Defendants appeal from an order entered July 8, 1965, insofar as such order denied defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint and each cause of action therein, and to strike certain allegations thereof, and further denying defendants’ motion for reargument.
Plaintiffs are 32 limited partners, or approximately 30% of a total of about 100 such partners, of Terrace Associates, Ltd. (hereinafter Terrace). They bring this action individually and as limited partners on behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated, and in the right of Terrace.
The individual defendants Maurice S, Handler, Horodas and Harpas are general partners of Terrace. Defendant Newmark & Company (Newmark) is a New York partnership composed of six of the individual defendants, not including the three persons above named, though there is alleged to be a degree of relationship between at least two of them and certain members of the partnership. Defendant Austin Newmark, Inc. (Austin Newmark) is a New York corporation largely owned by Newmark.
On or about October 24, 1957, Newmark contracted to purchase the Terrace Motor Hotel (the Motel) in Austin, Texas. *335The contract was assigned to defendants Maurice S. Handler and Karpas who, as landlords, entered into a 15-year lease of the Motel with Newmark as tenant, at an annual base rental of $330,000. The contract of purchase was assigned to Terrace which took title to the Motel in May, 1958. At some point the lease was taken over by the Sheraton interests (Sheraton) which operated thereunder until about July, 1959, when it discontinued operations and transferred the lease to Austin Newmark. A prospectus was issued to the public in January, 1958 by Newmark, a real estate syndication of the Motel was worked out, and these plaintiffs and others became limited partners in the venture. Sometime about May, 1964 the venture failed and there was a foreclosure of the Terrace partnership properly by the mortgagee.
This action was commenced in July, 1964. The complaint sets forth five causes of action charging false misrepresentations, fraud and misconduct by the general partners afid others, and sought restitution of assets to Terrace, damages for wrongs done to Terrace and damages for wrongs done to plaintiffs as investors. Plaintiffs purport to bring a class action on behalf of all the limited partners, including those not named or joined. The false representations were allegedly contained in the printed prospectus. Defendants moved to dismiss the representative and derivative phases of the complaint alleging lack of capacity, and also contending certain parts of the first three causes of action were time-barred. Defendants also sought an amended complaint with causes separately stated and numbered.
Without attempting to analyze in detail the various charges, basic to the disposition of this appeal is resolution of the question—may the limited partners maintain this action as a class action!
Limited partnerships were unknown to the common law. They are solely creatures of statute (Lanier v. Bowdoin, 282 N. Y. 32; Ruzicka v. Rager, 305 N. Y. 191). ‘ ‘ The object to be accomplished * * # is to protect the special partner, and exempt him from a general liability and to place his capital alone at the peril of the business (Casola v. Kugelman, 33 App. Div. 428, 433, affd. on opinion of Patteeson, J. below, 164 N. Y. 608) ” (Lanier v. Bowdoin, supra, p. 38). u Limited partners as such shall not be bound by the obligations of the partnership ’ ’ (Partnership Law, § 90), and they have only such rights, duties, obligations, etc., as the statute may provide (Partnership Law [Limited Partnerships], §§ 90-115). It should be noted that a limited partner is expressly given “ (1) the same rights as a general partner to (a) Have the partnership hooks kept at *336the principal place of business of the partnership, and at all times to inspect and copy any of them, (b) Have on demand true and full information of all things affecting the partnership, and a formal account of partnership affairs whenever circumstances render it just and reasonable, and (c) Have dissolution and winding up by decree of court. (2) A limited partner shall have the right to receive a share of the profits or other compensation by way of income, and to the return of his contribution as provided in sections one hundred and four and one hundred and five of this article ” (Partnership Law, § 99; emphasis supplied). Section 104 deals with the compensation of a limited partner, while section 105 deals with the question of withdrawal or reduction of a limited partner’s contribution.
From the foregoing it is obvious that a limited partner is not in the hopeless position where he must only suffer in silence when an alleged wrong occurs. He has a right of full and free access to information contained in the partnership books, and of all things affecting the partnership, as well as a right to a formal accounting. Even a stockholder has no right to an accounting but must have recourse to a derivative action on behalf of and for the benefit of the corporation. Of course a limited partner, unlike a stockholder, has no right to a counsel fee if he prevails in the action. A limited partner also has a right to dissolution in addition to his rights as an individual against third parties. In brief, a limited partner has such rights and only such rights as the law and his contract afford (cf. Herrick v. Guild, 257 App. Div. 341).
'Section 115 of the Partnership Law which provides: “ A contributor, unless he is a general partner, is not a proper party to proceedings by or against a partnership; except where the object is to enforce a limited partner’s right against or liability to the partnership.” It does not restrict or limit the rights enumerated in section 99. It relates to claims by or against the partnership, and declares the circumstances under which a limited partner may be or may become a necessary or proper party to litigation. Even though a limited partnership may be regarded as a distinct entity for the purposes of pleading (Ruzicka v. Roger, supra, p. 197), and CPLR 1025 provides, is no right in a limited partner to sue in a derivative capacity in part: 1 ‘ Two or more persons conducting business as a partnership may sue or be sued in the partnership name,” there on behalf of the partnership (Partnership Law [Limited Part-a general partner unless, in addition to the exercise of his nership], § 115). Nor does a limited partner u become liable as rights and powers as a limited partner, he takes part in the *337control of the business ” (Partnership Law, § 96; cf. Executive Hotel Assoc. v. Elm Hotel Corp., 41 Misc 2d 354, affd. 43 Misc 2d 153).
Upon withdrawal or reduction of his contribution, “In the absence of any statement in the certificate to the contrary or the consent of all members, a limited partner, irrespective of the nature of his contribution, has only the right to demand and receive cash in return for his contribution” (Partnership Law, § 105, subd. [3]; see, also, §§ 99,112,115). Only a general partner is authorized to act in behalf of the partnership (Merrick v. New York Subways Adv. Co., 14 Misc 2d 456, 458; Yeager v. Transvision, Inc., 277 App. Div. 986).
While a limited partner has been compared to a shareholder of a corporation (Klebanow v. New York Produce Exch., 344 F. 2d 294) and has been characterized as having “ quasi-shareholder status ” (Ruzicka v. Rager, supra, p. 198) the fact remains that the Legislature has not seen fit to endow bim with the status of a shareholder, or to confer upon him the rights, powers and obligations of a shareholder. It is not part of the judicial function to do so. For an extensive discussion of the Klebanow case and the status of limited partners see “ Standing of Limited Partners to Sue Derivatively ” (65 Col. L. Rev., 1463). The writer discusses the analogy of a limited partner as a creditor as well as the contrasting view of a limited partner as a stockholder or trust beneficiary. He asserts, however, “ the limited partner is perhaps most aptly analogized to the holder of preferred stock whose capacity to sue derivately has been widely accepted ” (p. 1479). However, it should be borne in mind, as previously pointed out, that the Legislature which created the limited partnership took great care to enumerate the rights, privileges and benefits accruing to a limited partner. While allowing certain economic advantages to such partner, he is not at the same time exposed to the unlimited liability of a general partner. In the corporate form the corporation is an entity recognized by law for the purpose of bringing or defending an action as distinct from the individuals who comprise it. New York has long recognized the right of shareholders to maintain a derivative action. The contention that the limited partnership should be recognized as analogous to the corporate entity by a similar right in the contributor or limited partner to maintain a derivative action is presumably based on an equitable concept in positive law. The rights of the limited partner are increased but there is no correspond • ing increase in responsibility or potential liability.
*338The rights of a limited partner have been defined with precision in the Partnership Law heretofore referred to. CPLB 1005 has neither extended nor limited those rights. Each limited partner has a right to any share of the profits and to a return of his contribution (Partnership Law, § 99). In the case before us plaintiffs seek general damages for all limited partners (not a right or incident of the relationship), the return of their investment, an accounting, and expenses. The nature of the action precludes any conclusion that the u question is one of common or general interest” (CPLR 1005, subd, [a]) or that the interests of each and every limited partner are common; 'or identical so as to authorize a single common action (Onofrio v. Playboy Club of N. Y., 15 N Y 2d 740; Society Milion Athena v. National Bank of Greece, 281 N. Y. 282; Brenner v. Title Guar. & Trust Co., 276 N. Y. 230; cf. Gaynor v. Rockefeller, 15 N Y 2d 120). If there was wrongdoing each limited partner suffered a separate wrong and has a separate cause of action.
The basis for the alleged misrepresentations as the inducing cause for investment is the prospectus which was circulated publicly. Aside from the fact that such prospectus need not have been the inducing cause for each and every one of the limited partners or influenced each to the same extent, there is grave doubt that a class action for fraud could be premised thereon (Coolidge v. Kaskel, 16 N Y 2d 569). If there was fraud in the inducement, the wrong done was to each limited partner individually, and his cause of action is separate and individual (Brenner v. Title Guar. & Trust Co., supra, p. 233; White v. Ludwig, 32 Misc 2d 120; cf. Medvec v. 333 East 69th St., 14 A D 2d 849).
Bespondents cite and apparently place great reliance upon Executive Hotel Assoc. v. Elm Hotel Corp. (41 Misc 2d 354, affd. 43 Misc 2d 153); E. H. A. Successor Corp. v. Vogel (21 A D 2d 176) and Klebanow v. New York Produce Exch. (supra) so it might be well to examine briefly those cases. In Executive Hotel Assoc. v. Elm Hotel, the plaintiff landlord instituted a rent nonpayment proceeding against Elm as tenant. The plaintiff was a limited partnership and one "Vogel, chairman of a committee of the limited partners, signed the petition which instituted the proceeding. The limited partners under the syndication were to receive dividends in the form of rent from Elm. One Glatstian was the sole general partner of the limited partnership and was also president and majority stockholder of Elm, the defaulting sublessee of the limited partnership. By Glatstian’s machinations the limited partnership had relinquished obligations and security in favor of Elm and *339the limited partnership had been stripped of its sole asset, the leasehold. The court merely held: “ Under the flagrant and singular circumstances revealed” (p. 359) the committtee chairman was a person entitled to apply under subdivision 8 of section 721 of the Beal Property Actions and Proceedings Law so that the landlord, the limited partnership, could institute and maintain proceedings as provided in subdivision 1 of section 721. The court was careful to note that by so doing the chairman subjected himself to the same possible consequences as a general partner. The court also pointed out that Glatstian had violated section 98 of the Partnership Law and also a specific provision of the partnership agreement.
In E. H. A. Successor Corp. v. Vogel (21 A D 2d 176) where the defendant had appealed from an order which granted a stay and appointed a receiver, we pointed out that indispensable and even proper parties, plaintiff or defendant, should be added in the Supreme Court action and that the pleading should be amended to clarify the situation, with leave to the defendant to interpose any possible defenses or counterclaim.
Klebanow v. New York Produce Exch. (supra) went somewhat further. The question as stated by the court was ‘ ‘ whether limited partners of a New York partnership in dissolution can sue on its behalf for damages claimed to have been inflicted on it by conduct proscribed by the federal antitrust law, when the partnership and the liquidating partner allegedly have rendered themselves unable to sue and their delegate is claimed to be unwilling to do so because of affiliations with the defendants ” (p. 295). The court, after an extended discussion, reversed the dismissal for want of capacity with instructions to file an amended complaint in default of which a new order of dismissal could be entered. Moore, Circuit Judge, concurred only in the result. The court’s discussion of the relationship between limited partners and the partnership concluded that the New York courts did not consider section 115 of the Partnership Law, “a clear mandate against limited partners’ capacity to bring an action like this ” (p. 298). It noted that who might bring an action under section 4 of the Clayton Act (U. S. Code, tit, 15, § 15) on behalf of a partnership was a question within Federal competence and observed ‘ ‘ in the main, a limited partner is more like a shareholder ” and that it makes “ considerably greater sense to clothe the instant appellants with whatever descriptive phrase is necessary to enable them to sue on behalf of the partnership than to entertain derivative suits by persons owning a few shares in giant corporations ” (p. 297). The court seems to have gone on the basis of policy *340considerations and to have overlooked the fact that the New York Legislature has not so extended the law as to limited partnerships. Possibly its attention was not called to a long line of cases which do not equate or even substantially analogize a limited partner to a shareholder. In Mannaberg v. Herbst (45 N. Y. S. 2d 197, affd. without opn. 267 App. Div. 818, affd. 293 N. Y. 657) an action by one of four general partners against a third person for damages allegedly sustained by reason of the wrongdoing of such third person and one or more of the partners, it was pointed out “ that where one partner and a third person join in a fraudulent disposition of partnership property the wrong is done not to the firm but to each partner separately and that each not only may but must sue alone for such damage as he has sustained" (p. 199). It would seem that a limited partner should have no greater right in seeking redress than a general partner, i.e., by individual action. (See, also, Sweet v. Morrison, 103 N. Y. 235, 240.)
While the appellants seek to have respondents separately state and number the causes of action and to strike certain causes as time-barred, in light of our conclusion that the class action may not be maintained we conclude the better procedure is to direct service of an amended complaint.
Accordingly, the order appealed from should be reversed on the law and the motion to dismiss the complaint granted, with leave to replead, and with costs and disbursements to appellants.