54 F. 985 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Vermont | 1893
According to the bill the orator has 300 out of 4,000 shares of the stock of the Standard Electric Company, acquired ou representation that it was fully paid up from the individual defendants, who have a majority of the whole, none of which is in fact paid up, and have managed the company for the benefit of the E. <& T. Fairbanks Company, in which they are largely interested. The prayer is for payment of the stock; an accounting between the two companies, and determination of the orator’s claim for misrepresentation, misapplication of funds, and violation of trust; and the general prayer. All the defendants but the electric company have demurred. The bill shows no cause of action in the orator’s own right against the Fairbanks Company or against the individual defendants for the stock or breach of trust. Such claims belong wholly to the electric company, and the orator has no right to prosecute them unless that company has refused, on Ms express request, and by the refusal given him a cause of complaint against both. Hawes v. Oakland, 104 U. S. 450. In