184 N.Y. 46 | NY | 1906
This action is brought by a stockholder of the Virginia Passenger and Power Company to redress certain wrongs alleged to have been inflicted on that company by the defendants Frank and Helen Gould, and to have certain certificates of shares of the capital stock of said company and certain of its mortgage bonds held by said defendants adjudged void, or in lieu thereof that the said defendants pay the company their value. The complaint is inartificially drawn and is so voluminous, and most of the questions presented on this appeal are of so little general interest or application, as not to warrant us in incumbering the reports with the details of the charges. It is sufficient that we state our conclusions on the points raised by the demurrers and give briefly our reasons therefor.
The several grounds of the demurrers are: First, that there *50 is a defect of parties defendant; second, that separate causes of action are improperly joined, and, third, that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The first ground of demurrer is based on the demand found, in the prayer for relief that the directors of the power company, who committed the unlawful acts alleged, be held responsible for any loss or deficiency occasioned by their conduct. As it is not even stated in the complaint who these directors were, nor are they made parties to the action, it seems rather difficult to imagine on what theory such relief was asked. Nevertheless, as their presence is in no way necessary to a complete determination of the controversy between the plaintiff and the defendants Gould, the prayer for relief referred to may be deemed mere surplusage and the failure to join them as defendants in no way can prejudice these defendants. This ground of demurrer is bad.
The other grounds of demurrer can be most readily considered together. The claim of the plaintiff being derivative he was required to allege in his complaint, first, a good cause of action in favor of the Virginia Power Company; second, facts which authorized his intervention and the institution of his suit in behalf of his corporation. (Kavanaugh v. Commonwealth TrustCo.,
But though, as we have held, the complaint does state a good cause of action in favor of the power company against both Frank and Helen Gould, we think it fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action in the plaintiff's favor. In a derivative action of the character of the present one "the complaint should allege that the corporation, on being applied to, refused to prosecute, and that this averment constitutes an essential element of the cause of action." (Flynn v. BrooklynCity R.R. Co.,
The orders of the Appellate Division and of the Special *54 Term should be reversed and judgment rendered for the defendants on demurrer, with costs in all the courts, with leave to the plaintiff to serve an amended complaint within twenty days on the payment of such costs. The first and third questions certified should be answered in the negative and the second question answered in the affirmative.
O'BRIEN, HAIGHT, VANN, WERNER, WILLARD BARTLETT and HISCOCK, JJ., concur.
Ordered accordingly.