Moore v. Silver Valley Mining Co.

10 S.E. 679, 104 N.C. 534
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 10 S.E. 679 (Moore v. Silver Valley Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Silver Valley Mining Co., 10 S.E. 679, 104 N.C. 534 (N.C. 1889).

Opinion

Merrimon, J.

— after stating the case: The plaintiff must allege in his complaint facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action in his favor legal or equitable, or both legal and equitable, in its nature. Otherwise, the defendant may move to dismiss the action, or the Court will ex mero motu dismiss it, because, in such case, there is nothing alleged in the pleading that raises the jurisdiction of the Court as to the subject matter of the action and to which it can attach.

And so, also, when the plaintiff asks for relief by injunction in the course of the action as a provisional remedy *542 therein, he must if he has not, at the time of the application filed his complaint, set forth in his application — his affidavit — ordinarily, such a cause of action. The Court will not — can not — proceed in the action, unless its jurisdiction as to the parties, and the subject matter of it, appears, in some way, allowed by law. Jurisdiction is essential and it must appear by the record. The Court must see a cause of action at least substantially alleged.

We are of opinion that the plaintiff failed to allege a cause of action in himself, and, therefore, the Court ought not to have granted the injunction as to which the appellant complains.

Accepting the plaintiff’s allegations as true, for the present purpose, he is not, nor does he purport to be, the owner of the lands and the judgment mentioned in the complaint in controversy. They belong to the Silver Valley Mining Company of Baltimore, of which he is a stockholder, and that company, in the absence of statutory regulation otherwise, is the proper party to assert its rights and seek redress for any invasion of the same by action. In the nature of the matter, it would contravene every principle of intelligent procedure, be impractical and absurd, to allow, ordinarily, one, or more, of the stockholders of a corporation to bring actions to recover property, or the value of it, that belongs to it, or to recover damages for injuries to it, or its property, or to collect debts due to it. Such actions imply corporate disorganization and the absence of corporate integrity and entity. If corporate officers, or agents, will not, or fail to, exercise their corporate powers and authority in the discharge of their duties and obligations to the stockholders of the corporations, or others, the body corporate does not thereby cease to exist, nor can it be ignored as an effective instrumentality for its purposes. The law, statutory and otherwise, supplies ample means whereby to render it operative without necessarily destroying it, or an aban *543 donment of it as a corporate being. The remedy of its stockholders and others interested in it is made effective by, through, for, or against it, as the case may be or require. In cases like the present one, the complaining stockholder, or stockholders, should take such action in their company as its charter and by-laws might allow, and these not affording adequate remedy, he, or they, should bring his, or their, action against the corporation ■ and the offending officers of it, to the end such officers should be compelled to a proper discharge of their duties, or be displaced and others put' in their places. Pending such action, the Court might — would in proper cases — protect the rights of the corporation, and, through it, the same of the corporators, by the appointment of receivers. And, having in view the same ends, one, or more stockholders might, in possible cases, bring an action in their own names to protect the rights of the corporation, and, through it, their own rights in common with those of all the other stockholders. The right to bring,.and the occasion of bringing, such actions arises only when and because the proper corporate officers will not, for some improper consideration, discharge their duties as they should do. But stockholders, as such, may not bring such actions at their pleasure, and have their rights as individuals growing out of the corporation settled and administered. Such actions are allowed because of necessity, and for the benefit of the corporation and its stockholders. Hence, it was held in Hawes v. Oakland, 104 U. S. R., 450, that to entitle a shareholder in a certain water-works company to maintain an action in his own name, it must appear, first, that something has been done, or is threatened to be done, by the directors, which is beyond the authority conferred by the charter or law under which the company was organized; or, secondly, that such fraudulent transactions are threatened, or contemplated, by the- directors, either among themselves or with some other party, or with shareholders, *544 as will result in serious injury to the company or other shareholders; or, thirdly, that the directors, or a majority of them, are acting in their own interest in a manner destructive of the company or the rights of the other shareholders; or, fourthly, that the majority of the shareholders are oppressively and illegally pursuing, in the name of the company, a course of action in violation of the rights of the other shareholders which can only be restrained by a Court of Equity; and, fifthly, that the complaining party must have made an earnest effort to obtain redress at the hands of the directors and shareholders-of the corporation, and that the ownership of the stock by him was vested in him at the time of the transactions of which he complains, or was thereafter transferred to him by operation of law. The case just cited was afterwards cited, and fully approved, by the same Court in Dimpfill v. Ohio & Mississippi Railroad Co., 110 U. S., 202, and it was therein further held that it must appear that the plaintiffs had exhausted all the means in their power to obtain redress of the grievances within the corporation itself. These, and other similar cases, as well as the reason of the matter, show that the cause of action in favor of the complaining stockholders does not arise, and he cannot maintain an action in respect thereto unless such-facts exist and appear by a proper averment. Planters’ Line v. Wagner, 71 Ala., 581; Showan v. Zion, 79 Ky., 300; Taylor v. Holmes, 127 U. S., 489.

In the present case, it is alleged that the plaintiff purchased certain certificates of stock of the Silver Valley Mining Company of Baltimore endorsed in tjank, but certificates have not been issued to him. It is questionable whether he is a stockholder and entitled to act as such. It seems that, at most, he is only the equitable owner of the shares of stock. When he so purchased them does not appear. It does appear however, that he got them long after most, if not all, the fraudulent transactions complained of. It should *545 appear that he was the bona fide owner of the stock; that he-bought the same in good faith and not for mere vexatious-purposes;

It is not alleged, nor does it appear in any way, that the plaintiff had ever taken steps within the company last mentioned to correct the grievances of which he complained, although he had known of them for years ; nor does it appear that he has ever demanded and required of its officers that they take proper action to prevent, them or obtain redress on account of the same.

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Bluebook (online)
10 S.E. 679, 104 N.C. 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-silver-valley-mining-co-nc-1889.