1. Taking the allegations in the bill to be true, as we are bound to do upon a demurrer, it sets forth a case clearly within the chancery jurisdiction of this court under St. 1851, c. 327, § 16. One main purpose of the bill is to vacate the proceedings in insolvency against the Cheshire Iron Works, on the ground of irregularity and illegality. This power has been uniformly exercised by this court as to proceedings in insolvency against individuals under St. 1838, c. 163, § 18, and it has been adjudged to be the only proper mode of trying and determining the validity and legality of the proceedings by which a debtor’s property is made subject to the insolvent laws and transferred to an assignee. Partridge v. Hannum, 2 Met. 569. Wheelock v. Hastings, 4 Met. 504. Hanson v. Paige, ante, 242. Penniman v. Freeman, ante, 248. The provisions of St. 1851, c. 327, § 16, giving equity jurisdiction to this court in all cases arising under that statute concerning proceedings in insolvency against corporations, are identical with those of St. 1838, c. 163, § 18. The question of jurisdiction would seem therefore to be res adjudicata.
Nor is it any objection to the exercise of this jurisdiction in the present case, that the proceedings were ordered by the commissioner to be stayed on the petition of one of the creditors of the corporation. No such authority is given to commissioners *534of insolvency, in regard to insolvent corporations, by St. 1851, c. 327. Such power was conferred by St. 1848, c. 304, § 13, in regard to proceedings against individual insolvents. But although most of the powers possessed by commissioners of insolvency, to regulate and control proceedings against insolvent debtors, were embodied in St. 1851, c. 327, and expressly conferred upon them in relation to insolvent corporations, the power to stay proceedings against such corporations was studiously omitted. The order of the commissioner, therefore, vacating the proceedings in the present case, was unauthorized and void; they are still in force, and the only mode of superseding them for illegality is by an application to the equity jurisdiction of this court.
2. It is further objected that the bill cannot be maintained by the present plaintiffs; or, if it can, that, in its present form, it is bad for misjoinder of plaintiffs, and for multifariousness. But these objections are founded on a misapprehension of the main object of the bill. The plaintiffs have a common purpose which they seek to effect by it, in which each has a direct interest, and in regard to which they are, in the sense of the statute, aggrieved parties. If the proceedings in insolvency are illegal, then the corporation, acting for itself, and Seneca Pettee as a creditor of the corporation, are aggrieved by them, and each has a right to have them vacated. The rights of both plaintiffs are essentially involved in the proceedings, and both are interested in the common purpose of procuring them to be set aside. If the plaintiffs are both proper parties to the bill for any purpose, it is no objection that one is also joined for a purpose which, if it stood alone, would make the bill multifarious. It is sufficient to obviate all objection to the bill on this ground, that each party has an interest in the one main purpose of the bill; and it is unimportant that there are other matters contained in it in which only some of them have an interest. The rule is well settled, that a bill is not bad for misjoinder or multifariousness, when the parties have one common interest touching the subject matter of the bill, although they claim in different rights, and their interests are independent of each other. If there is a common *535interest m the point in issue in the cause, among all the parties it is immaterial that the rights of the parties are otherwise separate and independent of each other. Story Eq. PL §§ 285, 285 a, 531 Sf seq. These well settled principles leave no doubt as to the sufficiency of this bill, both as respects the parties and the subject matter. The plaintiffs are each aggrieved by the proceedings in insolvency, if they are irregular and illegal; both have a common interest and common purpose in procuring these proceedings to be set aside, and the defendants are all interested in this issue, as claiming title to or having a direct interest in property transferred under said proceedings.
The ground of the demurrer seems to have been that Pettee’s claim for relief in equity consisted solely in the allegation ihat he had taken a deed, from the Cheshire Iron Works, of the same real estate which had been previously sold by Gay to one of the other defendants, by virtue of his power and authority as assignee under the proceedings in insolvency. But this is not so. The bill also sets forth, that he is a creditor of the Cheshire Iron Works, and it is on this ground that he is aggrieved by the proceedings in insolvency, and has a common interest with the corporation in the maintenance of the bill. It is true, that incidentally he may have a separate and distinct interest in the subject matter of the suit, as grantee of the corporation, and that a decree in favor of the plaintiffs, annulling the proceedings in insolvency, may operate to confirm his title under that grant. But this furnishes no reason for refusing to the plaintiffs the relief which they jointly seek on. other and satisfactory grounds. It is no objection that different claims to relief are united in the same bill, if the main subject matter be such as may be heard and determined without inconvenience or confusion, and be disposed ©f by one adjudication. Story Eq. Pl. § 533.
3. We know of no rule which requires a party, in a case like the present, to annex a full copy of the record of proceedings in insolvency. He must produce it, at the hearing, as the foundation of his claim for relief. But it is then produced and used in the nature of evidence in support of the allegations in the biV, and not as necessary to constitute a part of the bill itself.
Demwrer overruled