188 Misc. 583 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1947
These are motions by the individual and cor- ■ porate defendants for an order dismissing so much of the complaint as seeks to recover for acts committed prior to January 10, 1946, on the ground that plaintiff has not legal capacity to sue. ID the alternative an order is sought dismissing so much of the complaint as seeks to recover for acts committed prior to January 9, 1944, on the ground that such recovery is barred by the Statute of Limitations.
The motions also ask for an order requiring plaintiff to serve an amended complaint omitting large amounts of alleged irrelevant matter. This branch of the motion may be disposed of at the outset. A reading of the complaint shows that all of . the matters objected to are appropriate for one reason or another to the proper pleading of plaintiff’s cause of action. This part of the motion, therefore, is denied.
This is a stockholder’s derivative suit and is brought by the plaintiff, who owns 7,000 shares of stock, or one fifth of the company, as a stockholder and as a director of the corporation, alleging that some of the individual defendants received compensation after the contracts under which it was due were terminated; that defendant A. J. Abrahams caused the corporation State Laundry Co., Inc., to make payments to him
All of the specific allegations of wrongdoing concern definite sums of money alleged to have been illegally paid out or abstracted by the individual defendants. To recover such moneys six years are allowed on the theory of money had and received. As was recently said in Myer v. Myer (271 App. Div. 465
It is evident that the six-year statute applies to everything except, possibly, some matters which may be proved under the general allegations of paragraphs 35 to 37, 40 to 42, 44 and 45. If any such matters turn out to be mere waste of corporate assets, then the three-year statute is applicable, but the determination of this must await the trial.
The main part of the motion concerns the standing of Claire Singer, as a stockholder and director, to represent the corporation for the recovery of any wrongs committed prior to January 10, 1946. The moving affidavits allege that plaintiff did not
Defendants claim, however, that as an individual stockholder plaintiff has no standing in this action to recover for any wrongs done prior to January 10, 1946. Section 61 of the G-eneral Corporation Law provides: “ In any action brought by a shareholder in the right of a foreign or domestic corporation it must be made to appear that the plaintiff was a stockholder at the time of the transaction of which he complains or that his stock thereafter devolved upon him by operation of law.” It will be noticed that the section does not require, as seems to be claimed by defendants, that the stockholder must be a stockholder of record at the time of the transaction of which he complains. Under the Federal decisions, on which the statute is modeled, it has been held that it is sufficient if the stockholder is equitably entitled to be such.
In the present instance, plaintiff’s rights stem from her father’s will. Her father died testate May 23, 1943, leaving one fifth of his stock holdings to Claire Abrahams Singer, the plaintiff. The fact that the executors did not see fit to transfer the stock until January 10, 1946, should not bar the plaintiff from a recovery (Boum v. Sporborg, 146 App. Div. 537; Hurt v. Cotton States Fertiliser Co., 145 F. 2d 293, certiorari denied 324 U. S. 844; Willcox v. Harriman Securities Corporation, 10 F. Supp. 532). I hold that insofar as the plaintiff, Claire Abrahams Singer, is suing as a stockholder, she is entitled to claim damages done to the corporation from the date her father died, at which time she became equitably entitled to one fifth of the shares of stock in the corporation.
There is no need to serve an amended complaint. The exact applicability of the Statute of Limitations and of the amount of recovery, if any, which is based upon the date of the acquisition of the stock, are matters for determination as questions of fact on the trial.
The point made by the defendant Cohen that he should not be held liable on the ground that he was neither a director nor
For the reasons set out above the motions are in all respects denied.
Affd, without opinion 296 N. Y. 979.— [Rep.
See, also, Katz v. Braz, 188 Misc. 581, affd, without opinion 271 App. Div„ 970.— [Rep.