127 P. 984 | Or. | 1912
delivered the opinion of the court.
“I was incorporated for the purpose of supplying water to my stockholders through the medium of. my canal. Therefore I am a trustee of an express trust for that purpose. Defendant has wrongfully- diverted the water which it was my duty to have furnished my consumers, and they are thereby damaged; and I, as their trustee, have a right to bring this action to collect for them such damages.”
While for some purposes a corporation, as between itself and its stockholders, may be regarded as a trustee for the purpose of protecting its stockholders, we find no case in which it has been held that it can in such an action recover damages suffered by a considerable number of stockholders not united in interest, or by a single stockholder. The cases cited by plaintiff as holding a contrary doctrine are: Farmers’ Independent Ditch Co. v. Agricultural Ditch Co. et al., 22 Colo. 513 (45 Pac. 444; 55 Am. St. Rep. 149) ; Thorpe v. Tenem Ditch Co., 1 Wash. 566 (20 Pac. 588) ; Riverside Water Co. v. Sargent, 112 Cal. 230 (44 Pac. 560). But all these cases are
“The corporation was not farming the lands on which the crops were sown that suffered from the failure to deliver the water. They were the property of third persons who were not parties to the action in which the writ was issued, and who were not nominated in the bond on which the suit is based. To extend the right to recover to include these losses under such circumstances would surely violate the well-founded doctrine that nothing shall be allowed which is not the actual, natural, and proximate result of the wrong committed.”
It may be true, as suggested by counsel for plaintiff, that an irrigating corporation should be permitted to
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.