Averill v. Barber

2 Silv. Sup. 40
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 9, 1889
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Silv. Sup. 40 (Averill v. Barber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Averill v. Barber, 2 Silv. Sup. 40 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1889).

Opinion

The following opinion was delivered at special term, by

Patterson, J.:

“This action has been tried in a very unsatisfactory manner, not in consequence of any fault of counsel, (for, so far as it has been heard by me, it has been well and effectively presented by both sides,) but from the fact that the whole of the plaintiff’s case has by consent been put in on a record of a trial had a year ago before another judge, and I am obliged to take the evidence into consideration upon his rulings, and to give effect to the testimony then admitted. I have gone over that record with extreme care, and I may say, critically; partly with the view of ascertaining if I could with propriety revise some of the rulings upon evidence. Under the circumstances, I am compelled to adopt those rulings. I should not, perhaps, have made some of them had the questions been presented to me originally, but without the benefit of the arguments made before him, and not knowing what reasons prevailed with the learned judge in admitting evidence, I cannot now undertake to review what he passed upon, and on this submission say what was and what was not (if anything) improperly admitted. It is understood that the exceptions of the defendants to the rulings referred to apply on this trial, and the evidence came in with that understanding. I make these remarks in the outset, because the defendants’ counsel has claimed that I should make specific rulings now on every question of evidence passed upon by the learned judge on the former trial. As the record is made, that cannot be done without virtually ordering a new trial, and subjecting the parties to serious expense and delay. I therefore adopt all the rulings made on the former trial.

“ There are in reality, but two principal subjects of consideration : First. Is the plaintiff entitled to maintain this action as a shareholder in the American Asphalt Company?

[42]*42Second. Was it the duty of defendants, Barber, McLain and Langdon, either by agreement or by reason of their relations, as trustees to the American Asphalt Company, upon their acquiring the control of the two De Smedt patents, to transfer them to or hold them for the benefit of the American company ?

“ 1. The right of action for the matters alleged in the complaint inheres in the American company. The testimony establishes that the officers of that company refused to bring the suit. Thereupon the plaintiff; as a stockholder, was entitled to sue. Although brought in his name as plaintiff, the action is really for the benefit of the corporation, and is to enforce a right of the corporation, and not a private right of the plaintiff. He is personally interested only to the extent that he, as a shareholder, would participate in the benefit of a recovery. The whole theory of stockholders’ actions in cases like the one at bar may be stated in a very few words extracted from the opinion of the court in Brinckerhoff v. Bostwick, 88 N. Y. 52, which was an action by a stockholder, brought against directors of a bank for negligent and improper conduct in their official relations, whereby the bank suffered damage. A request had been made that the receiver of the bank sue the directors, and he declined. The court said (page 56): The causes of action set forth in the complaint are losses and misapplication of the funds of the bank through the negligence and misconduct of its directors. For these losses the bank, if still exercising its corporate functions, would have a claim upon the guilty directors which it could enforce by action, but if it refused to prosecute, or if it still remained under the control of the very directors against whom the action should be brought, the stockholders would have a standing in a court o£ equity to sue in their own names, making the corporation a party defendant. Robinson v. Smith, 3 Paige, 222, 223; Greaves v. Gouge, 69 N. Y. 154; Ang. & A. Corp., § 310. See review of [43]*43cases in Heath v. Railway Co., 8 Blatchf. 347.’ The foregoing citation expresses in brief terms the rule as to the right of the stockholders to maintain an action for a wrong perpetrated by directors to the detriment of the company when the officers of the corporation refuse to institute the ■suit; or where the directors in control of the corporation are the very persons against whom the action is to be brought. The general idea deducible from the rule, is that the stockholder, suing as a substituted plaintiff for the corporation, is merely asserting the corporate rights, and not his own. The cause of action belongs to it, and not to him.

“It is claimed, however, by the defendants, that the plaintiff cannot maintain this action because of certain .alleged false statements and representations made by him as the promoter and organizer of the American Company. The matters referred to grow out of the plaintiff’s declarations as to his patents for making asphalt pavements, and are connected with the history of the organization of the American Company, the transfer to it of the assets of the Trinidad Company (so-called), and involve an inquiry into the circumstances under which the American Company was organized, and under which Barber, McLain and Langdon were induced to or did become associated with the enterprise of the American Company. It is at this point of the case that I feel embarrassed by a mass of evidence taken at the former trial. Some of that evidence was received by the learned judge before whom the plaintiff’s proof was put in (so far as I am able to gather) on the question of the right of the plaintiff to maintain the action at all upon equitable grounds relating to his good faith ; and, looking at an opinion written by that learned judge, I should infer from the conclusion at which he arrived, that he deemed it wise to admit the evidence, rather than reject it, and imperil a possible recovery by the plaintiff on the whole merits. When the case came to me, finding such evidence already [44]*44in, I allowed the defendant to add to it, and so the question is in the ease as to the effect to be given to the alleged statements of the plaintiff (conceding they are established,) made at or before the organization of the American Company, concerning his own patents and his control of the De Smedt patents, and as to other representations referred torn the proof on the record, to which special reference is not now necessary.

“ The action against the three individual defendants is to-hold them to a responsibility incurred in their capacity as directors of the American Company, to compel them to account for property which, it is claimed, they should have acquired for the benefit of that company, but which, it is alleged, they obtained for their own individual benefit, and have held and used for their own behalf; and it is claimed that they a,re to be charged, as trustees for the company, with the value of that property, and with such profits as-they may have realized from the use and control thereof. Alleged frauds of the plaintiff are urged as an affirmative defence going to the direct right to maintain the suit. It is not claimed that he is estopped to sue as a stockholder by reason of any complicity or connivance in the acts of the individual defendants, nor that he has been guilty of laches. If such a claim were made, there is absolutely no foundation for it in the evidence. Such matters, if proved, would have been available to defeat the action, but there is no such proof concerning them as would authorize a finding of fact against the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Silv. Sup. 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/averill-v-barber-nysupct-1889.