
    Frederick Phillips, Suing on his Own Behalf and on Behalf of All the Stockholders of the Sonora Copper Company, Respondent, v. Sonora Copper Company and Others, Appellants, Impleaded with Others.
    
      Complaint against certain corporations and individuals, alleging misrepresentations inducing the sale of some of the stock of one of the corporations, and other misrepresentations inducing stockholders of such corporation to exchange its stock for that of the other corpoi'ations, the diversion of the proceeds of the sale of the stocks, and asking for an accounting and receiver — it does not state a cause of action — when the courts will appoint a receiver of a foreign corpoi'ation.
    
    The complaint in. an action brought by Frederick Phillips, suing on behalf of himself and of all stockholders of the Sonora Copper Company, against the Sonora Copper Company, the Puerteeito Copper Company and the Empire Consolidated Quicksilver Mining Company, all foreign corporations, and a number of individuals who controlled the affairs of such corporations, set forth a prospectus issued by the Sonora Copper Company, inviting subscriptions to the treasury stock of the company, together with a statement issued by the Sonora Copper Company, and alleged that certain statements in the prospectus and statement were not true; that they were issued pursuant to some fraudulent scheme for the purposé of promoting sales of the stock of the Sonora Copper Company; that, as a result of the issuance and circulation of the prospectus and of their personal efforts hy solicitation and correspondence and of statements with regard to the properties of the Sonora Copper Company, the individual defendants succeeded in selling a large amount of the stock of said company to various persons. It was not alleged that the plaintiff purchased any stock in reliance upon the prospectus or upon the statements made by the company or by the individual defendants.
    The complaint further alleged that the Sonora Copper Company is not now engaged in business, and “that, if the said Company now has any assets or claims of any sort of any value, there is grave reason to apprehend that said assets and claims will be dissipated and lost unless cared for by some persons other than the defendants; ” that the individual defendants had, by certain false and fraudulent representations, succeeded in inducing certain stockholders of the Sonora Copper Company to exchange their stock for stock of the Puertecito Copper Company and of the Empire Consolidated Quicksilver Mining Company and were now engaged in persuading other stockholders of the Sonora Copper Company to do so; that all these wrong and fraudulent-acts had been done in pursuance of some conspiracy to defraud the stockholders of the Sonora Copper Company. It was not alleged that any of these false and fraudulent statements had deceived the plaintiff,' or had caused him any injury or had affected the value of hiá stock.
    The complaint further alleged that large sums of money were obtained by the individual defendants from the sale of the stock of the Sonora Copper Company; that such money had been diverted from the use of the Sonora Copper Company and had been delivered to the other defendant corporations, and that all of the assets of the Sonora Copper Company were in the possession of the other defendants without right or authority. It was not alleged that the stock so sold was the stock of the Sonora Copper Company or that the defendants had misappropriated or misapplied any of the money or property of the Sonora Copper Company, or that that corporation ever owned or sold a share of its own stock or ever had any property of any kind.
    The complaint further alleged that the individual defendants were not fit persons to have charge of the affairs of the defendant corporations and that they ought to account to the Sonora Copper Company for all assets of said company which have been turned over to them, as alleged or otherwise.
    The relief demanded was that a receiver be appointed for the defendant, the Sonora Copper Company; that the individual defendants account to such receiver for the sums- of money obtained by them from the sale of the stock of the Sonora Copper Company; that the defendant corporations, other than the Sonora Copper Company, pay to such receiver the sums received by the individual defendants from the sale of the stock of the Sonora Copper Company to -the extent that such defendant corporations have received such money from the individual defendants, and that the Puertecito Copper Company account to the receiver for such assets of tt^e Sonora Copper Company as it had received.
    
      Meld, that the complaint did not state facts entitling the plaintiff to any relief.
    
      While .the courts of the State of Sew York will, under certain circumstances, appoint a receiver of a foreign corporation when necessary for the protection of the stockholders or creditors of the corporation, they will not appoint a receiver of a foreign corporation simply because of general allegations of misconduct on the part of the directors or officers thereof.
    Appeal by the defendants, Sonora Copper Company and others, from, an interlocutory judgment of the Supreme Court in favor-of ' the plaintiff, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Hew York on the 25th day of April, 1903, upon the decision of the court, rendered after a trial at the Hew York Special Term, oyerruling the said defendants’ demurrers to the plaintiff’s complaint.
    ■J. G. Thomson, for the appellants.
    
      Harry S. Bandler, for the respondent.
   Ingraham, J.:

It is somewhat difficult to ascertain from this complaint just what was attempted to be alleged. The defendants, the Señora Copper Company and the Puertecito Copper Company, are foreign, corporations existing by virtue of the laws of the State of Delaware; and the defendant, the Empire Consolidated Quicksilver Mining Company, is a foreign corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Hew Jersey; and the individual defendants are alleged to control and handle the affairs of these corporations. The defendant Hallenborg is the treasurer of one copper company and the secretary and treasurer of the other copper company. There are other allegations scattered through the complaint which would seem .to indicate that these‘defendants, or some of them, are also directors, of one, or more of these companies, although I cannot find that that fact is directly alleged. The complaint then sets out a prospectus that was issued by the Sonora Copper Company which invited subscriptions to a limited number of shares of the treasury stock of the company at eight dollars per share, alleging" that this prospectus was signed by one Costello as vice-president, and by the defendant Hallenborg as treasurer of the Sonora Copper Company. There is then set out a statement issued by the Sonora Copper Company ; and this prospectus and statement are alleged to have been issued and circulated pursuant to some fraudulent scheme for the purpose of promoting sales of stock of the Sonora Copper Company, and that certain statements in this prospectus and statement are not true. It is then alleged that as a result of the -issuance and circulation of this prospectus, notwithstanding the falsity thereof, and as a result of their personal efforts by solicitation and correspondence, and by making statements with regard to the properties of the Sonora Cop- per Company of the nature set out in the foregoing prospectuses, the individual defendants succeeded' in selling at various prices a large amount of the stock of said company to various persons in different localities in the United States.

• From this allegation it would appear that it was the individual defendants that sold the stock, and not the corporation; but it is not alleged that the plaintiff purchased any stock relying upon the statements of this prospectus, dr in the statements made by the companies or the individual defendants.

The plaintiff then alleges that the Sonora Copper Company is not now engaged in business, and “ that if the said Company now has any assets or claims of any sort of any value, there is grave reason to apprehend that said assets and claims will be dissipated and lost unless cared for by some. persons other than the defendants; ” that the individual defendants are connected with or are interested in the other corporate defendants and have circulated information among the stockholders of the Sonora Copper Company residing in the States of "Vermont and New York to the effect that the assets of the Sonora Copper Company have been turned over to the Puertecito Copper Company and that they"have.informed the stockholders of the Sonora Copper Company in Kentucky that the Empire Consolidated Quicksilver Mining Company possessed the assets of the Sonora Copper Company, and said defendants have endeavored to induce; the stockholders of the defendant Sonora Copper Company to exchange their stock for that of the said the Puertecito Copper Company and Empire Consolidated Quicksilver Mining Company; and for the purpose of preventing criticism of and inquiry into and action upon their acts in relation to these corporations, they are endeavoring to bring about such transfers, although there is no allegation that they have endeavored to or have succeeded in deceiving this plaintiff. It is also alleged that they are engaged in deceiv„ing and tricking persons to purchase stock of the Sonora Copper Company in the manner before alleged; that the defendants, acting in pursuance of their false and fraudulent scheme to obtain money from the public and to turn over any assets of the Sonora Copper Company to the defendant, the Puertecito Copper Company, or the Empire Consolidated Quicksilver Mining Company, and for the purpose of preventing an investigation by the stockholders of the Sonora [Copper Company, with respect to their said deceitful and wrongful acts, caused and permitted to be issued and uttered to the stockholders of the Sonora Copper Company, resident in Kentucky, statements that said company had gone out of the copper mining business, and that there had been organized a quicksilver mining company; and that the assets of the Sonora Copper Company were held by the Empire Quicksilver Mining Company; that as a result of said statements and representations certain of the stockholders of the Sonora Copper Company, residing in Kentucky, were induced to exchange their stock in the Sonora Copper Company for stock in the Empire Consolidated Quicksilver Mining Company at par; that for the same purpose similar representations were made to stockholders of the Sonora Copper Company in Vermont and Hew York, and that by said statements various stockholders of the Sonora Copper Company were induced to exchange their stock for stock in the Empire Consolidated Quicksilver Mining Company. It is further alleged that the individual defendants have made other representations about these companies which are all alleged to be false and untrue; and that by reason of all of these false and untrue statements they are now engaged in persuading the stockholders of the Sonora Copper Company to exchange their stock for stock of the other companies, and that all of these very wrongful and fraudulent acts have been done in pursuance of some conspiracy to defraud the stockholders of the Sonora Copper Company. But it is not alleged that any of these false and fraudulent statements and representations have at all deceived the plaintiff or have caused him any injury, or have affected the value of the stock held by him. It is then alleged that large sums of money were obtained by the individual defendants from the sale of the stock of the Sonora Copper Company, but that said sums of money have been diverted from the use of the Sonora Company and have been delivered over to the other defendant corporations, and that all of the assets of the Sonora Company are in' the possession of the other defendants without right or authority and to the ends and purposes of the defendants herein other than the Sonora Copper Company. But it is not alleged that the stock' so sold was the stock of the Sonora Company, or that the defendants have misappropriated or misapplied any of the money or property of the Sonora Copper Company.

It is difficult to understand just what relation all of these alleged false and fraudulent representations as to the condition and affairs of these various defendant corporations have to do with any cause of action which the plaintiff, suing on behalf of himself and all other stockholders, can enforce. Just what disposition was made of the stock of this company by its various stockholders, whether it was exchanged or sold, is no concern of the plaintiff as a stockholder." It could make no difference to him who the other stockholders are, or how much they have been affected by the frauds of the individual defendants, as long as he has sustained no injury by their acts. Nor does it appear how the acts of the various stockholders of the' Sonora Copper Company in disposing of their stock or exchanging their stock could affect the Sonora Copper Company. If these individual defendants have sold their own stock, or other people’s stock, and realized large sums of money for it, so far as is alleged, they were under no obligation to turn the proceeds of that stock over to the Sonora Company or to other of the corporations. If they sold stock belonging to the Sonora Copper Company and misappropriated the proceeds, there would be a cause of action in favor of the company against them, and such cause of action might, under certain conditions, be enforced by a stockholder suing on behalf of himself and all other stockholders. But I fail to find in this complaint any allegation that would sustain such a cause of action, as there is no allegation that the corporation ever owned a share, of its own stock, ever sold a share of it, or that these individual defendants have ever received a; share of the stock of the company which had belonged to it, or which it had sold. The general allegation that all the assets of the Sonora Copper Company, such as they may be, are in the possession of these other defendant corporations and are being diverted from the said corporation without right or authority, is not sufficient to sustain a cause of action, as there is no allegation that the Sonora Copper Company has or ever had any property of any 'kind. All that the complaint alleges is that, if it ever had any property in its possession of the. other corporations, it has been diverted. ' Certainly such an allegation cannot be seriously considered as giving a cause of action.

The complaint then goes on to detail a proceeding-which the plaintiff through his attorney, Anthony Higgins, Esq., of Wilmington, Del., brought in the courts of the State of Delaware; but just what this has to do with any claim that' the plaintiff can enforcé in the courts of this State is not perceived; nor does it appear just what the mandamus alleged to have been issued by the Superior Court of the State of Delaware, directing the Sonora Copper Company to file a certificate in the office of the Secretary of State, and stating the amount'of installments of calls of capital paid, has to do with the complaint that the plaintiff makes against these defendants.

Having alleged all of these fraudulent and. wrongful acts of these defendants, the plaintiff, alleges upon information and belief that the individual defendants are not fit persons to have charge of any affairs or property of the defendant corporations, and. that they ought to account to the Sonora Copper Company for all assets of said company which have been turned over to them, as alleged or otherwise. But as I fail to find any allegation that the Sonora Copper Company ever had any property, or ever turned any oyer to the individual defendants, there does not seem to be any. substance in this allegation.

The .plaintiff, then, upon these allegations* asks, fl/rst, that a receiver be appointed for the defendant, the Sonora Copper Company. As the said company is a foreign corporation, organized under the laws of the State of Delaware, it would appear that any application to appoint a receiver of that corporation should be made in that State. While the. courts of this State will, under cei^ tain .circumstances, appoint a receiver of the property of a foreign .corporation in'this State, when necessary for the protection of the stockholders or creditors of the corporation, I know of no. authority which justifies the courts of this State in .appointing a receiver of a foreign, corporation because of general allegations of misconduct ,on the part of the directors or officers.

The second relief that the plaintiff asks is that the individual, defendants account to the receiver of the Sonora Copper Company to be appointed for the sums of money obtained by them from the sale of the stock of the Sonora Copper Company. Just why the individual defendants should account to the Sonora Copper Company is not apparent, as it is not alleged that the company is. insolvent or has any creditors, that these individual defendants have, any property of the company in their hands, that the company ever had any stock in its possession, or that any stock belonging to the; company had ever been sold.

The third relief to which the plaintiff considers himself entitled is that the defendant corporations, other than the Sonora Copper Company, pay over to the receiver of the Sonora Copper Company the sums of money received by the individual defendants from the sale of the stock of the Sonora Copper Company to such extent as the said Puertecito Copper Company and the Empire Consolidated Quicksilver Mining Company have received the same from the individual defendants, and that the Puertecito Copper Company account; to the receiver for such assets of the Sonora Copper Company as-they have received. But for the same reasons it is quite apparent that, upon the facts alleged the plaintiff could not be entitled to this relief-

The learned judge at Special Term, in overruling this demurrer,, seems to have found some allegation in the complaint which charges the individual defendants with selling and misappropriating the treasury stock of the Sonora Copper Company, but I have been unable to find any such allegation. The only statement in the complaint that the Sonora Company ever had any stock is that contained in what is called the “ prospectus,” by which it is said that “ subscriptions are invited at $8,00 per share to a limited number of shares of the Treasury Stock of the Sonora Copper Company,” but a large part of the complaint is taken up with allegations of the falsity of this prospectus, and the cause of complaint that this plaintiff seems to have is, that this prospectus and the statement prepared by the company are false and fraudulent. But it cannot be said that an allegation that such a prospectus was issued is an allegation that the company ever had' any treasury stock. Counsel for the plaintiff seems to base his claim that this complaint alleges that the Sonora Copper Company had some stock which was sold by the defendants, upon the allegation that the Sonora Copper Company had no assets except moneys received from the sale of-' its shares as alleged, and claims against the defendants herein growing out of the receipt by the various defendants of moneys, being the proceeds of said shares-as sold. But an allegation that a corporation had no property, except moneys received from the sale of its shares, is not an allegation that it had money so received.

This complaint is an extreme example of a method of pleading that has become too common. Allegations are jumbled together, having no relation to each other, uniting statements of fact with conclusions of fact and conclusions of law, without any relation to one distinct cause of action which is sought to be enforced, and then trying to sustain the complaint when its sufficiency is attacked by picking out independent allegations which have no particular relation to each other, and claiming that a good cause of action is established because such allegations, if properly pleaded, would be a sufficient foundation for calling upon the defendants to answer, but in such a case we should at least have in some portion of the complaint a specific allegation of the facts which are necessary to sustain ¡such a cause of action as the plaintiff claims he has alleged, and the complaint should not be sustained where it is impossible to pick out •distinct statements of fact which, taken together, are sufficient to entitle the-plaintiff to some relief. I think the complaint fails in "this particular; that no fact is alleged which would justify the •court in awarding to the plaintiff any relief in the' form of action which he has brought, and that for that reason the demurrer should "be sustained.

It follows- that the interlocutory judgment appealed from is reversed, with costs, and the demurrer sustained, with costs, with leave to the plaintiff to amend his complaint within twenty days, upon payment of costs in this court and in the court below.

Van Brunt, P. J., O’Brien, McLaughlin and Hatch, JJ., concurred.

Interlocutory judgment reversed, with costs, and demurrer sustained, with costs, with leave to plaintiff to amend complaint within twenty days- on payment of costs in this court and in the court below.  