiv Jersey; that Duval and Pitch were its general officers and had exclusive control over the affairs of the company; that in June, 1889, defendants Duval and Pitch, in the name of and for the use and profit of the defendant navigation company, chartered the schooner uPIera” for a voyage to the northwestern coast of Alaska and return, and purchased a cargo consisting of lumber, merchandise, and other articles, and contracted in the name of the company to pay about the sum of $10,000 therefor; that the voyage was safely made, and the cargo disposed of, and a large sum was realized as profits thereon ; that thereafter defendants Duval and Pitch pretended that the voyage of'the schooner Hera and the purchase of her cargo was an individual and private venture, and
1. It is maintained by counsel for appellants that plaintiff’s action is not a creditor’s bill wherein he sues for the benefit of all of the creditors of the corporation. It is true the complaint does not state that it is in behalf of the creditors,' and that it mentions other creditors. This would not seem to be very material. In 5 Enc. PL & Pr., p. 558, it is said:
“As has been seen hereinbefore, in ordinary suits inter vivos, a creditor is permitted to sue in his own behalf alone, and in such cases the bill need not state in whose behalf it is filed, or contain any invitation to other creditors to join.”
In the case of Dunlap v. Rauch, 24 Wash. 620 (64 Pac. 807), this court had a similar complaint before it, to which much the same objections were made as are now urged here. In that case, it is true, the complaint did not disclose other creditors or inadequacy of assets to meet all claims against-the corporation,'but no importance was attached to the failure to mention other creditors. A receiver was afterwards appointed at the suit of a stock
2. If the charge of fraudulent conversion was maintained against Duval and Fitch, the president and general manager of the corporation, it would be immaterial that Ryan, who was alleged to have engaged in the misappropriation of the funds, and who received a proportion thereof, was not made a party to the action. It is elementary that a recovery may be had against one or all of the wrongdoers, and it is equally well settled that the general officers of a corporation who direct its business cannot use the corporate name and property for their individual enterprise, and avoid the responsibility to answer personally to the creditors of the corporation or others injured by their misfeasance.
The evidence heard at the trial embraced some seven hundred pages of typewritten matter besides exhibits. The issues involved are almost exclusively those of fact. There is much conflict in the testimony. The court made very complete and detailed findings of fact. In view of the substantial conflict in the testimony, we are not inclined to disturb the findings of fact. The court found, in substance, that defendant Duval was one of the original incorporators and a large stockholder in the Blue Star Navigation Company; that the stockholders resided at and in the vicinity of the city of New York; that the company, when organized,- elected its officers from the stockholders, and paid large salaries to them, so that a large proportion of the amount subscribed by the stockholders, if not all
Having concluded that the findings of fact are sustained by the record, no reversible error is perceived in the conclusions of law or the decree, and it is affirmed.
Fullerton, Anders, Dunbar and Mount, JJ., concur.