Kidd v. New Hampshire Traction Co.

66 L.R.A. 574, 56 A. 465, 72 N.H. 273, 1903 N.H. LEXIS 64
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedNovember 3, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 66 L.R.A. 574 (Kidd v. New Hampshire Traction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kidd v. New Hampshire Traction Co., 66 L.R.A. 574, 56 A. 465, 72 N.H. 273, 1903 N.H. LEXIS 64 (N.H. 1903).

Opinion

Parsons, C. J.

The proceeding is a bill in equity by two shareholders in the Massachusetts Construction Company Incorporated, a Connecticut corporation, brought in behalf of all the shareholders, and charging that through the fraud of the defendants all of the assets of the corporation have been transferred to and are now held by one of the defendants, and that the purpose of the transaction was fraudulently to deprive the plaintiffs of the value of their shares. The following facts appear from the alie *280 gations of the hill: The capital stock of the plaintiffs’ corporation consists of 5,000 shares of $100 each, par value. Twenty-five hundred shares of this capital are preferred both as to capital and income, but have no voting power, such power being vested exclusively in the remaining shares, called common stock. At the time of the transactions in question the assets of the corporation were worth, in addition to the amount necessary to satisfy the existing indebtedness of the corporation, more than $500,000, the amount of the whole capital stock. The plaintiffs then owned and now own 2,440 shares of the preferred stock. The parties charged with the fraud are the defendant Lovell (then and now the owner of all the common stock, and now owning all the preferred stock not held by the plaintiffs), the New York Security and Trust Company, a New York corporation, and the New Hampshire Traction Company, a New Hampshire corporation. The corporation in which the plaintiffs are stockholders is also made defendant. Lovell has appeared and answered to the bill. The plaintiffs claim to have made service upon the Construction Company and the Trust Company, and the bill has been taken pro confesso as to them. The Traction Company has filed a plea alleging that the Construction Company and the Trust Company are indispensable parties to the suit, averring that they are not within the jurisdiction and that no sufficient service has been made upon them, and traversing the material facts set out in the several returns of service.

The practice in equity upon plea filed and the essentials of a valid plea are set forth by Chief Justice Bel l in Bassett v. Company, 43 N. H. 249. The proceedings in the superior court are hardly in accord with equity practice as there explained. The plaintiffs demurred to the plea, and the demurrer was sustained. Judge Bell says (y>. 253) : “In equity, there is no demurrer to a plea, and no other step can be taken until it is disposed of. . . . To obtain a decision upon the validity of a plea, the course is to set it down for argument, which has much the effect of a demurrer .at law, being an admission that the facts stated in the plea are true as they are pleaded, and it is submitted to the court to decide whether they constitute a bar. ... If the plea wants form, as if it is not verified by oath, the plaintiff must move to set it .aside, or take it off the files. He cannot make the objection on the argument.” If the demurrer to the plea can properly be treated as a motion to set it aside, the motion must be granted' because the plea is not verified by affidavit. Bassett v. Company, 43 N. H. 249. This objection has not been taken and possibly can be avoided by amendment. Since the purpose of the demurrer was undoubtedly to obtain a decision upon the validity of the plea, *281 the proceedings in the superior court may properly be considered as amounting. in substance to the overruling of the plea when set down for argument.

“ In pleas in equity, there must in general be the same strictness and exactness as in pleas at law, at least in regard to matters of substance. . . . The plea must not be argumentative. . . . The language must be such as to include all intendments. And if a case can be supposed, consistent with the facts pleaded, which would render the plea inoperative as a full defence, and which is not excluded by particular averments, the plea is bad.” Bassett v. Company, 13 N. H, 249, 252. “Where the plaintiff’s right to the relief or discovery he seeks depends on a single • point, the defendant, instead of answering all the allegations of the bill, may insist on the fact which he relies on as a bar, oi' deny some fact alleged in the bill, which is essential to the maintenance of the plaintiff’s claim. He may thus narrow the investigation and save the expense of evidence, as to all the other matters made material by the bill, or which might be made so by the answer.” Bell v. Woodward, 42 N. H. 181, 191.

The objection raised by the plea is the want of parties. The question therefore is: If no sufficient service appears, whether either of the parties to whom the plea relates is indispensable to the maintenance of the suit, so that in their absence beyond the jurisdiction of the court no relief can be given the plaintiffs. “A plea to the whole bill ■of want of parties will be overruled if in any one state of facts charged by the bill the parties would not be necessary; for then the plea is not an answer to all the allegations in the bill.” Sto. Eq. PL, s. 745. Upon the argument of a plea, every fact stated in the bill and not denied by the answer in support of the jilea must be taken to be true; and the answer must be full and clear, or the court will intend the matter against the pleader. Sto. Eq. PL, ss. 511, 510, 527; Bell v. Woodward, 42 N. H. 181, 194. There is no answer in support of the jilea, and no denial by averments in the jilea, of any facts charged in the bill; but the averments are directed to the facts set out in the returns of service, and relate, as the defendants claim, to the date of the service and not to the date of the filing of the bill. The plaintiffs attempted in various ways to secure service upon each of the defendants. Whether this service is sufficient to render the Trust Company amenable to the jurisdiction in this suit, is a question which it is not now necessary to examine. Neither is it necessary to consider whether the facts upon which the plaintiffs rely to sustain the service are sufficiently denied by the allegations of the plea. The sole question is whether the jilea is a bar to the further maintenance of the bill against the pleader, the Traction *282 Company. The case is not here on demurrer to the bill, and therefore no question is before the court as to the sufficiency of the allegations to charge fraud or to establish the plaintiffs’ right to maintain the suit. The defendants so concede in their first brief. If, then, it be assumed without examination that the averments of the plea are sufficient to establish for the present purpose that no jurisdiction has been acquired over the New York Security and Trust Company by the various forms of service which appear in the record, the only question is whether the want of such jurisdiction is a bar to the maintenance of the suit against the pleader over whom the court has jurisdiction. It is not, upon the authorities cited, if under any supposable case provable under the bill the plaintiffs may be entitled to a decree against the Traction Company alone.

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Bluebook (online)
66 L.R.A. 574, 56 A. 465, 72 N.H. 273, 1903 N.H. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kidd-v-new-hampshire-traction-co-nh-1903.