Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co. v. Floyd

74 S.E. 465, 158 N.C. 455, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 67
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 3, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 74 S.E. 465 (Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co. v. Floyd) 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
Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co. v. Floyd, 74 S.E. 465, 158 N.C. 455, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 67 (N.C. 1912).

Opinion

AlleN, J:

The demurrer admits the allegations of the complaint, and it is well to see, in the first instance, if a cause of action is stated by the plaintiff.

If not, the action must be dismissed, and it will not be necés-sary to consider the other grounds of demurrer, and, on the other hand, if the complaint states a cause of action, an examination and analysis of it will aid in passing on the effect of the proceeding in bankruptcy and the necessity for the presence of the corporation or the trustee in bankruptcy as a party.

Contracts almost identical with the one alleged to have been entered into between the corporation, Floyd Bros. & Mitchell, and the plaintiff, have been considered in several decisions of our Court, and it has been held in each that the.proceeds of sales of fertilizers made thereunder, whether in money or notes, are the property of the person originally furnishing the fertilizer for sale. Chemical Co. v. Johnson, 98 N. C., 123; Hoffman v. Kramer, 123 N. C., 566; Lance v. Butler, 135 N. C., 422.

And it is also held that such a contract makes the person with whom it is made a trustee of the notes taken from the purchasers *460 of fertilizer, and -of tbe money derived from sales, or collected on notes, for tbe benefit of tbe original owner of tbe fertilizers. Guano Co. v. Bryan, 118 N. C., 579; Chemical Co. v. McNair, 139 N. C., 335.

Tbe complaint alleges tbat tbe defendant O. I. Floyd was tbe secretary and treasurer of tbe corporation wbicb made tbe contract witb tbe plaintiff, and tbat tbe defendant A. N. Mitcbell was its president, and tbat these two were largely in control of its business; tbat money was collected and notes taken under said contract, wbicb are tbe property of tbe plaintiff, and tbat said defendants, knowing these facts, misaj>plied and misappropriated said money and notes.

Tbe demurrer admits these allegations, and it cannot be questioned, assuming them to be true, tbat tbe defendants are liable to tbe plaintiff, if, as officers of tbe corporation, they, witb knowledge, received property belonging to tbe plaintiff, and wbicb they held in trust for it, and misappropriated it; and as tbe complaint alleges a joint wrong, it is not a misjoinder to sue both defendants in tbe same action. Howell v. Fuller, 151 N. C., 317.

Note tbat tbe cause of action is for misappropriation of property belonging to tbe plaintiff, and not of property of tbe corporation, Floyd Bros. & Mitcbell, and in this is tbe distinction between tbe eases relied on by tbe defendants and this.

In Coble v. Beall, 130 N. C., 533, a stockholder sued tbe directors of a bank for fraudulent and wrongful mismanagement of the property of the banlc, and in Latta v. Electric Co., 146 N. C., 309, tbe action was for tbe fra/ackdent disposition of property of the corporation by its officers; and it was held in each tbat tbe action should have been brought by a receiver, if one bad been appointed, and if not, by tbe corporation, and tbe citations from Loveland on Bankruptcy, secs. 23 and 158, are to the same effect.

Thompson on Cor., vol. 3, sec. 4132, marks tbe line between tbe two classes of cases: “Tbe grounds on wbicb tbe directors of corporations may make themselves liable to strangers have been already indicated. They stand toward tbe outsider in tbe same relation in wbicb any other agents stand toward the gen *461 eral public. For a breach of duty to, tbeir principal, redress can only be bad by that principal, tbe corporation, or by the shareholders, if the corporation refuses to sue, as elsewhere pointed out. But for any breach of duty toward a stranger to the company, such stranger may have redress against them, either at law or in equity, according to the nature of the injury; and it will be no defense that their principal is also liable.”

It appears, therefore, that the cause of action is against Floyd and Mitchell for misappropriating property which they knew belonged to the plaintiff. The complaint does not allege that the defendants converted the property to their own use, and the only other reasonable inference is that they used it for the benefit of their corporation.

If so, neither the corporation nor the receiver could sue them, as the corporation had received and used the property, and if they converted the property to their own use, their liability to the plaintiff would be primary, and payment by them would exonerate the corporation.

We are, therefore, of opinion that neither the corporation nor the trustee is a necessary party, and that the pendency of the proceeding in bankruptcy does not prevent the prosecution of this action, as in that proceeding the assets of the insolvent corporation are to be administered, and not the property of the plaintiff.

The question remaining to be considered is that of misjoinder of parties and causes of action, which is not free from difficulty, but we think the authorities authorize the prosecution of the action as now constituted.

The cause of action is the recovery of the value of the property misappropriated, and one of the remedies sought to be enforced is the setting aside of certain deeds alleged to have been executed fraudulently by one of the defendants.

It has been held proper to join a cause of action on a note, a cause of action to set aside a deed made by a bank, and one against the stockholders to hold them personally liable (Glenn v. Bank, 72 N. C., 626); to join a cause of action against a sheriff, Wyatt, to compel the execution of a deed, with one against Edwards, who was in possession, to recover the land *462 (McMillan v. Edwards, 75 N. C., 82); to join a cause of action to have one defendant declared a trustee of land with another against other defendants to recover judgment on a money demand, and with still another for possession of the land (Young v. Young, 81 N. C., 91); to join a cause of action on a note with a cause of action against three defendants, to each one of whom it was. alleged the debtor had executed a fraudulent deed (Bank v. Harris, 84 N. C., 206); and these cases are cited and approved in Outland v. Outland, 113 N. C., 75; see, also, Benton v. Collins, 118 N. C., 196; Fisher v. Trust Co., 138 N. C., 224.

The language used by Justice Ashe in Heggie v. Hill, 95 N. C., 306; in discussing misjoinder of parties and causes of action is apposite to the facts presented here. He says: “The rule in such a case as existing prior to The Code was thus announced by Ruffin, C. J., in Bedsole v. Monroe, 40 N. C., 313: ‘If the grounds of the bill be not entirely distinct and wholly unconnected; if they arise out of one and the same transaction,

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Bluebook (online)
74 S.E. 465, 158 N.C. 455, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virginia-carolina-chemical-co-v-floyd-nc-1912.