Ramsey v. Erie Railway Co.

8 Abb. Pr. 174, 57 Barb. 398, 39 How. Pr. 62
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 8 Abb. Pr. 174 (Ramsey v. Erie Railway Co.) 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
Ramsey v. Erie Railway Co., 8 Abb. Pr. 174, 57 Barb. 398, 39 How. Pr. 62 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1870).

Opinion

Parker, J.

This action is brought by the plaintiff, as a creditor and stockholder of the Erie Railway Company, for the purpose, among other things, of compel[178]*178ling "the officers of the company, who are named as defendants, and who are charged in the complaint with having the control of its affairs, to account for their official conduct in the management and disposition of its funds and property, and, upon allegations of abuse of trust and gross misconduct by them, in respect to such funds and property, to obtain their suspension and removal from office.

The complaint has been served, but it does not appear that any answer has been, as yet, put in. In this condition of the case a motion is made, on the part of the defendants, founded upon the complaint, on affidavit of the plaintiff taken before a referee appointed under section 401 of the Code, and various other affidavits, for an order dismissing the complaint, or perpetually staying proceedings' in the action ; or, in case such motion is denied, for an order that portions of the complaint indicated be stricken out as irrelevant or redundant, and that the complaint be" made more definite and certain. A motion is also made to set aside an ' order granted at a special term of this court, held at Albany on the 24tli of January last, appointing a referee to take the deposition of A. S. Diven, to be used on the motion first above mentioned, and upon “amotion to be noticed by the plaintiff in this court.” The motion to dismiss the complaint, or perpetually to stay the pro- . ceedings in the action, is based upon three principal grounds:

1. That the suit is not brought in good faith, for the purposes avowed in the complaint, but is an attempt to pervert"and 'abuse the process of the court to purposes of retaliation and revenge," and to compel the defendants to cease a litigation in which the plaintiff has an adverse interest; and, moreover, that the plaintiff became the holder of the stock and bonds which he claims to own, with a full knowledge that the acts of which he complains, had been done, and for the purpose of bringing this action.

[179]*1792. That the plaintiff is not, in fact, a creditor of the Erie Railway Company In the sense required to entitle him to maintain this suit, and if he is, that since the commencement of the suit the company has tendered to him full payment of all the demands which he claims to hold against it.

3. That the plaintiff, when he purchased the bonds and stock mentioned in the complaint, was an attorney at law, practicing as such ; that he purchased all the stock, securities and indebtedness of the company which he claimed to have at the commencement of the suit, with intent to commence an action thereon, and that such purchase was a violation of the statute (2 Rev. Stat., 228, § 71).

In regard to the first ground of the motion, I think it clearly appears from the affidavits, that, prior to the plaintiff’s purchase of the stock and securities held by him, he had become involved in a litigation respecting the control of the Albany and Susquehanna Railroad Company, to which defendants Gfould and Fisk, and possibly others of the defendants, were parties in interest adverse to him ; that when he purchased such stock and securities he believed that said defendants had been guilty of such gross abuse of their trust as officers of the Erie Railway Company, that the welfare and safety of the company, and the security of its stockholders and creditors, required their removal from office; that among the wrongful acts done, by them, he believed they had used the money of the Erie company to purchase the stock of the Albany and Susquehanna Railroad Company, in which he was interested, for the purpose of obtaining control of that company ; and believing as aforesaid, he purchased said stock and securities with the intent—if no other person authorized to bring an action against them, for the purposes for which this suit is brought, could be induced to do so—to bring such suit himself; being influenced to some extent, in' bringing the suit, by the desire to defeat said defend[180]*180ants from gaining control of the- Albany and Susquehanna Railroad, but mainly, in the language of the plaintiff, “to have them brought to justice.”

If the plaintiff stands in relation to the defendants, as creditor or stockholder of the Erie Railway Company, authorizing him to bring this suit, then, I apprehend, on a question whether the suit can be maintained or not, the court has no right to look into the plaintiff’s motive for bringing it. And although in moving it his malice is gratified, or his independent litigations incidentally subserved, still, unless the court can plainly see that he has no meritorious cause of action, or that he is estopped from prosecuting it, his prosecution of it will not be deemed a perversion or abuse of the process, of the court. This is true, equally, in a court of equity as in a court of law. The inquiry in each must be-with reference to the plaintiff’s right of action, and whether in it are involved interests entitled to the protection of the court, and not to his ulterior motives and purposes in bringing the suit. The court will see to if, that the judgment or decree obtained is such, and only such, as the plaintiff, as plaintiff in the suit, is entitled to, and will carefully prevent its process from being perverted to other and illegitimate purposes.

The defendants’ counsel argues and insists, that a civil action cannot be allowed for the mere abstract purpose of “bringing men to justice,” and that where an individual sues, he must sue for his own personal remedy—for the redress of some wrong "personal to him—for the establishment of justice, in some way immediately affecting his own interest, and that, unless he seeks redress of this kind, and shows a title to it, he has- no standing in court.

This is all very true. But the plaintiff, if in fact the owner of bonds and stock of this company, as he alleges, is personally interested in obtaining the relief sought by him in the complaint; and, in inquiring whether the plaintiff is prosecuting this action for the [181]*181one purpose or the other of those mentioned by the counsel, the court must look to the cause of action shown, and the judgment demanded in the complaint, rather than to motives or purposes elsewhere avowed or shown to exist.

It is argued by defendants’ counsel, also, that this suit is brought in bad faith ; that, inasmuch as the-plaintiff made himself the holder of stock and bonds of this company for the very purpose of complaining that his rights, as such, were invaded, and with full knowledge that the very acts of which he complains had been done, when he made the purchase, he is to be regarded rather as a mover and promoter of strife than a bona fide suitor; and that he does not come into court with clean hands, as the familiar rules of equity require, and should therefore be dismissed.

I do not see that the equity rule invoked has any application here. That has reference to the relation of the parties in respect to the matter in controversy. If there is any abuse of that relation by the plaintiff, he does not come with clean hands to enforce an advantage thus obtained. Here the plaintiff has no inequitable. advantage which he is seeking to enforce against the defendants. His buying the stock and bonds was no wrong done to them, with whatever intent it was done. The relative rights of the parties are the same as if the suit was brought by the plaintiff’s vendor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Abb. Pr. 174, 57 Barb. 398, 39 How. Pr. 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramsey-v-erie-railway-co-nysupct-1870.