43 A.D.2d 785 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1973
Order unanimously modified in accordance with memorandum and as modified affirmed, without costs. Memorandum: Plaintiff’s right to examine defendant corporation upon all the causes of action stated in the complaint is limited where she has not established a right to an accounting. It is clear from the instant record that the sole basis for plaintiff’s claim of stock ownership in the defendant is her bald assertion thereof in the complaint. There is no supporting documentary evidence which buttresses plaintiff’s claims to ownership in defendant corporation. It is generally held that the right to an accounting is dependent upon the establishment of the underlying liability which gives rise to the duty to account. “The right to an accounting based upon the existence of a partnership agreement must be established before examination of the account itself may be had. At this stage of the proceeding there is no basis in the record for ordering the production of defendants’ records and books of account (Koerber v. Rutherford, 262 App. Div. 869; Melzer v. Melzer, 274 App. Div. 1028). Plaintiff contends that he requires the account books to determine when his cause of action accrued. Again, no such cause of action has been established as yet which would warrant the production of the account books for this purpose.” (Corwin v. Kaufmam, 37 A D 2d 838.) The same position is stated in Weinstein-Korn-Miller, New York Civil Practice (vol. 3A, par. 3101.18): “ The courts distinguish between examinations relating to the right to an accounting and those pertaining to the accounting itself, permitting the former but denying the latter until the right to an accounting has been established. The rule is designed to avoid needless revelation of the contents of the examinee’s books. Accordingly, examination will be permitted where there is no preliminary issue which can be determined without the accounting.” To the extent that plaintiff seeks to examine the books, records and documents of defendant corporation in order to establish her right as a stockholder to determine to what use the assets and income of the defendant have been put, such examination should not be permitted until plaintiff establishes her right to seek such relief. Until plaintiff establishes her legal status as a stockholder relief in the nature of an account of discovery of the books and records looking