Hayden v. Perfection Cooler Co.

227 Mass. 589
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 30, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 227 Mass. 589 (Hayden v. Perfection Cooler Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayden v. Perfection Cooler Co., 227 Mass. 589 (Mass. 1917).

Opinion

Rugg, C. J.

This is a suit in equity by minority stockholders in the Perfection Cooler Company against that corporation and six individuals alleged to be its directors.

It is a fundamental principle of equitable jurisdiction over suits [591]*591by stockholders to recover against corporate officers for their wrongs committed against the corporation that they cannot be maintained by stockholders in vindication of a personal right. Such wrongs are against the corporation and have no relation to the stockholder except as he has a derivative and indirect interest. It is the corporation alone whose interests are immediately concerned, whose rights are to be vindicated and for whose exclusive benefit the damages, if any are recovered, must be paid. Therefore there must be an express allegation that the suit is brought by the plaintiffs, not for themselves alone but in behalf of all others similarly situated and interested. This principle of law in substance was declared by Chief Justice Shaw in the pioneer case of Smith v. Hurd, 12 Met. 371, with his usual conclusiveness of reasoning. That principle has been followed and amplified in numerous other decisions. Brewer v. Boston Theatre, 104 Mass. 378. Dunphy v. Traveller Newspaper Association, 146 Mass. 495. Peabody v. Flint, 6 Allen, 52. Heath v. Ellis, 12 Cush. 601, 604. Converse v. United Shoe Machinery Co. 185 Mass. 422; S. C. 209 Mass. 539. Davenport v. Dows, 18 Wall. 626, 627. Continental Securities Co. v. Belmont, 206 N. Y. 7, 15. The plaintiffs cannot recover separate judgment for the damages sustained by them individually. They have no priority or preference over other stockholders. If the suit is sustained, the decree must be for the full amount of damages sustained by the corporation and the money must be ordered to be paid to the corporation so that it will be available for the benefit of all the creditors and all the stockholders, as if the suit had been brought by the corporation. Bartlett v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad, 221 Mass. 530, 531. Dewing v. Perdicaries, 96 U. S. 193, 198. Landis v. Sea Isle City Hotel Co. 8 Dick. 654. Zinn v. Baxter, 65 Ohio St. 341, 364. Rafferty v. Donnelly, 197 Penn. St. 423, 429. Wallace v. Lincoln Savings Bank, 89 Tenn. 630, 635. In re Dennett, 136 C. C. A. 422, 426. Atwool v. Merryweather, L. R. 5 Eq. 464, 467, 468. The allegations of the bill are not sufficient in this respect. The averments as to its being brought generally in behalf of all other stockholders similarly situated who desire to join are somewhat vague and conditional. But there is no adequately specfic allegation that the suit is brought for the benefit of the corporation. The prayers in this regard are indefinite.

[592]*592Leave is granted to the plaintiffs to make amendments in order to overcome this difficulty. St. 1913, c. 716, § 3. We proceed to consider the case on its substantive allegations on the assumption that such amendments will be made.

The bill seeks relief against the other defendants for acts of fraudulent convertion, waste and dissipation of corporate assets and of other wrongdoing to the corporation. It is contrary to the basic principles of corporate management for minority stockholders ordinarily to interfere in corporate management by instituting litigation respecting its interest. The control of the corporation is vested in directors or other officers who occupy a trust relation to the corporation and who are presumed to be zealous for the promotion of its welfare. Commonly the stockholder must seek his remedy for illegal acts by application to the directors to protect the corporation. It is only in the exceptional instance where it is made, to appear that such application would be fruitless and unavailing to protect corporate rights that the stockholder may institute an action. The present bill contains no averment of application to the board of directors and refusal by them to act. The allegation in this particular is that “it is useless to request the corporation to take action because the board of directors consist of the persons' herein named as respondent officers and directors, . . . and that . . . said respondent officers and directors or some of them . . . are the ones charged herein with the guilty conduct for which this action is brought.” This is not an allegation that a majority of the directors are faithless to their trust. In similar terms, every wrongful act charged in the bill (with two exceptions to be noted later) is alleged to have been done by the “officers or directors, or some of them.”

These averments would be fully satisfied if it should be proved at the trial that one or two out of the six directors had been faithless to their trust to the corporation and that the other four or five directors had been not only faithful and honest but ignorant of any wrongful conduct on the part of any of their associates, and ready and willing to prosecute with wisdom and force claims against their associate directors who have wronged the corporation, as soon as their attention was called to the facts. Since no intendment can be made in favor of the bill, it must be assumed that this [593]*593is the extreme limit of the allegation. Bowker v. Toney, 211 Mass. 282, 286.

It long has been settled that it is not enough to show that a minority of the directors have been guilty of wrongs to the corporation, in order to excuse a stockholder from first applying for relief to the directors, before instituting suit in his own name, without showing further by appropriate and specific allegations that the majority of the directors were wilfully disregardful of the interests of the corporation. On this point, reference need only be made to the leading cases of Brewer v. Boston Theatre, 104 Mass. 378, and Dunphy v. Traveller Newspaper Association, 146 Mass. 495, where the subject is discussed with convincing fullness. See, also, Bartlett v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad, 221 Mass. 530, 532, 536, and cases there collected; S. C. 226 Mass. 467. The allegations of the present bill fail to conform to the principles declared in these cases and recognized generally. They are fatally deficient in not setting forth sufficient facts to show that it would have been an idle form to ask the directors to institute action for the protection of the corporation, if a full disclosure of facts had been made to them. Doherty v. Mercantile Trust Co. 184 Mass. 590, 593.

There are two paragraphs in the bill, however, which are adequate. In paragraph nine it is alleged with ample details that four named directors of the defendant corporation have, fraudulently, at prices grossly less than their real or their market value, sold large amounts of products manufactured by the defendant corporation, to another corporation known as the Perfection Cooler Company of Canada, in which these same four directors own the controlling amount of stock and are the dominant officers.

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Bluebook (online)
227 Mass. 589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayden-v-perfection-cooler-co-mass-1917.