Civil action instituted by plaintiff, receiver, under order of court, against the defendants, living directors, executors and administrators of directors since deceased, and the general officers of the Bank of Warsaw, to recover, for the benefit of depositors and creditors, moneys and assets, some alleged to have been wrongfully received, other negligently diverted, and still others recklessly squandered by said officers and directors, during their respective administrations, and in which they all participated to the extent alleged against each, under a general course of dealing or systematic policy of mismanagement, "wrongdoing, concealment and fraud," commencing in the year 1919 and ending on 22 April, 1926, when the said bank was closed because of its insolvency. *Page 718
Demurrers were interposed by all the defendants principally upon two grounds:
First, because of misjoinder of parties and the misjoinder of causes of action.
Second, for that no cause of action is taken in favor of the plaintiff on account of deposits alleged to have been wrongfully received.
From a judgment overruling the several demurrers, the defendants appeal, assigning errors. Without undertaking to state the substance of the complaint, which covers 95 pages of the record and contains more than 290 paragraphs or separate allegations, suffice it to say a careful perusal of the record leaves us with the impression that the demurrers were properly overruled on the alleged ground of multifariousness or misjoinder of parties and causes of action. Furniture Co. v. R. R., ante, 636.
The one circumstance which differentiates this case from those cited by the defendants, especially Emerson v. Gaither, 103 Md. 564, 7 Ann. Cas. 1114, most nearly in point and upon which great reliance in put, is the allegation of a general course of dealing and systematic policy of wrongdoing, concealment and mismanagement, virtually amounting to a conspiracy, in which the defendants are all charged with having participated at different times and in varying degrees. Cotton v. LaurelPark Estates, post, 848, 141 S.E. 339. A connected story is told and a complete picture is painted of the series of transactions, forming one general scheme, and tending to a single end. This saves the pleading from the challenge of the demurrers. Cotton Mills v. Maslin, ante, 12; Bedsolev. Monroe, 40 N.C. 313; Fisher v. Trust Co., 138 N.C. 224,50 S.E. 659; Oyster v. Mining Co., 140 N.C. 135, 52 S.E. 198; Hawk v. LumberCo., 145 N.C. 47, 58 S.E. 603; Chemical Co. v. Floyd, 158 N.C. 455,74 S.E. 465. *Page 719
In Young v. Young, 81 N.C. 92, it was held (as stated in the first headnote): "Where a general right is claimed arising out of a series of transactions tending to one end, the plaintiff may join several causes of action against defendants who have distinct and separate interests, in order to a conclusion of the whole matter in one suit." And it has been held that in such case the share of each, in causing the total loss, may be separately measured and assessed in one action. Long v. Swindell,77 N.C. 176.
But under Wall v. Howard, 194 N.C. 310, 139 S.E. 449, and Bane v.Powell, 192 N.C. 387, 135, S.E., 118, the allegations with respect to the wrongful receipt of deposits would seem to be without avail and superfluous in an action by the receiver. On motion, they should be stricken from the complaint. The injured depositors alone may sure for such alleged wrongs. To this extent, the demurrers are valid upon the second ground stated above.
Modified and Affirmed.