Black v. Simpson

April 14, 1913. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The appeal is from an order of the Circuit Judge overruling defendant's demurrer to the complaint.

For the purposes of this discussion the material facts set out in the complaint may be stated in few words. The defendant, Arthur O. Simpson, was a director and general manager of the Farmers Fertilizer Company, in which the plaintiffs were shareholders. The defendant, while occupying this trust relation to the plaintiffs, conceived and entered upon a scheme of acquiring the entire corporate assets at much less than their actual value by representing to each of the plaintiffs that the corporation was not prosperous, but financially embarrassed, and thus having assigned to him the shares of each of the plaintiffs at much less than their real value. The defendant successfully carried out his scheme by means of the false representation to the plaintiffs as to the condition of the corporation and the value of its property; and thus, in breach of his trust, induced the plaintiffs and other shareholders to sell him their stock. After thus acquiring all, or nearly all, the shares of stock, he sold "the stock, franchises, real estate, buildings and machinery" at much more than he had paid the shareholders, to his great profit and to the great loss of the plaintiffs. The grounds of demurrer to the complaint are as follows: *Page 314

First. "Upon the ground that the same does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, in that it fails to state facts which, if true, constitute a joint cause of action in behalf of the plaintiffs against the defendant, and if it states any cause of action at all, states a separate and distinct cause of action in favor of each of the plaintiffs against the defendant, it being submitted that such separate and distinct causes of action do not constitute a joint cause of action and cannot be joined in one cause of action.

Second. "Upon the further ground that the complaint fails to allege any facts showing that the plaintiffs, or any of them, have ever rescinded, or offered to rescind, the several contracts whereby the defendant purchased from several parties all stock in the Farmers Fertilizer Company and fails to allege any tender by the plaintiffs, or any of them, to the defendant of the amounts paid to the several plaintiffs by the defendant for the shares of stock purchased from each of them, it being submitted that such allegations are necessary and prerequisite to the maintenance of this action."

Considering the second and less important ground first, it is perfectly clear that tender by each plaintiff of the amount received for his stock was not a necessary condition of bringing an action of this character. The action is not for rescission. Indeed, the complaint alleges that the property has passed from the ownership and control of the defendant. But even if the property were still in the hands of the defendant, it is elementary that the plaintiffs could either tender back the price paid and demand a rescission, or they could elect to let their transfer to the defendant stand, and bring their action to require him to account for the true value of the property acquired at less than its true value by false representation in breach of his trust. Examination of their complaint shows that this last is the course the plaintiffs have elected to pursue, and that the action is one to require the defendant, as their trustee, to account *Page 315 to them for the profit obtained by the acquisition and resale of property through a breach of his trust. Whittle v. Jones,79 S.C. 205; 60 S.E. 522; 20 Cyc. 87, and cases cited.

The second question, whether the plaintiffs can sue jointly to require an accounting from the defendant, is one of greater difficulty. The argument in support of the demurrer on this point has been strongly presented, but it is plausible rather than sound. If the transactions alleged in the complaint amounted to nothing more than sales whereby a stranger had obtained from each of the plaintiffs separately a transfer of his stock by false representations, it would be true that each stockholder should maintain a separate suit in his own behalf for the difference between the real value of the stock and the price paid. But, this case is much more than separate transactions of that sort between strangers. The defendant, as director and manager, was trustee not only of the corporation, but for all the stockholders. 10 Cyc. 787; 2 Pomeroy's Eq., sec. 1090. His duty was to manage the corporate property for the benefit of the stockholders; and in the performance of that duty he was chargeable with the utmost good faith. It was a breach of his trust to all of the stockholders to use any means to acquire for himself the corporate property, except in the open after giving to the stockholders fully and candidly, all material information he possessed as to its condition and value. Yet, according to the complaint, he entered upon a scheme to control the corporation and acquire the corporate property for his own advantage by positive concealment as to the real condition of the corporation and the value of its property. Each separate purchase of the shares of a stockholder was but one step in the general scheme to defraud the stockholders, as a class, consummated by the acquisition of all, or nearly all, of the stock and the subsequent sale of the corporate property at a great profit.

Looking at the complaint in this its full scope, it seems to me clear, both on reason and authority, that the plaintiffs *Page 316 as cestuis que trust may maintain a joint action against the common trustee for an accounting for the profits made by him in breach of his trust at their expense, each being charged in the accounting with the amount received by him from the trustee in the course of the execution of the fraudulent scheme. The subject of the action is the consummated scheme to defraud the stockholders, the cestuis que trust of the defendant; and all the plaintiffs are interested in the relief of an accounting. Hence the joinder is allowed by sec. 166 of the Code of Procedure, which provides that "all persons having an interest in the subject of the action, and in obtaining the relief demanded, may be joined as plaintiffs."

Turning to the authorities, the test in determining when there may be a joinder of plaintiffs seems to be whether there is a wrong common to all, or, stated differently, whether all are interested in the matter, or thing, concerning which the action is brought. Hellams v. Switzer,24 S.C. 40; Bliss on Code Pleading, sec. 76. That the consummation of the defendant's scheme to acquire the property, in breach of his trust, was a wrong common to all the stockholders, and a matter, or thing, in which they were all interested seems evident. In this, the case is distinguished from the Hellams case, just cited; for that was an action by persons who owned separate tracks of land for damages, and an injunction against the defendant who had dammed up a stream. There was no common interest, no trust relation common to all the plaintiffs, no wrong common to all; and, therefore, the Court held the joint action could not be maintained. It is well settled that several distributees entitled to unequal portions of an estate, after receiving unequal payments, may unite in an action against an administrator to require him to account for breaches of his trust, and pay over to each his share, though the shares be unequal.Stallings v. Barrett, 26 S.C. 478, 2 S.E. 483; McCorkle v.Williams, 43 S.C. 66, 20 S.E. 744; Wagner v. Sanders, *Page 317 49 S.C. 192, 27 S.E. 68. The present case falls under the same principle.

The examination of the authorities leads to the conclusion that no inflexible rule on the subject of joinder of parties can be laid down, and that the provisions of the Code of Procedure on the subject must be allowed considerable flexibility to meet the requirements of justice and convenience in the cases as they arise. Pomeroy's Remedies, secs. 257 and 266; 16 Cyc. 198. This was so even under the strict rules of the old practice. "It is a favorite object of this Court to prevent multiplicity of suits and variety of litigation. Furthermore, `if the nature of the transaction (says an approved author, Adams' Equity 310) makes a single suit convenient, the objection of multifariousness in such cases will not be sustained.' In Oliver v. Platt, 3 Howard U.S. 333, 411, the Court says: `Where the interest of different parties are so complicated in different transactions that entire justice could not be done without uniting the whole, the bill is not multifarious.' And, again, `there is no general rule by which to determine whether a bill, in such cases, is multifarious or not; but it must be left to the discretion of the Court, under the circumstances of the case.' See, also, Williams v. Neel, 10 Rich. Eq. 338; Barkley v.Barkley, 14 Rich. Eq. 12."

In a case like this where, according to the complaint, an officer of a corporation conceives and consummates a scheme to defraud the stockholders by deceiving them as to the value of the corporate property, and purchases the stock of each as a step in his scheme of fraudulent acquisition, it seems to us not only illogical, but most inconvenient and unjust to require each stockholder to allege and prove the fraudulent scheme and the breach of trust in a separate action. In many corporations there are hundreds, and in some thousands, of stockholders, many of them having small holdings and residing at a distance from the corporate enterprise. To establish a rule which would deny to stockholders in *Page 318 such cases the right to unite in attacking such a breach of trust as is here alleged and demanding an accounting by the trustee, would be a practical denial of justice.

For these reasons, judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.

MESSRS. CHIEF JUSTICE EUGENE B. GARY and JUSTICE WATTS concur.