205 Ky. 604 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1924
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
Tbe appellants instituted this action as plaintiffs in the court below. There are some twenty-three hundred of them and all of them were stockholders of the Kentucky Rural Credits Association, a Delaware corporation. The history of its creation and short but eventful life together with the part played in same by them and the defendants constitutes their cause of action. It ap
To -summarize briefly, it appears that plaintiffs claim that their respective subscriptions of stock in the Kentucky Rural Credits Association were procured from them by fraud; that therefore they are entitled to have their stock subscriptions cancelled. They claim further that the individuals whom they sue were the officers and directors of the corporation at the time their stock -subscriptions were taken and participated in.the fraud by which their stock subscriptions were procured; that the individual defendants, while acting as directors and officers of the corporation, negligently and wrongfully paid to Van Laningham $201,000.00 and collected and dissipated all the rest of the money paid in by them on their stock subscriptions; that therefore they are entitled to have judgment against those individuals for $201,000.00 they wrongfully and negligently paid to Van Laningham and for all the other money paid in by them on their stock subscriptions.
With reference to the other relief sought by them, after carefully considering the matter we do not understand that the item of $201,000.00 paid to Van Laningham occupies a place to itself or may be treated separately. Eeduced to a final analysis, the thing appellants are undertaking to do, is, upon their theory that each and all. of them were induced by the fraud of appellees to subscribe for stock in the corporation and to pay part of their subscriptions, all of which has been lost by them, to recover from appellees what they so paid and lost as the damages resulting from the fraud. That being true, and it can not but be so, the details as to how and to whom
Section 83 of the Civil Code permits the uniting or joinder of several causes of action upon the subjects of litigation specified in the six subsections of the section “if each affect all the parties to the action, may be brought in the same county, and may be prosecuted by
Section-25 of the Code provides:
“If the question involve a common or general interest of many persons, or if the parties be numerous and it is impracticable to bring all of them before the court within a reasonable time, one or more may sue or defend for the benefit of all.”
The construction given that section of the Code in Bateman, Jr. v. Lou. Gas & Electric Co., 187 Ky. 659, refutes appellants’ contention that under it one suit might be brought for all. There is wholly lacking that community of interest authorizing that to be done. Plaintiffs have no common or general interest in the various causes of action sought to be joined. They have similar but entirely separate and distinct causes of action, which under our Code, as uniformly construed, may not be joined under section 83 or may not be brought into a
Concluding,' the court is of the opinion that each of the parties plaintiff has his action for deceit against such of the defendants as may have participated in the fraud; that they are separate and distinct causes of action; and that there is no such community of interest as is contemplated by either section 83 or section 25 of the Civil Code as to authorize the joinder of the various actions or a single suit by some for all the parties plaintiff.
Wherefore, the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.