91 Mo. 217 | Mo. | 1886
This case is here from a judgment sustaining- separate demurrers to the petition. The defendants are the St. Louis, New Orleans & Foreign Dispatch Company; the St. Louis and New Orleans Transportation Company, known as the Transportation Company, and the St. Louis & Mississippi Valley Transportation Company. The plaintiffs are three of the shareholders in the Dispatch Company, and they own three hundred and thirty of the one thousand shares of stock. The Dispatch Company was organized for the purpose of soliciting freight and making contracts for the transportation of the same by means and through the agency of inland and ocean carriers. It issues through bills of lading, but is not a carrier. At the dates hereafter named the Transportation Company was engaged in moving merchandise upon the Mississippi river. On the fifth of March, 1881, these two corporations made a written contract to continue for five years, whereby the Dispatch Company agreed to open offices and appoint agents to solicit business and make contracts at St.. Louis and New Orleans, in the United States, and at Liverpool, England, and at such other places as might be agreed upon. For the freight received and turned over by the Dispatch Company to the Transportation Company, the latter agreed to pay the former ten per centum of the amount by it earned and charged for the carriage of the merchandise over its own line.
The petition proceeds to state that the Dispatch Company, pursuant to the contract, established agencies' in the United States and foreign countries, at an outlay of twenty-five thousand dollars, made contracts for, and
Plaintiffs sue for themselves and ail other stockholders, and state that more than a year previous to the commencement of this suit, the stockholders, by resolution, instructed the directors to commence a suit in the name of the company to vindicate their rights, which they refused to do ; that the present officers obtained a majority of the stock for the purpose of preventing the corporation from asserting its rights ;
The demurrers present the question whether these plaintiffs can maintain this suit. It is to be observed, at the outset, that the directors who refuse to bring the suit are not made defendants. It is not a suit to require any of the officers to account for their maladministration of the affairs of the company. It is an effort by the plaintiffs, as stockholders, in their own names, to collect damages due to the Dispatch Company from the Transportation Company, arising from a breach of a contract — a contract which had been made in the legitimate conduct of the affairs of the two corporations. The cause of action accrued to the corporation, and not to the shareholders ; and the general rule undoubtedly is, that all such suits must be brought by, and in the name of, the corporation. The question, then, is, whether this case comes within any of the exceptions to that rule, for there are exceptions as well established as the rule itself.
The vice-chancellor, in Foss v. Harbottle, 2 Hare, 492, so often cited, after speaking of the general rule, made these remarks: “If a case should arise of injury to a corporation by some of its members, for which no adequate remedy remained, except that of a snip by individual corporators in their private characters, and asking, in such character, the protection of those rights to which, in their, corporate character, they were entitled, I cannot but think that the principle so forcibly laid by Lord Cottenham in Wallworth v. Holt, 4 Myl. & Cr. 635, and other cases, would apply, and the claims
Where there has been a waste, or misapplication, of corporate funds by the officers or agents of the company, a suit in equity may be brought by the corporation to compel them to account for the waste, or misapplication. “But, as a court of equity never permits a wrong to go unredressed, merely for the sake of form, if it appear that the directors of a corporation refuse, in such case, to prosecute, by collusion with those who had made themselves answerable by their negligence or fraud, or if the corporation is still under the control of those who must be the defendants in the suit, the stockholders, who are the real parties in interest, will be permitted to file a bill in their own names, making the corporation a party defendant.” Ang. & Ames Corp. [11 Ed.] sec. 312.
Mr. Pomeroy, in his work on Equity Jurisprudence, section 1095, states the rule as follows: “Wherever a cause of action exists primarily in behalf of the corporation, against directors, officers, and others, for wrongful dealing with corporate property, or wrongful exercise of corporate franchises, so that the remedy should regularly be obtained through a suit by, and in the name of, the corporation, and the corporation, either actually or virtually, refuses to institute, or prosecute, such a suit, then, in order to prevent a failure of justice, an action may be brought and maintained by a stockholder, or stockholders.”
These principles of equity jurisprudence have been well considered, and applied in a number of adjudicated cases. The following are some of them: Brewer v. Boston Theatre, 104 Mass. 378; Peabody v. Flint, 6 Allen, 52; Robinson v. Smith, 3 Paige, 222; Pond v. Railroad, 12 Blatchf. 280; Detroit v. Dean, 106 U. S. 537; Hawes v. Oakland, 104 U. S. 450. The relief awarded is often of a preventive character, and, in
But, in all these cases, the defaulting directors, or officers, were made defendants, and the suits were primarily against them. That the suit must be primarily against them, is also the deduction to be made from the above extracts from the text books. The relief, when awarded against other persons, flows incidentally from their complicity with the officers in the wrong- complained of. No officers of the plaintiffs’ corporation are parties to this suit. It is simply a suit against the debtor company only, to collect a debt or. damages due to the Dispatch Company, and we do not understand that a suit for such a purpose only comes within the exceptions of the general rule before stated. If these managing officers were sued for the abuse of the trust imposed upon them as officers, they might possibly assign a good reason why the suit should not be brought, and why the affairs of the corporation should not be taken out of their hands. They are the proper persons to show, if they can, why the management of the affairs of the company should not be taken out of their hands, as must be done to sustain this suit.
The case specially cited by the plaintiffs, as giving them a right to prosecute this suit, is that of Hawes v. Oakland, 104 U. S. 450. There a stockholder filed his bill against his company, the directors thereof, and the city. The complaint was that the city demanded, without compensation, water for certain municipalpurposes, to which demand the company yielded, to the great loss
If the matters stated in the petition are true, the plaintiffs have a complete remedy under sections 948-9, Revised Statutes, and when a receiver is appointed that officer of the court will stand invested with authority to sue for all demands and debts due to the company. This result renders it useless to discuss the other questions raised by the demurrers. We may say, in conclusion, that we are all agreed that, from the statements of the petition, the new Transportation Company is liable for the debts of the old Transportation Company; certainly, to the full extent of the value of all of the property received from the old company.
The judgment of the circuit court is, therefore, .affirmed without prejudice.