Martin v. Brown
Opinion of the Court
It appears from the bill that in July, 1893, the J. S. Brown & Brother Mercantile Company was incorporated under the laws of the state of Colorado. This corporation succeeded to the business of J. S. Brown & Brother, wholesale grocers at Denver, Colo., a copartnership conducted by J. Sidney Brown and his brother Junius Elagg Brown. At the time of the incorporation the said John Sidney Brown appears to have been the sole owner of said business and the corporate stock of the corporation which sxicceeded the partnership. John Sidney Brown died on the 15th day of January, 1913, leaving surviving him Adele Overton Brown, his widow, and nine children. The plaintiffs Alice Brown Martin and Irene Brown Black and the defendants J. Sidney Brown and Carroll Teller Brown were children of the said Adele Overton Brown. The defendants Frederick Sidney Brown, William Knight Brown, and Edward Newton Brown, together with one Katherine Brown Johan-son and one Elizabeth Brown Inglis, not parties to this proceeding, were children of the said John Sidney Brown by a former wife.
By his will John Sidney Brown bequeathed his property to his widow and children, and named his widow and the defendants Frederick Sidney Brown and J. Sidney Brown as his executors. In his will he expressed the wish that the stock and notes of the corporation standing in his name should be partitioned among his heirs, upon which they should receive the income respectively from their holdings for a period of five years. On or about the 19th day of July, 1913, the heirs of John Sidney Brown filed in the county court for the city and county
• On the 2d of August, 1913, the prayer of the petitioners was granted by order of the county court. This petition was signed by the plaintiffs in this action. At that time Alice Brown Martin was married and a resident of Seattle, Wash.; the plaintiff Irene Brown Black was unmarried and liying with her mother. It is alleged in the bill that neither of the plaintiffs understood the purport of the transaction, but relied entirely upon the representations, particularly of their elder brothers, defendants herein, who exercised a dominating- influence in the affairs of the family, and upon whose representation that the step taken was for the best interests of all concerned they implicitly relied. It is stated also that the mother, who was at that time living and had been named as president of the J. S. Brown & Brother Mercantile Company, was likewise unversed in business affairs and was under the same dominating influence and control. In the petition filed with the county court the full nature of the contemplated change was not stated. It was evident, of course, that new capital and other parties were to be brought in through the agency of the new corporation, but the names of such parties and the extent of their control was not stated.
The bill charges that the purpose of this reorganization was, in effect, to shift the management and control of the business of the J. S. Brown
At a later period the defendant J. S. Brown Grocery Company, of Pueblo, Colo., was organized, apparently as a branch and subsidiary of the J. S. Brown Mercantile Company: the stock holdings and commercial transactions of the two companies, and indirectly of the J. S. Brown & Brother Mercantile Company, being interlaced and interdependent.
It is charged in the bill that the defendants of the Brown family, in control of the affairs and remaining property of the J. S. Brown & Brother Mercantile Company, have voted to themselves salaries, and have credited themselves with expenses and distributions, largely disproportionate to the services required in view of the transfer of the substantial business of the company to the new corporation, and to the disadvantage of complainants; that in substance the conduct of the business of the affairs of the John Sidney Brown estate, through the transactions to which reference has been made, as alleged in the bill, discloses, and will, upon hearing, more fully disclose, not only waste in management, but a deliberate plan in the nature of a conspiracy to administer the estate to the personal advantage of the defendants and at the expense and loss of these petitioners. The petitioners, therefore, pray an accounting and for such other and further relief as the ulti
“As to practically everytMng stricken from the bill, whatever could possibly have been material was sufficiently covered and included in allegations remaining in the bill to have let in all the testimony that might have been admissible under the stricken allegations. In fact, if any causes of action were stated, as to appellees whose motion to strike was sustained, enough remains in the bill to charge them with liability. The rulings, therefore, as to redundant allegations, the substance of which remains in other parts of the bill, could not possibly have prejudiced appellants.”
The motion to strike, therefore, and the parts stricken, need be given no further consideration.
Appellees, defendants below, also filed their several motions to dismiss the bill upon many grounds therein stated; the main ground, and the only one upon which the court acted, as disclosed by its opinion, being that no cause of action was stated against certain of the defendants, to wit, the J. S. Brown Mercantile Company, the J. S. Brown Grocery Company, the Shields-Metzler Grocery Company, Franklin T. Metzler, John O. Spicer, James M. Metzler, and William H. Parry. The motions to dismiss were sustained as to all the above-named defendants except Franklin T. Metzler, and plaintiffs were given 30 days to amend their bill in accordance with equity rule 20, in default of which the bill was to be dismissed. At the expiration of that time, the plaintiffs having elected to stand upon their bill of complaint and declining to plead further, the bill was finally dismissed.
From the foregoing it will be seen that practically the sole question before the court is to determine whether the bill, as it finally stood, stated a cause of action, and whether the defendants, in whose favor, the order of dismissal was made, were proper parties thereto.
“There are doubtless circumstances in the case which indicate at least a difficulty of proof, if not to arouse a suspicion, that perhaps the plaintiff may have overstated his case, but the pleader in a bill in equity is not bound to state either the testimony or facts which militate against his theory, but only to present his case in the light most favorable to his own interests, and ask that, upon such presentation, the court shall decide upon the sufficiency of his bill.”
“In regard to the first group of defendants, with the exception of Franklin T. Metzler, the situation is different. On account of the relationship existing between them, the defendants’ conduct (which would not necessarily be objectionable in the absence of such, relationship) may very properly be deemed fraudulent, if established. They occupied the position, with respect to their two sisters, of executors, older brothers, and confidential advisers; and it is charged knew at the time of the death of their father that they, the plaintiffs, had had no business experience, and had every reason to rely with full confidence upon their judgment and advice.
“The defendant Franklin T. Metzler, although a stranger to the plaintiffs, and occupying no relation of trust toward them, became, according to the bill, after the execution of. Exhibit A, a director of the J. S. Brown & Brother Mercantile Company, and was actively associated with the first group of defendants in the alleged mismanagement of the affairs of the defendant the J. S. Brown & Brother Mercantile Company. The bill, therefore, as to him, will not at the present time be dismissed.”
. It is manifest that the requirement that plaintiffs should amend their bill was made pursuant to that part of the motion to dismiss which was sustained by the court. Under the equity rules motions to dismiss now perform the office of demurrer under the former equity practice. Motions to strike parts of a bill do not, and should not, perform that office.; if sustained, the parts stricken are removed from consideration, without more. In equity they are brought to the attention of no one hut the chancellor, who has passed upon them in considering the motions to strike, and therefore are without further prejudicial effect. It is necessary, therefore, to consider the bill under the motions to dismiss as upon demurrer.
It is conceded by appellees that the parts stricken out constituted, in effect, mere surplusage and unnecessary amplification of the main charge; that all contained therein, so far as it was or might he material, remains in the bill, and therefore that, if a cause of action was originally, stated, it still remains. This is, in effect, the finding of the trial court in refusing to dismiss the bill in the first instance as to several defendants. The chief complaint of appellants is the dismissal as to others of the defendants, and the final order of dismissal as to all defendants because of refusal to amend the bill by leaving out the defendants thus originally dismissed out of court by the trial judge. It is true that the court complained of certain statements of law, argumentative expressions, and allegations of mere business transactions, the wisdom of which “it is not proper for the court to pass upon;” but these are not specified with such particularity as would advise the pleader what amendment should be made in such respects. It does not, therefore, appear that the court dismissed the bill for such general and unexplained faults. It is true that appellees attack the bill as multifarious, and as joining several different grounds for relief, criticized as not affecting all parties to the litgation, and some as not entitled to be considered upon the facts stated; but the trial court did not indulge these attacks, and did not found its ruling thereon. Certainly it did not point out requirements for amendment with sufficient clearness to enable appellants to remedy the alleged defects, even if so
It is alleged in the bill that the defendants in whose favor the order of dismissal was originally made were all parties with the remaining defendants in the various transactions, exchange of properties, and reorganization,- of which complaint is made. They received interests and benefits flowing therefrom. It satisfactorily appears from the allegations that what was done was done as part of a plan of which all the parties must necessarily have had knowledge and understanding. Furthermore this express allegation is found:
“And the plaintiffs expressly charge the defendants Franklin T. Metzler, John O. Spicer, James H. Metzler, William H. Parry, and the Shields-Metzler Grocery Company were participants in the fraud by which the business and property of the J. S. Brown & Brother Mercantile Company was transferred and turned over to the J. S. Brown Mercantile Company as herein stated, and that the said last-named defendants and all of them should likewise be held to account to the J. S. Brown & Brother Mercantile Company for all loss and damage which the last named company suffered by reason of such fraud, disposition, and transfer; and the plaintiffs further allege that the J. S. Brown Mercantile Company was organized for the express purpose of being a beneficiary of the fraud so perpetrated.”
The trial court expressly finds that the defendant Franklin T. Metz-ler sustained such a relationship to the transaction that he must be retained as a defendant in the case, but the allegations of the bill involve equally the other Metzler defendants named.
But, even though the allegations did not point convincingly to the active participation of such dismissed parties in an unlawful attempt to gain undue advantage over the complainants, nevertheless the interests of all parties defendants, in the properties involved and in the complex transactions affecting those properties in their various changed forms and relations, are so interlaced and interwoven that a disentanglement and readjustment in accordance with the prayer of the bill would be impossible, without affecting the property rights and holdings of each. Even though some of the parties could not be personally .charged with affirmative fraud, nevertheless the fact that they are alleged to be recipients and holders of stock and other property rights in the allied companies, would make them proper, if not necessary, parties to any readjustment and marshaling of the assets involved. They should therefore be retained in the case for this reason if for no other.
It may be freely conceded that this bill is unduly prolix, and contains much repetition and duplication of statement. This vice makes it confusing and embarrassing to a chancellor, and this type of pleading is condemned. The order of the court, however, does not have the effect of dismissing the bill upon that ground, and the spirit of equity requires, in the absence of substantial violation specifically pointed out, that where a bill states, even imperfectly, a cause of action which is recognized by the court in its findings, a complainant should not be
This bill sounds primarily and in the last ■ analysis in a charge of fraud and overreaching on the part of the older brothers of complainants, in which the other defendants not so related have contributed and participated in some degree. It is charged that certain of the defendants made knowingly and pjirposely an unwise and improvident disposition of the father’s estate, with the intent and purpose of gaining personal benefits to the disadvantage of the complainants; that this was a breach of trust and confidence, the consent to which was brought about, if not by active misrepresentation, then by tacit deceit practiced and accomplished through, the relationship of trust and confidence existing; that since the original transfer of a large part of the assets of the original company for an inadequate consideration, the family defendants, at least, have enjoyed special benefits and pecuniary gain, to the disadvantage, or at the expense, of the complainants, to such extent and in such manner as to amount to a breach of <he trust and confidence existing between them. It is unnecessary to do moré than generalize upon the intendment of the bill. It may very well be that the charges made cannot and will not be substantiated; that it may develop, upon hearing, that complainants are estopped from being accorded the relief in whole or in part to which they lay claim; but this court cannot anticipate such a result, particularly when the trial court upon the face of its ruling concedes that a case is stated against some of the defendants, when such finding is sustained by the allegations of the bill, and when it appears that all of the defendants are at least proper, if not necessary, parties to a determination of the full extent of the relief which may flow from the cause of action stated.
It follows from what has been said that the order of dismissal should be set aside, and the cause reinstated as to all the defendants named. The case is remanded for hearing upon the merits.
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Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). The bill seeks equitable relief on the claim of fraudulent conduct by some of the individual defendants. It is a stockholders’ suit. The principal things complained about are, first, the transfer of the grocery business of the J. S. Erown & Brother Mercantile,Company (called Old Company), in which the two complainants are shareholders, to the J. S. Brown Mercantile Company (called New Company), in which they are not shareholders; secondly, sale of stock in the New Company and certain accounts receivable belonging to the Old Company; thirdly, that the board of directors of the Old Company has used some of its funds to buy stock in the J. S. Brown Grocery Company of Pueblo (called Pueblo Co.) and in the Shields-Metzler Grocery Company of Colorado Springs (called Springs Co.); also,— but independently of the three grounds of complaint just noted, — fourthly, that certain of the Brown brothers as directors and officers of the Old Company have been and are receiving salaries in excess of what their services are worth, that they have caused the Old Company to pay excessive office rentals to their individual benefit, that they have made charitable contributions out of the funds
As to the facts set up, — John Sidney Brown, through many years of industry and close attention amassed a large fortune. He built up a wholesale grocery business. It was owned and carried on by the Old Company. Much of his property not used in or connected with the grocery business was held also in the name of the Old Company. At the time of his death he owned 3,090 shares in that company. Em-ployés-owned 120 shares, other parties not in the family or the company ■ owned 40 shares, and the remainder of .the 5,000 issued shares was owned in unequal proportions by his five sons and his second wife, who survived him for three years. When he died the directing head and controlling hand in the grocery business was gone. What should be done with that business? The widow and all of his nine children, five by his first wife and four by his second, decided within six months after his death not to close it out, but to devise a plan by which it would be segregated from the other assets and continued. That plan was fully set out in a petition to the probate court in which his estate was being administered. The widow and all of his children, including the plaintiffs, signed it and there is appended to it certificates of Notaries Public that each of them, including plaintiffs, was duly sworn and upon their several oaths “depose and say that she has read the foregoing petition, and knows the contents thereofand it was approved by a .probate court order in every particular. The petition recited that the Old Company was capitalized at 5,000 shares, each of the par value of $100, and that John Sidney Brown, at the time of his death was the absolute owner of 3,090 shares, that the company was the owner and in possession of a large and valuable stock of groceries and general merchandise pertaining to the wholesale and jobbing business, also the necessary equipment for carrying on that business, that petitioners were his only heirs-at-law and his devisees and legatees, and that they were desirous of segregating the wholesale and jobbing business and property pertaining thereto from the other business and property of the company, and to vest the title of all of said wholesale and jobbing business and of all the assets pertaining thereto in a new corporation to be formed under the laws of the state of Colorado, except $150,000' of its accounts receivable, to be selected and set aside by the executors of the estate, and to then be disposed of as expressed in the petition, that it was their wish and desire and the desire and wish of all stockholders of the company, and they believed it would be to their best interest and to the best interest of the estate to form a new corporation with an authorized capital of $1,500,000, divided into 15,000 shares, one-half to be common and the other half preferred stock, the preferred to be without voting power but to be entitled to cumulative dividends of seven per centum payable semi-annually for the first ten years of the life of the New Company and six per centum thereafter, and that $400,000
Immediately on approval in probate of the plan for continuing the grocery business by the New Company and the sale of the accounts receivable and $250,000 stock in the New Company as it was set forth in the petition, steps were taken to carry it out. The wholesale grocery business was transferred to the New Company, for which the Old Company received $400,000 in preferred and $350,000 in common stock in the New Company. The balance of the stock remains unissued. The defendant German-American Trust Co. took and holds in trust the $350,000 issued common stock, as provided for in the petition and probate order. Defendants Spicer, Parry and the two Metzlers were conducting a wholesale grocery business at Colorado Springs in the corporate name of Shields-Metzler Grocery Co., and the sale of the $250,000 common stock in the New Company and the $150,000 accounts receivable of the Old Company was made to one of the Metzlers on the terms stated in the petition filed in probate. This was all done in August, 1913. The bill alleges that the other seven children, including plaintiffs’ two brothers of the full blood, still approve those transactions and all the other matters of which plaintiffs complain.
This suit was instituted in May, 1922, almost nine years after those transactions were closed, and it seeks to have them annulled and vacated and restitution made to the Old' Company through an accounting, insofar as that is possible; and the ground on which it is claimed that relief should be administered is that those transactions were brought about and consummated by fraudulent conduct between four of the Brown brothers and the Metzlers, Spicer and Parry, also that the plaintiffs signed the petition to the probate court without knowing its contents, one of them, Irene Brown Black, claiming that she relied upon her mother and statements of' one or more of her brothers that they would look after her interest, but that she afterwards learned that her mother was under the control of her brothers. She was 22 years of age, unmarried and resided with her mother and two brothers when she signed the petition. She later married and now resides in the state of Washington. The other plaintiff was married at the 'time of her father’s death and resided in Seattle, Washington. As to her, it is alleged that she came to Denver immediately on the death of her father, and that while in Denver one of her half brothers and one of her full brothers, who with her mother were named as executors in her father’s will, assured her that her interest in the estate would be cared for and protected, that one of her brothers later brought the petition to Seattle and told her that its purpose was to segregate the mercantile business of the estate from its other business and affairs, that all of the other children were in favor of it, and that relying upon those statements she signed the petition, expecting her brothers to look after her interest. It is' alleged that the four Brown brothers made an arrangement with the Metzlers and their associates long prior to the signing of the petition presented in probate, under which the wholesale grocery business belonging to the estate was “to be turned over to them;” and it is charged on information and belief that Metzlers and associates paid or gave to the four Brown brothers “or some one or
It will be observed that both plaintiffs allege that the nature of the fraudulent arrangement under which the transfer to the New Company was made, was unknown to them at the timé they instituted this suit, then the plaintiff Irene Brown Black alleges that she learned the facts and circumstances set out in the bill and the true nature of the transactions and relations between her brothers and the Metzlers and associates before she engaged counsel, and in the same sentence she al-lges that she engaged counsel and started an investigation which resulted in the disclosure of the facts set out in the bill. She adds that she did not know or understand the facts until she engaged counsel. Then as to both plaintiffs it is alleged that they did not know until
The bill attempts argumentatively to make it appear that the purchase from the Old Company by Metzler of the accounts receivable and stock in the New Company were separate transactions, by which Metz-ler got $150,000 accounts receivable from the Old Company for $100,-000 cash, to the detriment and damage of the Old Company in the sum of’$50,000. This flies in the face of the real transaction disclosed by the petition in probate, by which Metzler bought the acounts receivable and the stock for $250,000, to be paid for by $100,000 in cash and notes for $150,000. I lay aside the inquiry whether the allegations that have been noticed are so inconsistent and repugnant as to destroy and neutralize each other, and consider them in connection with the question of laches. I find no other allegation that will aid the plaintiffs on that subject. The allegation that when plaintiff Mrs. Martin made complaints ‘and protested from time to time to her brothers they threatened that if she insisted on her rights they would stop payments of dividends to her by the Old Company contradict^ her assertion that she relied on them to protect her interests until shortly before the institution of this suit. Moreover, this claim by both plaintiffs of continued trust and confidence in their half brothers is refuted by the litigation between the two sets of children over the division of the widow’s estate. 69 Colo. 400, 194 Pac. 943. They delayed bringing this suit for nine years after the grocery business was turned over to the New Company, and stock in it and accounts receivable belonging to the Old Company were sold to Metzler. They admit that they were informed when they signed the petition that its purpose was to segregate and turn over the grocery business of the Old Company to another company, and they admit that they knew that a working interest in the grocery business had been, sold to the Metzler party. They must have known that a multitude of financial and, business transactions changing and affecting the rights of every one interested in and connected with the Old and the New companies and the grocery business would at once arise, and they must have known that as time went on it would grow more and more difficult to restore the status quo without seriously and disastrously affecting those interests. They have failed, in my judgment, to allege any facts assigning reasons for not acting
‘•In tlie application of the doctrine of laches, the settled rule is that courts of equity are not bound by, but that they usually act or refuse to act in analogy to, the statute of limitations relating to actions at law of like character [citing authorities]. The meaning of this rule is that, under ordinary circumstances, a suit in equity will not be stayed for laches before, and will be stayed after the time fixed by the analogous statute of limitations at law; but if unusual conditions or extraordinary circumstances make it inequitable to allow the prosecution of a suit after a briefer, or to forbid its maintenance after a longer, period than that fixed by the statute, the chancellor will not be bound by the statute, but will determine the extraordinary case in accordance with the equities which condition it. * * * When a suit is brought within the time fixed by the analogous statute, the burden is on the defendant to show, either from the face of the bill or by his answer, that extraordinary circumstances exist which require the application of the doctrine of laches; and, when such a suit is brought after the statutory time has elapsed, the burden is on the complainant to show, by suitable averments in his bill, that it would be inequitable to apply It to Ms case.”
The Supreme Court, in Wood v. Carpenter, 101 U. S. 135, 140 (25 L. Ed. 807), held that the rules of pleading in this respect are stringent, and said: .
“A general allegation of ignorance at one time and of knowledge at another are of no effect. If the plaintiff made any particular discovery, it should be stated when it was made, what it was, how it was made, and why it was not made sooner. * * * The fraud intended by the section which shall arrest the running of the statute must be one that is secret and concealed, and not one that is patent or known. * * * ‘Whatever is notice enough to excite attention and put the party on bis guard and call for inquiry, is notice of every thing to which such inquiry might have led. When a person has sufficient information to lead him to a fact, he shall be deemed conversant of it. * * * The presumption is that if the party affected by any fraudulent transaction or management might, with ordinary care and attention, have seasonably detected it, he seasonably had actual knowledge of it.’ * ~ * A party seeking to avoid the bar of the statute on account of fraud must aver and show that he used due diligence to detect it, and if he had the means of discovery in his power, he will be held to have known it.”
In Hardt v. Heidweyer, 152 U. S. 547, 560, 14 Sup. Ct. 671, 674 (38 L. Ed. 548), it is said:
“Tested by this rule, it is apparent that this bill must be held deficient in not showing how knowledge of the wrongs complained of was obtained by the plaintiffs. It is alleged that they were ignorant, and now have knowledge; and that they acquired such knowledge within a month prior to bringing the suit; but how they acquired it, and why they did not have the same means of ascertaining the facts before, is not disclosed.”
See also Beaubien v. Beaubien, 23 How. 190, 208, 16 L. Ed. 484; Burke v. Smith, 16 Wall. 390, 401, 21 L. Ed. 361; O’Brien v. Wheelock, 184 U. S. 450, 493, 22 Sup. Ct. 354, 46 L. Ed. 636; Reed v. Dingess (C. C.) 56 Fed. 171; Swift v. Smith, 79 Fed. 709, 25 C. C. A. 154; Williamson v. Beardsley, 137 Fed. 467, 69 C. C. A. 615; Redd
The plaintiffs knew that the grocery business was to be transferred to a new company in the summer of 1913, when they signed the petition, and they also knew at that time, or were negligent in not knowing, that 250,Q00 shares of common stock in the New Company and $150,-000 of acounts receivable belonging to the Old Company were to be sold for $250,000. They were barred by their laches from questioning or repudiating those transactions at the. time they instituted this suit.
There is another Colorado statute. Section 6404, Compiled Raws 1921 (section 4703, Rev. Stat. 1908). It reads thus:
“Bills of relief, in case of the existence of a trust not cognizable by tbe courts of common law, and in all other cases not herein provided for, shall be filed within five years after the cause thereof shall accrue, and not after.”
Its relevancy rests on the assumption that the relation between plaintiffs and their brothers was one of trust, contemplated by the statue. See Morgan v. King, 27 Colo. 539, 63 Pac. 416. But the facts disclosed in the bill also fail, in my opinion,' to excuse the plaintiffs of their laches in not acting within the time limited by that statute'. So much for the first and second matters about which complaint is made.
As to the third matter complained about, the articles of incorporation of the Old Company gave to it express power “to acquire by purchase, or otherwise, shares of the capital stock in other corporations, and to receive such stock in payment for any property which the company may sell, lease or otherwise dispose of, and to vote upon any and all of the capital stock of other corporations which this company may acquire, own or hold, absolutely or in pledge, or hold as collateral security ; and generally to do and perform all such things and acts as the Board of Directors may deem desirable or expedient in the transaction of the company’s business.” The complaint is that funds of the-Old Company were used to buy shares of' the capital stock in the Springs Co. and the Pueblo Co. That power and right, as seen, was expressly vested in the Old Company, and the plaintiffs seek to avoid those transactions on the claim that they were a -part of the general scheme by which the so-called Metzler party, and perhaps also the four Brown brothers, were to obtain control, management and use of the Old Company and its funds and grocery business; and further, the bill attempts argumentatively to show oh that subject that the Springs Co. and the Pueblo Co. are both insolvent. For the purpose of this dissent I need only say that in my opinion there are no facts and circumstances set up in the complaint showing, or tending to show that such a fraudulent scheme existed or was ever concocted; and as to the second, the facts stated show that both of those companies are solvent. They each have a surplus of assets and each has been paying dividends on the issued stock ^t substantial rates.
In this state of the case the district judge sustained separate demurrers to the bill, which let out of' the case all of the defendants except the Old Company and its board of directors, and entered an order that the demurrers of the Old Company and individual defendants constituting its board of directors would also be sustained unless the plaintiffs,
Counsel for plaintiffs argues earnestly that the bill is good and should stand for purposes of discovery in all of the transactions complained of. But the bill expressly waives answer under oath, and for that reason it could not be availed of as a bill of discovery under the prior practice; nor have the plaintiffs attached interrogatories, as now required by Equity Rule 58, for that purpose. Ruten v. Camp (D. C.) 221 Fed. 424, and cases cited.
I regret the length of this dissent. But allegations without proof and proof without allegations are equally fatal; and to require answer and trial, which will evidently be greatly burdensome and very expensive, on such vague and contradictory charges of fraud, with no facts relieving the plaintiffs from the bar on account of their laches, is, it seems to me, unjust and contrary to settled principles.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- MARTIN v. BROWN
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- Published