70 Ind. 147 | Ind. | 1880
— The action in this case was by Wallace H. Dodge, against Henry G. Niles, James Q. C. Van Den Bosch and William N. Dunn, and the complaint was substantially as follows:
That on the 20th day of December, 1870, the defendants, with William W. Ferris. Seward E. White, James Welliver and Alfred H. Andrews, united themselves, under the then existing Iuavs of the State of Indiana, by certain aliñóles of association, a copy of which was filed and marked as “ Exhibit A,” into a corporation knoAvnby the name of the Andrews School and Church Furniture Company, with the capital and for the purpose in said articles set forth; that, of the capital stock, the said Niles oivned the sum of two thousand five hundred dollars, the said Van Den Bosch the sum of five thousand dollars, and the said Dunn a sum unknown to the plaintiff; that said articles of association ivere duly filed in the office of the recorder of St. Joseph county, and a duplicate thereof in the office of the Secretary of State, both of the State of Indiana; and that thereupon said corporation proceeded to do business as specified in said articles of association, in the toivn of Mishaivaka, in said county of St. Joseph ; that the defendants, with the said SeWard E. White, since deceased, were named in said articles of association as the directors of said corporation ; that the defendants thereupon assumed the duties of such directors and the management of said corporation, and so continued as such directors, and in the management of said corporation, until the time of the commission of the grievances complained of; that, by the laws of the State of Indiana, it was the. duty of the defendants, as such directors, to an
Summons was not served upon Dunn, and the cause was continued as to him. Niles and. Van Den Bosch de
Issue, trial by jury, verdict and judgment against Niles and Van Den Bosch, the appellants, for $280.43 and costs.
The appellee has filed no brief ; consequently no answer has beeu made here to the various objections urged by the appellants to the proceedings below.
The first question presented is that of the sufficiency of the complaint. The complaint perhaps sufficiently averred that the defendants,with others,had formed themselves into a corporation, Traber v. Bright, 32 Ind.69,butit did not state the purpose for which the corporation was organized, nor any facts from which the purpose of .its organization could be fairly or reasonably inferred. The name assumed by the organization indicated nothing as to the particular business to which it was to be devoted.
This was clearly a material omission, and one not in any proper way supplied by the filing of a copy of the articles of association with the complaint, such articles not constituting the foundation of the plaintiff’s cause of action, and hence not becoming a part of the complaint. The Excelsior Draining Company v. Brown, 38 Ind. 384 ; Knight v. The F. and W. Turnpike Co., 45 Ind. 134; Combs v. Etter, 49 Ind. 535; Parsons v. Milford, 67 Ind. 489.
It was necessary that there should have been some averment in the complaint, as to the object for which the corporation was formed, to enable the court to determine whether the organization was of a character authorized by some statute, and to know what duties the defendants were required to perform as directors of such corporation. But conceding that enough was alleged to authorize the inference that the corporation was organized under the act of May 20th, 1852, and the acts amendatory thereof, 1 R. S. 1876, p. 619, we are of the' opinion that the complaint did not make out a case under that act.
If the corporation shall fail to make such report, and any person or persons shall be misled or deceived and damaged thereby, then all the officers who shall have failed to make such report shall be .jointly and severally liable for all damages resulting from such failure on their part, while they remain stockholders in the corporation. It is, therefore, from the failure of the corporation to make the required report, that a right of action accrues for such failure, against its delinquent officers.
In the complaint before us, it was charged that the defendants, while acting as directors, had, during a series of years, failed to make any report of the condition of the-corporation. That was clearly not equivalent to an. averment that the corporation had not made any such report during those years. The number of directors in charge after the first year was not alleged. For aught that was shown, the defendants may have constituted only a minority of such directors, after that time, without whom the proper reports could have been made by the majority, acting in conjunction with the president.
Then again, the manner in which the plaintiff was misled and deceived by the alleged misconduct of the defendants was not, we think, charged with sufficient certainty. Steele v. Moore, 54 Ind. 52.
Our attention has been called to some other manifest uncertainties in the allegations of the complaint, but, as.
The judgment is reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.