Two appeals have been consolidated for hearing. The service of summons in each of two actions brought in the District Court for the Southern District of New York was vacated and the actions dis *466 missed. As nothing turns upon any distinction between the actions, what is hereinafter said in respect to the cause in which appellant is the sole plaintiff will suffice also to dispose of the appeal in the action in which his wife is joined as a party plaintiff. Both of them are residents of the Southern District of New York.
Ralph J. Schwarz was for many years a stockholder, vice-president and director of the defendant Artcraft Silk Hosiery Mills, Inc., a Delaware corporation engaged in the manufacture and sale of hosiery. Its factory is in Philadelphia and there defendant, Jacob Kugelman, its president, had a residence though his domicile was in Florida. The corporate defendant for many years has maintained a sales office in New York City in charge of the plaintiff as to the nature of which more will be said later.
The plaintiff had a contract with Kugelman which provided that whenever plaintiff left the employ of the corporate defendant he would sell to Kugelman his stock in the defendant corporation which 'Kugelman agreed to buy and pay for at its then 'book value. The contract provided for arbitration as to the book value if the parties could not agree. In June 1939, the employment of Schwarz was terminated and he and Kugelman made an unsuccessful effort about the 20th of June to agree upon the price at which Kugelman should take over the Schwarz stock and pay for it. The discussion was not wholly amicable and Schwarz threatened to sue but Kugelman persuaded him to think things over for a few days and then'they were to get together again to try to settle. It was understood by both that this would be done and that until, there had been another opportunity to confer about the matter Schwarz should bring no suit. Kugelman wanted to have the conference at his home in Abington, Philadelphia, and expected Schwarz to call him from New York by telephone during the following week to make arrangements for it. Kugelman did not, however, hear from Schwarz and on July 5th, 1939 telephoned from Philadelphia to Schwarz in New York. Thereafter they had some correspondence about the matter. Schwarz insisted upon meeting Kugelman in New York while Kugelman wanted the meeting in Philadelphia. Schwarz succeeded in having his way about it and a tentative agreement was made to meet on Monday, July 17th at the Empire State Club in the City of New York. In making this arrangement Kugelman wrote Schwarz in part as follows; “ * * *; I wjll make it a point to meet you, as you suggest, on Monday: but I think, to be sure, it would be a good idea if you phoned me at Westhampton, Long Island 1150 on Sunday evening, preferably- around six-thirty to seven o’clock, and I will know definitely what my plans are for Monday morning.”
The reference to Westhampton on Long Island was to the summer home Kugelman rented there and where he was accustomed to spend his week-ends with his family. He was planning to spend that week-end there with his family and did so. Schwarz telephoned him at Westhampton as requested and Kugelman then told Schwarz he preferred to meet him on Tuesday the 18th in New York instead of on Monday. The meeting so postponed at Kugelman’s request was had in New York City and toward the end of it a summons was served upon Kugelman as an individual defendant and also upon him as the president of the defendant corporation in each of the actions involved in this appeal. Nothing need now be said about the nature of either action aside from stating that in one the plaintiff charged Kugelman with misfeasance as an officer of the corporation and sought an accounting and in the other the charge was made that the corporation’s books have not been properly kept and did not reflect the actual value of the plaintiff’s stock which Kugelman is bóund to buy. The trial judge vacated the service in both actions on the ground that Kugelman was fraudulently induced to meet Schwarz in order that the service could be made upon him in New York.
It is now settled in New York that misstatements which mislead a defendant and induce him to appear where service may be, and is, made upon him which otherwise would not have then been made afford no ground for vacating the service provided the trick does not lure the person served into the jurisdiction. Gumperz v. Hofmann,
It was shown that Kugelman voluntarily came into the jurisdiction when he
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went to Westhampton to spend the weekend at his summer home. Under Rule 4(f) of the Rules of Civil Procedure (28 U.S.C. A. following section 723c) process could have been served upon him anywhere in New York. See Devier v. George Cole Motor Co., D.C.,
Schwarz was alleged to be a stockholder and also a director of the corporation. In Philipbar v. Derby, 2 Cir.,
As a director, Schwarz could, and did, bring the suit for an accounting by virtue of .the provisions of Secs. 60 and 61 of the General Corporation Law of New York (Consol.Laws, c. 23). Sec. 60 provides for the subjection of directors or officers of a corporation to liability for neglect, mismanagement, waste, and non-performance of their corporate duties. It is substantially the same as the old common law liability. But it was held to apply to foreign corporations. Miller v. Quincy,
Reversed.
