[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 69 This is an appeal from the judgment and comes here on the judgment-roll. It is not claimed that the findings are not supported by the evidence, but it is sought by this appeal to review the order of the court overruling the defendants' demurrer to the amended complaint. As the court found all the allegations of the complaint to be true, it will be necessary to state the substance of the complaint in order to make clear the points urged on this appeal. It appears from the complaint in substance that the defendant, "Sweet's Metal Cross Tie Company," was at all times mentioned a corporation duly incorporated under the laws of California, and that the plaintiffs and the other defendants were at all times named stockholders of defendant corporation. That in December, 1893, for a valuable consideration, the defendant Sweet agreed with the stockholders of defendant corporation that he should not control a majority of the stock of said corporation, but that he would transfer to plaintiff Baldwin two thousand and fifty shares of the said capital stock, with proxy irrevocable, authorizing said Baldwin to vote the said stock for the benefit and protection of the corporation for five years from and after June 15, 1892. That at a special meeting, claimed to be a meeting of the stockholders of the corporation, held on the twenty-third day of April, 1894, without proper notice and contrary to the by-laws of the corporation (the defendants Sweet, Jeffery and Pollard and no other stockholders being present), there was a resolution illegally passed removing plaintiffs Whitehead, Carter, Mills and Mariner from the board of directors of said corporation and electing as directors the defendants Mulford, Pollard, McKoon, *Page 71 Jeffery, and Green. That on the nineteenth day of June, 1894, at what was claimed to be an annual meeting of the stockholders of the corporation, but held illegally, without sufficient or proper notice, and contrary to the by-laws of the corporation (the defendants Sweet, Mulford, Pollard, Jeffery, and no other stockholders being present), the defendants Sweet, Pollard, Mulford, Green, and Jeffery and two of the plaintiffs, Chamberlain and Hunt, were illegally declared to be the directors of said corporation. That after said last-named meeting the defendants Sweet, Pollard, Jeffery, and Green were elected by the so-called board of directors respectively president, vice-president, secretary, and treasurer of the said corporation, and the defendants Mulford and Pollard were appointed attorneys for said corporation. That a majority of the so-called board of directors, to wit, Pollard, Green, McKoon, and Jeffery, are under the control of defendant Sweet, who is one of the so-called directors and president of said corporation. That on the twentieth day of August, 1894, at a meeting of the board of directors so illegally elected, at which were present defendants Pollard, Sweet, Green, and Jeffery and none others, and at the instance of defendant Sweet, the said defendants so present at last-named meeting entered into a contract, as the contract of defendant corporation and under its seal, with defendant Sweet and for his benefit, under and by the terms of which the said corporation was bound to pay said defendant Sweet sixteen thousand dollars for a certain patent known as "Sweet's metal cross tie," and for other covenants to be performed by said defendant Sweet. That at a special meeting of the said directors held illegally and without notice on the twenty-ninth day of January, 1895, at which were present defendants Green, Pollard, Jeffery and Mulford and none others, an assessment of four dollars per share on the capital stock of said corporation was illegally levied, and at the time of filing the complaint the stock of said corporation and of plaintiffs was being advertised as delinquent and for sale under the said illegal assessment. That the said illegal assessment of four dollars per share was made for the benefit of defendant Sweet, and for the purpose of paying him the said sixteen thousand dollars for his said patent as provided in the said illegal contract. That the defendant corporation is practically free of *Page 72 debt, and that, except for the said illegal contract with defendant Sweet, there would be no necessity for the said assessment of four dollars per share on said stock, and that the threatened sale of the said stock and the said contract so made with defendant Sweet will result in great loss and irreparable injury to the plaintiffs and to defendant corporation.
By a supplemental complaint filed before the trial it appears that the capital stock of the plaintiff had been sold under said illegal assessment and without proper notice. The demurrer to the amended complaint is upon the ground that the same does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, that there is a misjoinder of causes of action in several respects, and that the complaint is ambiguous and uncertain in some particulars. It is urged that there is no jurisdiction in a court of equity to remove corporate officers. It is true that in general a court of equity has no inherent power or jurisdiction to entertain a bill for the purpose of reviewing a corporate election and ousting the parties who claim to have been elected. It was not part of the original jurisdiction of chancery, and in most of the states of the Union such jurisdiction does not exist. But in order to avoid the delays and difficulties attending the old remedy of quowarranto, statutes have been enacted in many of the states which give courts of equity the power to review corporate elections, and among such states is our own. Our code (Civ. Code, sec. 315), reads as follows:
"Upon the application of any person or body corporate aggrieved by any election held by any corporate body, the district court of the district in which such election is held must proceed forthwith to hear the allegations and proofs of the parties, or otherwise inquire into the matters of complaint, and thereupon confirm the election, order a new one, or direct such other relief in the premises as accords with right and justice. Upon filing the petition, and before any further proceedings are had under this section, five days' notice of the hearing must be given, under the direction of the court or the judge thereof, to the adverse party or those to be affected thereby."
Under the above section it was held in Wright v. Central Cal.etc Co., 67 Cal. 532, that our superior courts have jurisdiction as courts of equity to inquire into the validity of a *Page 73 corporate election and to set it aside if not in conformity with law. In the opinion it is said: "The constitution of 1879 abolished the district court, but at the same time it created the superior court and conferred upon it the same equity jurisdiction which had been formerly conferred upon and was exercised by the district court. Sitting as a court of equity, therefore, the superior court had jurisdiction to inquire into the validity of an election, and to set it aside if it had not been made in conformity to law, whether the statute conferred it or not."
The same rule has been laid down in other states having statutes similar in some respects to our own. (In the Matter ofSt. Lawrence Steamboat Co., 44 N.J.L. 529; Ex parte Holmes, 5 Cow. 426; Schoharie Valley R.R. case, 12 Abb. Pr., N.S., 394;People v. Albany etc. R.R. Co., 55 Barb. 346.)
Under our code there is but one form of action, and if the complaint states facts which entitle the plaintiff to relief, either legal or equitable, it is not demurrable upon the ground that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. If the facts are such as address themselves to the equity side of the court, the appropriate relief will be granted by the court sitting as a court of equity. (White v. Lyons, 42 Cal. 279;Watson v. Sutro, 86 Cal. 528.)
It is said that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action because it was the duy of defendant corporation to bring the action, and, if it would not do so upon request, then it becomes necessary for the complaint to show that plaintiffs made a proper demand upon the corporation to bring the action. The complaint alleges that the business and affairs of said corporation are influenced and controlled by defendant Sweet, that said Sweet controls the board of directors, and that for this reason it would be of no avail to make a demand upon the defendant directors to bring such suit. Under the authorities, this was sufficient to excuse the necessity of alleging a demand. (2 Cook on Stock and Stockholders, sec. 741;Wickersham v. Crittenden, 93 Cal. 33; 106 Cal. 331; Ashton v.Dashaway, Assn., 84 Cal. 70.)
It is said the complaint alleges that defendants are not the board of directors, and that it does not avail to allege the reasons why demand was not made upon them, as the theory of *Page 74 the complaint is that their election was illegal, and, if so, they are not directors. The complaint alleges that the directors are influenced and controlled by defendant Sweet, without naming them, but, if it did name them as the parties claiming to be directors, we think it would be sufficient. One of the questions, and the main question, to be determined is, whether or not the defendants other than the corporation are the legal directors of the corporation, and the plaintiffs would not be required at their peril to determine that question before bringing suit. They have the right to have that question determined by the courts.
Several pages of appellants' brief are devoted to the argument that the suit should abate, by reason of the allegations of the supplemental complaint setting forth that the board of directors have caused the plaintiffs' stock to be sold since the commencement of the suit, and that therefore the plaintiffs have no further interest in the litigation. There would be some force in this argument if the sale were made by proper authority and were in all respects regular, but the sale is alleged to be void by reason of illegality of the assessment and by reason of it having been made by a board of directors who were not such in law. A sale of stock by a board of directors illegally elected, and under an invalid assessment made in violation of law, would not determine the relations of the stockholders to the corporation. The supplemental complaint alleges that the sale was made under a void and illegal assessment. The amended complaint shows that the assessment was illegal and made by a board illegally claiming to be such. Another answer to the contention is, that one of the objects of the action is to have the sixteen thousand dollar contract with the defendant Sweet set aside, and after the action is brought to remedy a wrong done to the corporation; all the stockholders, whether plaintiffs or defendants, are equally interested in the result of the suit. (Cook on Stock and Stockholders, sec. 737.)
The complaint is not ambiguous nor uncertain in the respects claimed by appellants. Although in some paragraphs of the complaint the defendants (other than the corporation) are referred to as the board of directors, it sufficiently appears all through the complaint that the claim is made that they are not the legal board and that their election was illegal. When a pleading is attacked as being ambiguous or *Page 75 uncertain, the rule is that a general allegation, although it would not have been sufficient standing alone, may nevertheless assist to make the complaint more certain in the particulars named. (Hutchinson v. McNally, 85 Cal. 619.) If enough appears to make the pleading easy of comprehension and free from reasonable doubt, a demurrer on the ground of ambiguity should be overruled.(Salmon v. Wilson, 41 Cal. 595.)
It is urged that there is a misjoinder of causes of action and that the complaint is multifarious in several respects. The principal argument of appellants on this ground is, that the sale of the stock under the alleged illegal assessment is a matter individual to each of the plaintiffs, and a matter in which the corporation has no interest, and that the revocation of the proxy given by Sweet to Baldwin in no way concerns the corporation. We do not think the complaint is obnoxious to the objections made in these respects.
The gist of the action being to declare the election of the board of directors void and illegal, this being established, it follows that the acts by which the assessment was levied the attempted sale of stock of plaintiffs, and the contract made with the defendant Sweet, August 20, 1894, were all done without authority and void. The agreement of defendant Sweet with the stockholders of the corporation to transfer to plaintiff Baldwin two thousand and fifty shares of the capital stock, with irrevocable proxy for five years, for the benefit and protection of the corporation, having been violated, its violation might properly be adjudicated in this suit. A court of equity having acquired jurisdiction would administer complete relief and adjust the case in all its branches. A court of equity abhors a multiplicity of suits. No fixed rule can be laid down by which to determine whether a given bill in equity is or is not subject to the objection of multifariousness. It may be that, for the purpose of preventing a multiplicity of suits, a court of equity will retain a bill against several defendants, although there be no privity if interest between them, and although each may stand in different relations to the complainant from the others. (Thompson on Corporations, sec. 3527.) Chancellor Kent sustained a bill the object of which was to set fraudulent conveyances *Page 76 of corporate property, as well as to coerce payment of defaulting stockholders. (Brinkerhoff v. Brown, 6 Johns. Ch. 139.) Where a court of equity has once obtained jurisdiction it will decide the whole case. It will not permit litigation by piecemeal, but will determine the whole controversy so as to prevent further litigation. (Watson v. Sutro, supra.)
Where all the parties in interest are, with sufficient pleadings before a court of equity, it can and will take hold of the entire case and give effect to their contracts legally made.(Cross v. Zellerbach, 63 Cal. 643.)
It is said in Wickersham v. Crittenden, 93 Cal. 32, in discussing a demurrer to the complaint in equity: "It is no objection to the complaint that the relief sought is not single. It is often necessary, in order that the plaintiff may obtain full justice, that the relief granted him be as varied and diversified as the means that have been employed by the defendant to produce the grievance complained of. If a trustee is shown to have been unfaithful, the court may not only compel restitution, but may also restrain him by injunction from similar acts or if deemed necessary may remove him from his trust. If he has called to his aid other confederates, they also may be enjoined from further participation in the acts which infringe upon the rights of the plaintiff. A court of equity will always find the means of enforcing its decrees against a delinquent defendant, and its power in this respect is as extensive as the exigencies of the case."
On well-understood principles of equity pleading, a bill is not multifarious because the plaintiffs are not entitled to a decree in their favor jointly or in solido. It is sufficient if they are injured in a similar way, that they have common grievances to redress, and that they are entitled to relief of the same kind. (4 Thompson on Corporations, sec. 4602.)
Applying the principles above laid down to this case, the complaint does not contain actions improperly joined. It tells one continued story, and alleges wrongs willfully perpetrated by the defendants, and the way in which they were perpetrated. No third parties appear in any way to be involved. If defendant Sweet agreed for the benefit of the corporation to transfer his stock with proxy irrevocable, and has violated his contract, why should he not now and in this *Page 77 action be compelled to perform it? A bill in equity is said to be multifarious when distinct and independent matters are joined therein. If the subject matter in the main relates to one transaction around which the others cluster, and each party has an interest in some matters in the suit, and they are connected, even though all the parties do not have an interest in all the matters in the suit, the bill is not multifarious. (Story's Equity Pleading, secs. 271, 271a; Wilson v. Castro, 31 Cal. 429.)
The findings refer to the complaint as amended and to the supplemental complaint. The original complaint was superseded by the amended and supplemental complaint.
We think the judgment should be affirmed, and so advise.
Chipman, C., and Haynes, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment is affirmed. Garoutte, J., Van Dyke, J., Harrison, J.