Wolf v. Young Supply Co.

19 Pa. D. & C.2d 404, 1959 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 147
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Delaware County
DecidedMay 25, 1959
Docketno. 835
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 Pa. D. & C.2d 404 (Wolf v. Young Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Delaware County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wolf v. Young Supply Co., 19 Pa. D. & C.2d 404, 1959 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 147 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1959).

Opinion

Diggins, J.,

This is a complaint in equity wherein plaintiffs aver that they are the legal and equitable owners of 292 shares of the capital stock of defendant corporation which plaintiffs purchased on July 9,1958, at a price of $26,300. The said shares were formerly owned by Frank Sacco, Jr., one of defendants, and had been distrained upon by the District Director of Internal Revenue for nonpayment of Federal income taxes owned by the said Frank Sacco, Jr., and sold at public sale to plaintiffs.

[406]*406The complaint alleges that defendants have refused upon demand to permit plaintiffs to inspect the books and records of account of defendant corporation and that defendants have failed, neglected and refused to keep and maintain a share register as required by law, that the individual defendants have mismanaged the affairs and transactions of defendant corporation to the prejudice and detriment of said corporation and its shareholders, and further alleges that on June 24, 1958, defendant corporation, by and through the approval of the individual defendants, unlawfully issued and sold 572 shares of the capital stock at $45.16 per share, whereas the fair and reasonable value thereof was in excess of $90 per share, and that defendant corporation did not receive any legal consideration for the sale of said 572 shares and accepted promissory notes of the individual defendants, and the shares of stock were distributed to three of the individual defendants, Harry A. Brennan, Ellis S. Malehorn and Clarence J. Malehorn, in their own names, and to one James Sacco, whom plaintiffs allege to be the agent and strawman for defendant, Frank Sacco, Jr., and plaintiffs allege that the purpose of the sale was to increase the amount of outstanding stock of the corporation and thus dilute the percentage of outstanding stock held by plaintiffs and secured at public sale.

The complaint further alleges that defendant corporation entered into a purported employment contract with the said Frank Sacco, Jr., whereby the latter received salary for services not rendered by him and also granted Frank Sacco, Jr., an expense account although no expenses were incurred by him, and further that defendants have permitted Frank Sacco, Jr., to enjoy the personal use of an apartment in defendant corporation’s building without payment of rent or for use and occupancy, and there are further allegations that the individual defendants have improperly kept the [407]*407books and records of defendant corporation by both understating and overstating the assets of the corporation with the result that the actual profits or losses from the operations of defendant corporation from time to time have been inaccurately and improperly minimized or exaggerated, which course of conduct, it is alleged, has operated to the economic detriment of the corporation, and plaintiffs seek the appointment of a receiver to administer and conserve defendant corporation’s property and assets and continue the operation of its business, and .for permission to examine the corporation’s books and records, and for the cancellation of the 572 shares of stock alleged illegal, and other affirmative relief.

To this bill of complaint, defendants filed preliminary objections alleging in support thereof three grounds:

(1) That plaintiffs in their complaint have improperly joined two types of actions, namely, a derivative action and a direct or personal action;

(2) That the bill is defective because there is no allegation under rule 1506 which provides, inter alia, that there must be an allegation to the effect that each plaintiff was a stockholder or an owner of an interest in the corporation or other entity at the time of the transaction of which he complains, or that his stock or interest devolved upon him by operation of law from a person who was a stockholder or owner at that time ;

(3) And the third is that plaintiffs have an adequate remedy at law.

On the first objection, it seems clear that direct and derivative rights cannot be asserted in a single complaint. In order to better understand what is meant by direct and derivative rights and to permit a distinction to be drawn between a shareholder’s direct right to sue a corporation or its managers and his [408]*408mere derivative right to assert a cause of action which the corporate management has failed to enforce, we should consider that where there is a breach of the contract existing between the corporation and a shareholder by reason of his status as a shareholder, as distinguished from a breach of a contract between the corporation and a third person, or where there is a breach of the fiduciary duty which the directors, officers or majority shareholders owe to a shareholder or the minority shareholders as such, as distinguished from the breach of such a duty owed to the corporation, the shareholder injured by such breach has a direct, personal cause of action.

For 'example, there is a breach of the shareholder’s contract with the corporation and he can sue it personally in the following instances: To enforce his right to inspect the corporate books, to enjoin or cancel the issuance of shares in violation of his preemptive rights or to recover damages therefor; to compel declaration of a dividend; to collect payment of a dividend declared, or compel issuance of treasury stock declared as a dividend; and to compel transfer on the books or issuance of a share certificate to .him as a purchaser or transferee of shares. Likewise there is a breach of the fiduciary duty owed him and he can sue the offending corporation in his own right in situations such as where the directors negotiate a sale of all the stock and persuade other shareholders to go along, but get a secret profit for themselves in return for the sale of their position and influence, or where other shareholders carry out a conspiracy to cause a pecuniary injury to the particular plaintiff shareholder.

In the above cases, the damage is direct and personal to plaintiff shareholder and does not arise merely as a result of a wrong to the corporation, and accordingly, he sues in his own right and the recovery inures to his benefit.

[409]*409Where the shareholder cannot show any direct injury, personal to himself and apart from injury to the corporation, he cannot sue in his own right. There the cause of action is in the corporation and it is the proper plaintiff, but in such instances, equity permits a shareholder to force assertion of the corporate cause of action, where the corporation fails or refuses, by permitting him to file a bill in equity in which he joins the corporation and the wrong-doing defendant as the parties defendant, and plaintiff’s action in such a case is purely derivative and any recovery inures solely to the benefit of the corporation.

There seems no doubt then that there are here both direct and derivative actions and that as far as the derivative actions are concerned, they are properly brought because the corporation did not do so and it is made a party defendant. Query: Does the rule as stated in Hornsby v. Lohmeyer, 364 Pa. 271, at page 274, which holds that joining of two such unconnected causes of action in one bill is defective, sustain defendants’ preliminary objections in this point? We think not, but we do think that the complaint is improperly drawn when it does not separate the causes of action, although we think separation in counts and not in suits is sufficient.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Pa. D. & C.2d 404, 1959 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolf-v-young-supply-co-pactcompldelawa-1959.