299 Mass. 547 | Mass. | 1938
This suit in equity was brought by the plaintiff in behalf of himself and all other stockholders of the defendant corporation (hereafter called the corporation) who may decide to join herein and become parties plaintiff. There are allegations in the bill setting forth numerous acts of wrongdoing and faithlessness, in connection with the organization and management of the corporation, by the individual defendant, who was a director, the treasurer and general manager of the corporation. These allegations comprise, among other matters, payment of excessive salaries to himself, the spending of a large part of his time in undertakings disconnected with the business of the corporation, misappropriation and misspending of funds of the corporation, the issuance of incorrect and misleading statements of the financial condition of the corporation, the causing to be declared, at a time when the corporation was in no condition to declare such a dividend, a dividend of forty per cent to repay his defalcations, and forcing the corporation to borrow $15,000 to that end. The defendants filed a demurrer, an answer and a plea in bar. After a hearing, the plea in bar was sustained and a decree entered dismissing the bill with costs. The appeal of the plaintiff brings the case here.
The plea in bar was in substance this: In January, 1935, the plaintiff brought a suit in equity against the defendants. A demurrer to that bill was sustained. Subsequently, three successive amended bills of complaint were filed in that suit, to each of which demurrers by the defendants were sustained.
It appears from Whitney v. Whitney, 296 Mass. 13, that the demurrer was sustained on the ground of multifariousness in that it was' alleged in that bill that the individual defendant had, without right, used the credit, funds and property of the corporation for his own private purposes; and it was also alleged that the individual defendant had, without right, issued shares of stock in the corporation, which belonged to the plaintiff, to the individual defendant, thus making an improper division of the capital stock to the harm of the plaintiff and to the advantage of the individual defendant. The main point argued in the case at bar is
The defence of res judicata may be raised by a plea in equity. Eastman Marble Co. v. Vermont Marble Co. 236 Mass. 138, 148. Franklin v. North Weymouth Cooperative Bank, 283 Mass. 275, 279. Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Royal, 291 Mass. 487, 491.
In the case at bar there is no finding of facts. There is no report of evidence. The case was heard simply on the plea, and the decree dismissing the bill was entered. In such circumstances the entry of the decree imports the finding of all facts adverse to the plaintiff which are permissible under the pleadings. Brogna v. Commissioner of Banks, 248 Mass. 241, 243. Levinson v. Connors, 269 Mass. 209. Pouliot v. West India Fruit Co. 283 Mass. 182, 184. Milne v. Walsh, 285 Mass. 151, 153. The trial judge in sustaining the plea in the case at bar must have found that the present bill is for the same cause of action as that which formed the basis of the earlier proceeding. There must also have been a finding that the plaintiff was permitted to amend that bill. It is a general rule that a judgment for the defendant founded on a demurrer is not a bar to a second action. The reason for the rule is that such a judgment commonly is based not on the merits but upon the insufficiency of the statement of the cause of action. Wilbur v. Gilmore, 21 Pick. 250, 253. Foster v. Busteed, 100 Mass. 409, 412. Abbott v. Bean, 295 Mass. 268, 273. An exception to that general rule has grown up in cases where the plaintiff has been given leave to amend his pleading and has declined to amend and a judgment has thereafter been entered founded on the sustaining of the defendant’s demurrer. In such cases a judgment operates as a bar to a second action. In such a case “the judgment rendered on demurrer commonly is treated as based on the merits.” Keown v. Keown, 231 Mass. 404, 408. It is well settled that in appropriate circumstances a judgment rendered on a demurrer is as conclusive as one rendered upon the hearing of evidence. Old Dominion Copper Mining & Smelting Co. v. Bigelow, 203 Mass. 159, 205. In these con
Decree affirmed with costs.