HERBERT E. NELSON AND WALLACE R. NELSON, APPELLANTS, v. SIERRA CONSTRUCTION CORP., R K R CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, A NEVADA CORPORATION, W. E. KOERWITZ, AND A. P. RAPONE, RESPONDENTS.
No. 4364
Supreme Court of Nevada
August 24, 1961
364 P.2d 402 | 77 Nev. 334
3. The record on appeal does not disclose prejudice to respondent resulting from appellant‘s failure to strictly comply with
For the reasons stated, respondent‘s motion to dismiss this appeal is denied.
MCNAMEE, J., did not participate in the consideration or determination of this motion.
Morton Galane, of Las Vegas, for Appellants.
Samuel S. Lionel and Dwight B. Claar, Jr., of Las Vegas, for Respondents R K R Construction Company, W. E. Koerwitz, and A. P. Rapone.
OPINION
By the Court, BADT, C. J.:
The amended complaint in the court below presented a stockholders’ derivative action in three counts. The first two counts sought relief from one Charles L. Horsey, Jr., and one Fred L. Allred, the former being a codirector with Koerwitz and Rapone of Sierra Construction Corporation, and the third count sought relief against R K R Construction Company, Koerwitz, and Rapone. An order of severance was made whereunder this action proceeded against R K R, Koerwitz, and Rapone. A separate action is now pending against Horsey and Allred. Counts 1 and 2 therefore have been dropped, but Count 3 incorporates in such count paragraphs 1, 2, and 3 and paragraphs 10, 11, and 12 of the first count. It omits, however, paragraphs 15 and 16 of Count 3 of the original complaint, the significance whereof is later discussed. Some question has arisen whether paragraphs 1, 2, 3, 10, 11, and 12 of the first count remain incorporated in the present third count.1 We are satisfied that the presentation to the district court on sundry motions pertaining to the third count assumed that the said paragraphs of the first count, thus incorporated by reference, were retained in the third count. We hold for the purposes of this opinion that such paragraphs remained included in the third count, the only count with which we are here concerned.
This count is asserted pursuant to
The motion to dismiss as to R K R, Koerwitz, and Rapone was granted on the ground that the amended complaint failed to state a claim against said parties under the requirements of
Two errors are assigned: “1. That the court erred in holding that the [amended] complaint failed to state a claim against said parties upon which relief could be granted. 2. That the court erred in holding that the [amended] complaint should be dismissed with prejudice.”
1. In determining whether or not the amended complaint stated a claim upon which relief could be granted, we turn to the allegations in question. Paragraphs 1, 2, and 3, incorporated by reference into the third count, recite the ownership of 1,200 shares of the stock of Sierra by appellant Herbert E. Nelson, and the ownership of 1,200 shares of said stock by Wallace R. Nelson, by reason of an agreement by Sierra to sell such shares for a total price of $5,000 on each issue, of which $3,750 remained unpaid by Herbert on his stock and $3,800 by Wallace on his stock, with an agreement to extend time for payment of the balance. Paragraphs 10, 11, and 12, incorporated by reference into the third count, contain
Such is the entire statement in support of the derivative action. At this point it should be further noted that, in such amended complaint, the plaintiffs omitted entirely paragraphs numbered 15 and 16 of their original complaint. These paragraphs referred again to Horsey as a director, alleged a breach by Horsey of his fiduciary duty as a director, and that corporate action could be taken only by three directors, which could be commenced only by the votes of Rapone and Koerwitz, and that none of these directors could vote disinterestedly in the interest of Sierra on the question of a proposed suit against Horsey and a proposed suit against Koerwitz and Rapone; that the bylaws required a majority for corporate action, namely, three out of five directors, and it was therefore impossible for a quorum of disinterested directors to be present and vote on the demand for legal action against Horsey and against Koerwitz and Rapone.
The original paragraph 16, omitted as aforesaid from the amended complaint that was before the lower court and is now before this court, alleged immediate and irreparable injury to Sierra; that it had performed a gross of over $3,000,000 during the fiscal year ending April 30, 1959 with a profit of $90,000; that the conduct of Koerwitz, Rapone, and R K R “threatens to divert a substantial value of construction contracts from Sierra Construction Corporation and threatens to impair and destroy the good will of Sierra Construction Corporation.”
We repeat that the allegations thus contained in the original complaint were, as the district court must have concluded and as we must conclude, deliberately and advisedly omitted from the amended complaint. The asserted cause of action against Horsey, as noted, was removed from the present action, leaving only Koerwitz, Rapone, and R K R. We must then find support for an
3. Appellants contend, however, that it was error for the court to grant the motion to dismiss without giving plaintiffs below an opportunity to amend. We should first note that plaintiffs had amended once, and that by such amendment they had deleted from their original complaint their allegations of irreparable injury and of the impairment and destruction of the good will of Sierra. The granting of leave to amend is largely a matter of discretion in the trial court and failure to grant leave to amend will not be held to be error in the absence of an abuse of such discretion. 3 Moore‘s Federal Practice, 2d Ed., p. 833; Heay v. Phillips, 9 Cir., 201 F.2d 220, 222; Young v. Garrett, 8 Cir., 159 F.2d 634. Nowhere in the record is there any suggestion that plaintiffs could have amended by alleging additional facts to support their cause of action. The nearest approach to this would be in the paragraphs of the original complaint which were deliberately omitted from the amended complaint. Nor in the briefs or oral argument to this court was any suggestion made that the derivative action could be supported by allegation of additional facts if opportunity to amend further were given. We find no abuse of discretion in the trial court‘s action.
Affirmed, with costs.
MCNAMEE, J., concurs.
THOMPSON, J., concurring:
In ordering dismissal of the amended complaint, the district court found that plaintiffs had failed to aver legally sufficient reasons excusing them from attempting to secure the action they desired from the corporate
