"{\"id\": \"3771173\", \"name\": \"SHIELD v. McCUTCHEON et al.\", \"name_abbreviation\": \"Shield v. McCutcheon\", \"decision_date\": \"1953-03-18\", \"docket_number\": \"No. A-8403\", \"first_page\": \"41\", \"last_page\": \"43\", \"citations\": \"14 F.R.D. 41\", \"volume\": \"14\", \"reporter\": \"Federal Rules Decisions\", \"court\": \"United States District Court for the District of Alaska\", \"jurisdiction\": \"United States\", \"last_updated\": \"2021-08-10T20:09:53.068448+00:00\", \"provenance\": \"CAP\", \"judges\": \"\", \"parties\": \"SHIELD v. McCUTCHEON et al.\", \"head_matter\": \"SHIELD v. McCUTCHEON et al.\\nNo. A-8403.\\nDistrict Court, Alaska. Third Division, Anchorage.\\nMarch 18, 1953.\\nJohn E. Manders, Anchorage, Alaska, for plaintiff.\\nMcCutcheon, Nesbett & Rader, Anchorage, Alaska, for defendants.\", \"word_count\": \"1164\", \"char_count\": \"6880\", \"text\": \"DIMOND, District Judge.\\nThe plaintiff has sued for cancellation of certain shares of the capital stock of defendant, Valley Plotel Corporation, alleged to have been fraudulently issued, and for other relief. The plaintiff alleges that at the time of the issuance of the stock, the plaintiff was the absolute owner of approximately 60%, and thus more than a majority, of the issued and outstanding shares of the capital stock of the defendant corporation; and that the defendants Mc-Cutcheon, Nesbett, Hassman and Ryan and other directors of the corporation held a meeting of the Board of Directors and wrongfully and fraudulently voted the issuance of and caused to be issued to the defendants McCutcheon, Nesbett, Hassman and Ryan, 2,600 shares of the capital stock of the corporation whereby the plaintiff was deprived of the control of the corporation through ownership of a majority of its issued and outstanding stock.\\nThis suit is brought by the plaintiff in his individual capacity and not to enforce a derivative or secondary right, and is therefore not a \\\"class action\\\" under Rule 23, Fed.Rules Civ.Proc. 28 U.S.C.A. Dresdner v. Goldman Sachs Trading Corp., 1934, 240 App.Div. 242, 269 N.Y.S. 360, 363. The plaintiff's complaint is not verified as required by Section 23(b) of the Rules with respect to derivative suits. In argument upon the defendants' motion to dismiss for lack of verification, it was repeatedly asserted by counsel for the plaintiff that the suit was not derivative in any sense' and, therefore, that under the Rules with respect to individual actions no verification was or is necessary. While the immediate issue arises upon the matter of verification, the basic question is whether the plaintiff may sue for an individual wrong, and not be compelled to bring a derivative action which would be subject to the provisions of 23(b) of the Rules.\\nThis Court, after deliberation, in the case of Bowman v. Alaska Airlines, D.C., 14 F.R.D. 70 has held that as a general rule suits by minority shareholders for cancellation of stock and for other kindred relief'may not be brought by an individual stockholder for his own benefit alone, but may be asserted only as a class or derivative action for himself and other stockholders similarly situated.\\nThe only respect in which the action before us differs from the Bowman case is that in this suit the plaintiff says that he was the majority stockholder and that by a fraudulent conspiracy on the part of the defendants he was deprived of that status and hence that he has a right to bring the suit for his own individual wrong and is not compelled to assert his claim through a class action. And so we must consider whether the decision of the Court in the Bowman case ought to apply here.\\nThe following excerpts from the text of 13 Fletcher on Corporations 276, bear directly upon the subject:\\n\\\"Actions or suits which may be brought by a stockholder as an indi vidual include the following, among others:\\n*\\n\\\"8. Acts depriving a stockholder or member of rights as such, including acts depriving one of the advantage of a maj ority control.\\nsjt sjt jjc ^ 5