In re Dietz

Dowling, J.:

This is a special proceeding brought to secure the removal of Frederick Dietz as one of two surviving trustees of trusts created for the benefit of Anna Dietz by the last will and-testament of Rob-' ert E.; Dietz, deceased. It was commenced by the service- of copies of - the petition-of Anna Dietz and of the notice of motion upon the two trustees and other persons interested, and thereafter, on July 17, 1909, the matter was referred by consent to Hamilton Odell, Esq., to f take the evidence and report the same with his opinion; since that time' it has been pending before such referee and is still undetermined. Among the assets of the trust estate are included 600 shares of the R. E. Dietz Company, out of a total of 1,000 shares, the remainder belonging to Frederick Dietz and John E. Deitz, except the number of shares required to qualify Frank H. Clement as a' director. The grounds upon which the removal of Frederick Dietz as a.trustee is demanded are found in, the allegations óf the petition detailing his management of the corporation, his votes as a director and his actions as an officer thereof, and a general course of dealing by which he is claimed to have so controlled its financial operations and the distribution o"f its profits as to diminish, or keep at án inadequate figure, the dividends payable from the company ¡ and to unduly increase and .maintain its cash' surplus, thus reducing the income to the petitioner (who has the life estate from said 600 shares), and adding to the principal which will ultimately go to the remaindermen, who are Frederick Dietz, John E. Dietz and the wife of said Frank H. Clement. It is further claimed that Frederick Dietz’s personal interests are in conflict *285with those of his mother, the petitioner, now a very aged woman, and that this furnishes further ground for. his removal. The directors of said corporation at the time the. proceeding was commenced were Frederick Dietz, John E. Dietz and. Frank FI. Clement. The annual election of the corporation was held on March 16, 1909, and prior thereto the petitioner requested her trustees,. Frederick Dietz and Samuel McMillan, to vote the 600 shares of stock held by them for Samuel McMillan as director in place of Frank IF. Clement, whose term as director was about. to expire. This the former refused .to do,, voting them for Clement, while McMillan voted them, as requested, for himself, thus leading to a situation where, by the voting of the other 400 shares for Clement, the latter was elected to succeed himself. The next annual election, of directors thereafter was set for January 24,1910, and on January 20, 1910, upon an affidavit of petitioner’s attorney, the original petition herein, the answer of Frederick Dietz, and the proceedings theretofore had, an order to show cause was granted why the trustees “ should not be instructed and directed to attend the annual meeting of the stockholders of the It. E. Dietz Company for the election of directors, to be held on January 24, 1910, and at such election to vote the 600 shares of stock of said corporation, held by them as trustees aforesaid,' in favor of Frederick Dietz and Samuel McMillan as directors of said corporation, or at such meeting to move that said election be adjourned until the termination of this proceeding, and the entry of an order thereon, and to vote said shares in favor of said motion.” The order to show cause further contained a direction to such trustees to vote the shares of stock held by them in favor of an adjournment of the election until the determination of the motion. The affidavit upon- which the order was granted recited the progress of the proceeding, the intention to re-elect Clement a director, and the reasons why Clement should not be re-elected, which are largely based upon his participation with Frederick Dietz in the various acts claimed to have been, injurious to the interests of the petitioner. It will be noted that there is no objection made to the re-election of any other director, nor to the re-election of Clement as secretary of the corporation.. The only relief asked for is the substitution of McMillan for the. latter as a director. From the petitioner’s theory of - the situation *286the corporation would still remain under the domination of Frederick Dietz. ■ Upon the return of the order to show cause the motion was granted, and the trustees were instructed by order to vote the 600 shares of stock held by them in favor of Frederick Dietz and Samuel McMillan as directors, thereby insuring the defeat of Clement. From this order the present appeal is taken. Objection has been taken to the power of the court to make it; upon the ground that it was in effect a mandatory injunction, and that it is now well settled that a court of equity has no inherent absolute power to grant interlocutory injunctions, but the authority therefor must be found in the Code of Civil Procedure. (Bachman v. Harrington, 184 N. Y. 462.) Under the Code there dues not appear to be any warrant for the granting of a temporary injunction save in an action (§§ 603, 604, 606, 608), and the distinction between an action and a special proceeding is clearly drawn. (§§ 3333, 3334.) The only exceptions of any kind to this rule, contained in the statutes and' authorizing the issuance of an injunction order, are to be found in the few isolated cases where an injunction is authorized in a special proceeding specifically named, as, for example, in the Code of Civil Procedure (§ 2423, as atad'. by Laws of 1889, chap. 3Í4; Laws of 1895,. chap. 946, and Laws of 1906, chap. 293), which, so far as applicable, has been revised into' tile General Corporation Law of 1909 (Consol. Laws, chap. 23 [Laws of 1909, chap. 28], § 184), and allows the court in its discretion to grant an injunction restraining the creditors of a corporation in special proceedings for the voluntary dissolution tif a corporation from beginning any action against it for the recovery of a -sum of money, or from taking any further proceedings in such-an action theretofore commenced. And it may well be that there are instances where, in special proceedings brought for specified particular purposes under the general powers of the court, it would be' authorized to issue a temporary staying order to insure the efficient' execution of its final determination. The petitioner, however, claims that the order granted is not an injunction, but simply a direction of the court for the method of execution of the trust in a special case, where one of the trustees was about to act in- bad faith and for his: own benefit, and where a disagreement existed between the trustees as tó' their course of action. But the infirmity of tin's contention is that a motion is-*287simply an application made in a pending or proposed action or special proceeding, and must depend for its granting upon its relevancy to the main litigation; it is not an independent right. Here the motion granted is in no way incidental to the riiain relief sought; it bears no relation to any proceeding authorized by statute; and it presents no condition warranting the intervention of the court by mandatory direction before the determination of the main issue.

The order appealed from must, therefore, be reversed, with ten dollars costs, and the motion denied, with ten dollars costs.

. Ingraham, P. J., Clarke and Soott, JJ., concurred.

Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.