
    Robert A. Craig, Suing on his Own Behalf and All Other Stockholders of the Anglo-American Savings & Loan Association of New York, Respondent, v. Thomas L. James and Others, Appellants.
    
      Transfer to a corporation of the assets of an association in the hands of receivers— order approving the transfer, by the terms of which the directors of the association were released from all personal liability — an action to set aside the order, so far only as the release was concerned, cannot be maintained.
    
    A stockholder of a savings and loan association, which had been dissolved and had passed into the hands of receivers, brought an action on behalf of himself and of all other stockholders against the .directors of the association to recover damages sustained by the corporation and the stockholders because of various breaches of trust committed by such directors.
    It appeared that a corporation known as the Empire State Realty Company, which the complaint alleged “was to all intents and purposes the said defendant directors and represented their interests,’’ had submitted an offer to the receivers of the savings and loan association to purchase the assets (other than cash) in the hands of the receivers for fifty per cent of their hook cost value;, to assume and secure the release of the receivers from all indebtedness of the association and to give its bonds for the balance of the purchase price; to secure the payment of said bonds by a mortgage on all assets transferred, and also by the joint and several bonds of the former directors of the association in the penal sum of $250,000; to allow any shareholder of the association to exchange his stock therein for common stock in the realty company and to provide a cash fund of $175,000 subscribed by its directors for its preferred stock, which cash was to be applied exclusively to the payment of interest and taxes and in otherwise safeguarding the property transferred.
    The offer provided that the receivers and any shareholder of the association who should make the exchange of stock therein provided for “shall in consideration of said $175,000 and said bond of the directors release said directors from all " claims of personal liability.” '
    An order was entered authorizing the receivers to accept this offer, and the transfer of the assets was consummated and a release to the directors executed..
    The complaint in the action was held demurrable on the ground that “ in the absence of fraud and bad faith ” in procuring the order of compromise the plaintiff as a stockholder could not maintain the action while such order remained in force. The plaintiff thereupon amendedhis complaint by asking foi a modification of the order of compromise by eliminating therefrom the provision for the release of .the defendant directors from liability. He alleged, as the basis for such, modification, that the receivers failed and omitted to present to the court any of the facts and circumstances tending to establish the liability of the defendants and were led to so fail and omit by the acts of the defendant directors and of the realty company which had been organized by the defendants.
    It was also alleged that the defendant directors, by false and fraudulent representations, induced the receivers to believe that they were men of limited means and could not be made to respond fully in damages; that such representations were false and were made with intent to deceive and were relied upon by the receivers.
    
      Held, that an action could not be maintained to set aside that portion of the order which secured to the defendant directors the only advantage which they, indi- . vidually, secured thereunder, and leave in force the provisions of the order, advantageous to the receivers, for the benefit of the plaintiff and his costockholders.
    Appeal by the defendants, Thomas L. James 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 New York on the 30th day of June, 1903, upon the decision of the court, rendered after a trial at- the New York Special Term, overruling the defendants’ joint demurrer to the plaintiff’s amended complaint.
    
      The action was brought by the plaintiff, a stockholder of the Anglo-American Savings and Loan Association of- New York, which is insolvent and has passed into the hands of receivers, against the directors of the association, to recover damages sustained by the corporation and the stockholders because of various breaches of trust committed by such directors.
    
      David Gerber, for the appellants Thomas L. James and others.
    
      Myer Nussbaum, for the receivers, appellants.
    
      Francis M. Applegate, for the respondent.
   O’Brien, J.:

As correctly summarized by the learned judge at Special Term (41 Misc. Rep. 148): “ Upon the appeal from the judgment sustaining the demurrer to the former complaint the Appellate Division found the complaint insufficient only because of the order of June 29,1901, whereby the receivers were instructed to release the defendants, who had been directors of the Anglo-American Savings & Loan Association, from all liability by reason of their alleged wrongful an d negligent acts. That order and release were deemed to constitute an effective bar to an action by a stockholder because any right of action a stockholder might have was one which was originally invested in the corporation and passed from it to the receivers.” (71 App. Div. 238.) This court, therefore, upon the former appeal, held that as long as the order of compromise stood, the plaintiff, as a stockholder, could maintain no action “ in the absence of fraud and bad faith ” in the procuring of the order of compromise, and it was .because of the absence of such allegations in the former complaint that the judgment sustaining a demurrer to the complaint was affirmed, with leave to the plaintiff to plead over.

To quote again from the learned judge at Special Term : “The plaintiff has now amended his complaint and seeks to remedy 'the defect found in the earlier complaint by asking for a modification of the order of June 29, 1901, so as to eliminate from it the provision for the. release from liability of the. defendants who were formerly directors of the corporation. He states two grounds upon which he asks such modification. In the first place he alleges that the receivers failed and omitted to present to the court any of the facts and circumstances tending to establish the liability of the defendants, and were led to so fail and ómit by the acts of the defendant directors and of the realty company organized by-said defendants. In the second place it is alleged that the defendant directors, by false and fraudulent representations,, induced the said receivers or their attorneys to believe that the defendant directors were men of limited means and conic! not be held to respond fully in damages, and that such representations were false and were made with intent "to deceive and that the receivers relied on such representations and. were thereby among other reasons induced to ask the court to approve the agreement which included the release of the directors.” (41 Misc. Rep. 149.)

These allegations as to the failure to make known the financial responsibility of the directors must be taken in connection with the petition of the receivers embodying the proposition of the Empire ¡State Realty Company for a compromise and the order of the Special 'Term allowing it, which are annexed to and made a part of the -complaint.

Apart from the question of whether or not the conclusion which the pleader expressly states is supported by these exhibits and assuming that the facts would warrant the inference that these defendants did represent to the receivers that they were men of limited responsibility, it will be noted that there is an absence of an allegation that such representations were made to the court or that the -Special Term judge when he approved the offer of the Empire. ¡State Realty Company, founded upon the report of the receivers as to the condition of the affairs of the company, understood or was, led to believe that the directors were men of limited responsibility. Assuming, however, but not deciding, that the averment that representations were made to the receivers, upon which they acted in accepting the compromise and subsequently obtaining the consent of the court, is a sufficient allegation of fraud and bad faith to remove the protection -which the defendants obtained under the -order, this by no means removes what we regard as an insuperable obstacle to the maintenance of this action by the plaintiff.

Before discussing what we deem to be the crucial point as affecting the sufficiency of the complaint, we will indulge in the further assumptions, but without so deciding, that the plaintiff’s remedy is in the form of an action of this character, instead of by an application to the court in the other department in which the-order assailed was made, and that this court has jurisdiction to modify and set aside the intermediate order, the same as though it were a final judgment. This complaint alleges that the Empire State Realty Company in its dealings with the receivers “ was to all intents and purposes the said defendant directors and represented their interests alone.” And, again, it is alleged that the said offer of compromise “ was devised and carried through by the said defendant directors, and the said receivers were induced to 'acquiesce in it by the said defendant directors and that the said defendant directors and the said Empire State Realty Company, as their agent, actively aided and abetted the said receivers in the consummation of the said sale with full knowledge of all the facts.”

The compromise embodied in the order was one entire whole by which the defendants, who in the complaint were charged with having formed the Empire State Realty Company, proposed through that company as their agent certain things, among others, first, to purchase the assets in the hands of the receivers other than cash at fifty per cent of their book cost value, and to assume and secure the release of the receivers from all indebtedness of the association, and by giving its bonds for the balance of such purchase price, payable three years from date; second, to secure the payment of said bonds by a blanket mortgage on all assets transferred and “ to further secure said payment by the joint and several bonds of the former directors of said association in the penal sum of $250,000 conditioned that said assets will realize at least said purchase price; ” third, to enable any shareholder of said association to exchange his stock therein for common stock of said realty company; fourth, that the said company would provide a cash fund of $175,000, subscribed by the directors for its preferred stock, which cash was to be applied exclusively to the payment of interest and taxes and otherwise safeguarding the properties transferred; fifth, that said receivers and any shareholders of said association who makes such exchange shall in consideration of said $175,000 and said bond óf the directors release said directors from all claims of personal liability ; ” sixth, that said proposal shall not take effect until at least sixty per cent of said shareholders shall have approved the same i by making such exchanges of stock.

The object of this action is not to set aside the entire order, some of the provisions of which we have above referred to, but ■ only to annul the provision in the order for the release of the directors from “ all claims of personal liability.” The judgment demanded, therefore, is that the order of the Supreme Court, Kings county, “be so far vacated or modified that the release of the Receivers, to the defendant directors of all liability of said directors to said Receivers shall be rendered null, void and of no effect as to this plaintiff and his co-stockholders who have not assented to said offer.”

We can conceive of no principle upon which an action for that purpose upon the facts stated can be supported. It will be noted that it is not intended that these defendants who through their alleged agent, the realty company, paid to the receivers $175,000. and executed to them a bond of indemnity, shall be released from such bond or receive back the money which they have paid. If the release had been made directly to the defendants in consideration of their payment of the cash and the giving of the bond, we do not think it would be seriously contended that an action could be maintained which would enable the receivers to keep all that the defendants had given to them and cancel every benefit which under the agreement they received. In view of the allegations of the complaint, however, that the realty company was but the agent of the defendants named and the payment of the money and the giving of the bond was fits act, no distinction in principle can be made because, of the form of the transaction. Qui facit per alium,facit per se..

An action such as this, which would seek to retain all the benefits of the compromise and reject the disadvantages, is not only Vicious in principle but it has no support in authority. Reference in the opinion of Special Term is made to the case of Hackley v. Draper (60 N. Y. 88). Therein a receiver fraudulently obtained an order for a sale of a debt due the corporation, and it was therein held that an equitable action at the suit of the creditor would lie to ‘ vacate the order and set aside a sale made in pursuance thereof and that the creditor was not limited to a motion in the action wherein the receiver was appointed. That case is also authority for the proposition that in such an action it was not necessary, in order to maintain it, for the plaintiff to return the money paid for the assignment, because such money was not in the plaintiff’s possession or under his control. That case, however, is easily distinguishable as it was not brought to set aside part of an order which contained provisions some in favor of the receiver and others in favor of the one at whose instigation the fraudulent order was procured.

The order here assailed contains numerous provisions not ob jected, to, and, therefore, presumptively to the advantage of the corporation ; and it is sought to modify it in the respect that it extends the only advantage which the defendants individually secured. Apart, therefore, from the effect which it might have upon the title of the realty company to the assets acquired if the order were thus modified, it must be conceded that part of the consideration moving to the realty company was the release of the defendants, the procuring of which was of advantage to the realty company because it was by turning, over the money which it was to receive for its preferred stock subscribed by the defendants, that the realty company was enabled to carry out the terms of the compromise. We might reasonably assume that the defendants would not have subscribed for the stock of the realty company and that. company could not have paid the cash or given the bond unless the release was made a. part of the consideration ; so that now the effect will be, if the order is .modified, that the realty company will be unable to deliver to the defendants the release for which they have paid to the company the $175,000 in cash and executed the bond of indemnity. It is impossible, therefore, legally to separate the two things, namely, the consideration [comprising money and bond which the receivers obtained and the consideration in the shape of a release which they extended to the realty company in favor of the defendants, If either is to fall, both should fall.

It is to be inferred, as stated, that the plaintiff regards the compromise as a good one so far as it relates to the consideration paid other than the release of the defendants; but it would be inequitable and unjust to a degree to permit the receivers, for the benefit of the plaintiff and his costockholders, to avail themselves of all the consideration which was furnished by the defendants through the realty company and then repudiate the only consideration which the defendants received in the shape of a release from their personal liability.

Without considering the other question as to whether or not there is a defect of parties by reason of the absence of the realty company whose, interests are apparently involved in the issue which would necessarily arise between the parties in the attempt to modify the order, we think for the reasons given that the complaint is insufficient in stating a good cause of action. An action such as this, which seeks to modify part of an order which must stand or fall as a whole, cannot be maintained.

It follows, accordingly, that the interlocutory judgment should be reversed, with costs, and the demurrer sustained, with costs.

Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, McLaughlin and Lauqhlin, JJ. concurred.

Judgment reversed, with costs, and demurrer sustained) with costs.  