26 A.D.2d 67 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1966
The defendants appeal from a judgment entered in favor of plaintiff following a nonjury trial. By this action, brought on the basis of the pleading of many separate causes of action, the plaintiff sought recovery on several theories for injuries and damages in the alleged frustration of plaintiff’s interests in a contract, dated May 22, 1958, between Crescent Line, Inc. (Crescent) and a corporation, Seawind Compañía, S. A., in which plaintiff was a 40% stockholder.
The plaintiff and the defendant Christophides, by virtue of their interests in a prior steamship operation, known as the Pegasus Line, had possessed alleged valuable good will in the matter of contacts and association locally and with certain foreign firms and agents in the business of the shipping of General Motors products from the United States to ports in the Near Bast. The Pegasus'Line, however, was an unsuccessful operation and, eventually, plaintiff and Christophides formed a Panamanian corporation, Seawind Compañía, S. A. (Seawind), to hold and to contract with reference to their interests in the Near East shipping business. The plaintiff and Christophides each held 40% of the issued stock of said corporation with the remaining 20% held by third persons who had lost money in the Pegasus Line venture. On May 22, 1958, Seawind and Crescent entered into a written contract for the taking over by the latter of the shipping service from the United States to the ports in the Near East, with provisions for payment to Seawind of a certain commission based on gross manifests and of a share of the net profits realized on such service. Crescent entered upon the performance of the contract and about one quarter of the steamship cargo shipped over its lines consisted of General Motors cargo carried to the Near East. Crescent did pay Sea-wind substantial sums under the contract as commissions upon the gross manifests, but the Crescent operations were also unsuccessful and there were no net profits. Finally, in February and March, 1960, Crescent contracted to and did sell its steamship lines and all of its property, assets and good will, including the shipping service to the Near East, to the defendant, Kulukundis Lines, Ltd. (Kulukundis). As a result thereof, the contract between Crescent and Seawind has been repudiated and terminated, and this action is brought by plaintiff against Crescent, Kulukundis, Christophides and other defendants to recover for alleged wrongful acts in the conversion and destruction of plaintiff’s alleged interest in Seawind and his alleged valuable business opportunities in the Near East shipping service.
The breach, if any, of the Seawind contract and the wrongful acts of defendants, if any, inducing the breach of the contract and resulting in the alleged loss to Seawind of a share in the Near East shipping profits, are not actionable by plaintiff on an individual basis. The corporate entity may not be disregarded so as to permit the plaintiff to sue individually for damages sustained by the alleged wrongs of the defendants. (See Brock v. Poor, 216 N. Y. 387; Greenfield v. Denner, 6 N Y 2d 867, revg. on dissenting opinion of Breitel, J., 6 A D 2d 263; Berzin v. Litton Ind., 24 A D 2d 740.)
The trial court further found (and the record supports the findings) that none “ of the defendants were joint venturers with Routsis [plaintiff] ’ ’; and that there was no ‘ ‘ fiduciary relationship between Routsis and * * * the defendants.” The joint venture, if any, as originally agreed upon, became merged into the corporate enterprises of Seawind and Orescent, Under the circumstances, plaintiff has not established that he possessed rights of value extrinsic to the corporate entity of Seawind, and, therefore, he does not have an individual cause of action for the alleged wrongs of the defendants. (See Miglietta v. Kennecott Copper Corp., 25 A D 2d 57.)
Finally, the plaintiff has failed to establish any wrongful conduct on the part of defendants. He has failed to prove that the transfer by Crescent to Kulukundis of the Near East shipping service, was other than legitimate and proper business transaction. Crescent was sustaining substantial losses in its ship
Upon the record, and on the law and the facts, the defendants were entitled to a judgment dismissing plaintiff’s complaint. The judgment for plaintiff should be reversed, on the law and the facts, without costs or disbursements to any party, and judgment should be directed for defendants, without costs or disbursements.
Botein, P. J., Breitel, Rabin and Eager, JJ., concur.
Judgment unanimously reversed, on the law and on the facts, without costs or disbursements to any party, and judgment directed in favor of the defendants-appellants-respondents dismissing the complaint.