Beadleston v. Alley

7 N.Y.S. 747, 4 Silv. Sup. 595, 28 N.Y. St. Rep. 89, 55 Hun 605, 1889 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1284
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 10, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 7 N.Y.S. 747 (Beadleston v. Alley) 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
Beadleston v. Alley, 7 N.Y.S. 747, 4 Silv. Sup. 595, 28 N.Y. St. Rep. 89, 55 Hun 605, 1889 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1284 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1889).

Opinion

Pratt, J.

The attitude of the trust company, and| those whom it represents in this case, does not commend itself to any especially favorable consideration. It was appointed receiver of the mining company April 8, 1884, in a sequestration suit brought by Bobbins upon a judgment in his favor for some $20,673.51. On May 3, 1887, the plaintiff, a stockholder of the company, by letter requested it to bring an action against the other defendants for the relief sought by this action. After six days the company replied by letter through its counsel, from which it may be fairly presumed that they had satisfied themselves that such an action could not be maintained, and formally refused to sue. Thereupon the plaintiff and two or three of the smaller stockholders, who were clients of Mr. La Grange, and to whom alone he owed professional duties in this matter, brought separate suits, joining the trust company as defendant, as they were bound to do, to compel Alley, Harpending, and others to account for alleged misconduct in fiduciary relations towards the mining company, whereby the rights of stockholders had been injured. This suit was in behalf of the plaintiff and other stockholders, but it was, nevertheless, her suit, and wholly subject to her control. The trust •company quite unnecessarily appeared and served an answer, in which it demanded that the complaint should be dismissed, with costs. There is no intimation that it, or any other defendant, ever sought any affirmative relief as against any other defendant, and certain it is that no defendant ever served its or his answer against any other defendant. Under those circumstances, I think we must hold that since the Code (sections 521, 1204) no relief could have been granted as between these co-defendants, unless in consequence of •some duty which arose out of the peculiar relations of the trust company to -the action,—a point which I shall examine later on. Having commenced the suit, plaintiff sought the assistance of other parties interested in the mining company. None of them ever formally came into the action as parties, so that they were ever in a position of peril from liability for costs. They finally -concluded that it was desirable for them to participate in the trial; but they did not depend upon the plaintiff or her counsel in that respect at all. On the contrary, they employed their own counsel; and, as I judge, pretty clearly •drew the distinction between their position and that of the plaintiff. Their ■counsel was careful on the trial to state to the court that he appeared for them, which was another form of stating that he did not appear for the plaintiff. I do not overlook the agreement between Mr. La Grange and Mr. Prince, but that seems to have been purely personal, so far, at least, as Mr. Prince was concerned; and if any wrong has been done there, it may be fully redressed in a proper action for that purpose. True, these outside stockholders did pay •some money towards the prosecution of the action, but it was all done with the express qualification that they were not parties, or entitled to the rights ■of parties; certainly not subject to the liabilities of parties. They wanted to fish from the plaintiff’s boat, and with her tackle, and simply brought along their ■own lunch, and offered plaintiff some of it in consideration of her courtesy in permitting them to fish at all. Nothing can be plainer than that they had no standing whatever in the action. The best commentary on this phase of the •case is that they do not now claim any standing in court. We may therefore ■dismiss all allegations by way of criticism, whether moral or legal, on plain[749]*749tiff’s conduct in settling the case, so far as they are concerned, unless, perhaps, the receiver may in some way represent them.

It is thus far plain that the plaintiff had the right to settle her own grievance against the parties who had done her the alleged wrong; and it was none of the other stockholders’ business how or by what means she did it. Indeed, I fail to see why they were not treated with fair courtesy and reasonable consideration in this very particular. Mr. La Grange seems to have fully conferred with the counsel about all negotiations for the settlement; and she did not cut loose from them until they made demands for greater proportions than she was disposed to accept, and thus became a positive obstruction to her disposition to settle; They had been invited to ride; she simply refused to allow them to drive. She stood alone liable for the costs of the action, the event of which was by no means certain. Indeed the learned trial judge had clearly expressed grave doubt about his conclusion to sustain the action at all. Hence, the settlement and discontinuance of the action fall wholly within, and are justified by the rule established in this district in the Treinain Case, 11 Hun, 286, unless there is something in the peculiar relation of the trust company to the action,—a point which I will now examine.

Let us in the first place observe that the trust company’s rights are strictissimi juris. Under the circumstances disclosed on the trial, it would seem to have been a pretty strong case for original action on its part. Perhaps it was not originally bound to bring the suit unless indemnified against expenses and costs; but no such question arose. Its refusal to act was placed on other grounds. Its lawyers said: “As at present informed of the rights of the parties, we must decline,” etc. This was, therefore, a clear election 'that it would not act, because it then thought that there was no cause of action. It therefore elected to have nothing to do with the action voluntarily. Plaintiff then brought the company in as a formal party. Again did it have an opportunity of coming in and asking the benefit of the action; but it did not do that. It might have suffered default without harm to itself, for it cannot he presumed that the court having discretion over the matter of costs would have suffered it to be injured in that respect if it had not appeared at all. But it did appear, and did repudiate all responsibility for the action by a pro ■- tical denial, or that which amounted to a denial, of the plaintiff’s material allegations. It therefore did all that it could to obstruct the plaintiff, and prevent her from the establishment of her alleged rights at that stage of the action. Doubtless that was not the motive, but it was nevertheless the result, of its conduct. Hot only this, it asked costs for being thus involuntarily brought into the controversy; and thus, in every way, did this trust company manifest its refusal to avail itself of this action, instead of interposing a general answer, pleading its ignorance of its rights and duties, and making itself the instrument of the court in protecting the rights of the stockholders, as it might, not to say ought to, have done. True, it took no active part in the trial, and there is no evidence of its active opposition there; but it is somewhat significant that Bobbins, at whose instance the company was appointed, •did not seek his opportunity of appearing on the trial through this receiver as his trustee, but through the mere courtesy of the plaintiff. I have already adverted to the fact that no answer seeking affirmative relief was ever served on the principal defendants. Indeed that was precluded by the very nature and character of the trust company’s answer itself. And thus do we plainly see that that company elected to have nothing to do with this action as a means of assisting anybody interested in this mining company. It is not material to inquire into the motives which led to this election. Doubtless they were expressed in the original letter of its counsel declining to bring the suit.

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7 N.Y.S. 747, 4 Silv. Sup. 595, 28 N.Y. St. Rep. 89, 55 Hun 605, 1889 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beadleston-v-alley-nysupct-1889.