The ground of demurrer to the effect that the requirements of the statute of frauds interpose a bar to the relief prayed for has been abandoned.
This leaves two other causes of demurrer assigned on the record, viz: That the amended bill is without equity, and that it is multifarious in that paragraph 22 presents a cause of action entirely distinct from that set up as the main cause. Paragraph 22 complains that Gwinn in making the conveyance to Ripka purposely omitted from the description some ten or more lots properly belonging to the “Thirtieth Street Development” and included in the description of the premises acquired by him from Atwell and Mundy. The amended bill is not open to the objection of multifariousness because of this paragraph. If the case presented is one properly cognizable in equity, that is to say if the main transaction in which Gwinn is alleged to have defrauded the complainants is such as calls for equitable relief, then the matter of the withholding of the ten or more lots by Gwinn is clearly related thereto in the most intimate way. The case is one where Gwinn is alleged to have perpetrated a fraud and as the fruits thereof to have secured not only money and securities, but as well ten or more lots of'land. The former he obtained out of the possession of the complainants; the latter he held back from them. There is no presentation, therefore, by paragraph 22 of a separate, distinct and unrelated subject-matter. Multifariousness being the only objection raised with respect to paragraph 22, this objection is not sustained.
On his brief, the demurring defendant assigns causes of demurrer not specified on the record. Before proceeding to dispose of the cause of demurrer assigned of record that the amended bill is without equity, these causes of demurrer assigned on the brief *106will be disposed of. No objection to them as proper to be considered has been made by the complainants, because I suppose they are regarded as properly assigned ore tenus. I shall accordingly treat them as necessary to be disposed of.
The first of these causes assigned on the brief may be embraced within the description of multifariousness. It is argued that because the amended bill states a cause of action which contemplates (a) cancellation of a bond and mortgage given by Ripka, (b) repayment of money procured through fraud, (c) damages based on contract and (d) a restraining order against Wyatt and Gwinn against the payment by Wyatt to Gwinn, and the assignment by Gwinn of the mortgage held by him against Wyatt, the amended bill is multifarious. In Cahall v. Lofland, 12 Del. Ch. 162, 166, 108 Atl. 752, the Chancellor said:
“Convenience in the administration of justice is the prime factor in considering whether a bill is multifarious, and even if it be technically objectionable by embracing more than one subject it will be sustained if such procedure is necessary or highly conducive to the administration of justice. 10 Ruling Case Law, 429,430; Brown v. Tilley, 25 R. I. 579, 583, 57 Atl. 380. After all the test is whether justice can be administered between the parties without a multiplicity of suits, and if so, then the objection of multifariousness will not prevail.”
It is very clear that the amended bill is not open to the criticism of being multifarious, for all the relief that it seeks is based upon one single ground of complaint, to-wit, that a fraud was perpetrated upon the complainants. The alleged fraud is the source from which flows the claim to the several forms of relief asked. The fact that the source of corrupt dealing spreads itself out in various directions, and, in order for its damage to' be repaired, necessitates the application of various corrective measures, is of no consequence. It is just such situations which equity is peculiarly fitted to deal with. The cancellation of Ripka’s bond and mortgage, the return of the overpayment beyond eighteen thousand dollars, damages for not conveying the ten or more lots to Ripka, and impounding the Wyatt mortgage so that it may be available for re-assignment, if they are entitled to be decreed in equity, are not improperly asked for in one suit for the plain reason that the one thing upon which they all rest and which gives *107to them a unity of action is the alleged fraud which Gwinn is alleged to have perpetrated on Ripka and Fielder. The bill is not multifarious in this particular.
The second of the causes of demurrer assigned on the brief concerns itself with parties. It is contended that the amended bill is guilty of a misjoinder of parties. This is said with respect to the joining of Caroline Wyatt as a party defendant. There is nothing improper in joining her as a defendant. She owes the money due upon the mortgage which Gwinn is alleged to have secured from Ripka by his fraudulent misrepresentation. If' this mortgage does in equity belong to Ripka, it having been secured from him by the fraud of Gwinn, it is highly proper that the defendant, Wyatt, be restrained from paying it or interest thereon to Gwinn its legal owner. In this particular the amended bill presents but another illustration of the procedure which equity constantly follows by which equitable assets in the hands of another are arrested so that in case they are finally determined to be the property of the complainant they may be easily available for his acquisition. The defendant Wyatt is not improperly joined.
It is also contended that there is a further misjoinder of parties in that the corporation, Fielder & Ripka, Inc., is made a party complainant. The demurrant urges that the alleged fraud was committed not upon the corporation but upon the individuals Ripka and Fielder, and that such being the case the corporation is in no wise .concerned and therefore is not entitled to join as a party to the bill. It appears that the corporation was formed by Ripka and Fielder after the title to the land was acquired by Ripka in behalf of both himself and Fielder and that all the stock of the corporation was divided equally between them. Thereupon the land was conveyed to the corporation. The demurrant insists that, though Ripka and Fielder may have a just ground of complaint against Gwinn for the alleged fraud practiced upon them, yet the corporation whose entity is distinct in contemplation of law from that of its stockholders can in no sense be said to have any ground of complaint cognizable in equity. That the law contemplates the identity of a corporation as entirely distinct from that of its stockholders, is a general rule well accepted. The demurring defendant appeals to this general rule in suport of his argument that the cor*108poration is' in no wise interested in the dispute concerning the fraud alleged to have been perpetrated. With respect to. this argument the complainants make two replies. The first is that the corporation holds title to the land upon which the twenty-five thousand dollar mortgage alleged to have been fraudulently obtainéd is a lien, and such being the case it is clearly a party interested in the subject-matter of the controversy, for, if the bond and mortgage were fraudulently obtained and because of the fraud ought to be cancelled, the corporation whose land is encumbered by the lien of the mortgage is manifestly very considerably interested in the relief sought. The mortgage was given by Ripka and was, I assume, in the usual form, that is to say, was given to secure the payment of the principal debt evidenced by the bond. If the bond of Ripka should be cancelled, the corporation whose land is subject to the mortgage lien given to secure the bond’s payment ought to be permitted to join in the suit in order to litigate its right to have the mortgage satisfied along with the cancellation of the bond which it secured. In the recent case of Wright v. Scotton, 13 Del. Ch. 402, 121 Atl. 69, the Supreme Court of this State said:
"A court of equity may adapt its relief to the particular rights and liabilities of each party and determine the interests of all, so far as they are legitimately connected with the subject matter and properly within the scope of the adjudication.”
The right of the corporation to litigate its contention that if the bond is cancelled the mortgage ought also to be destroyed is so intimately related to the matter in controversy that it cannot be said that to allow it to litigate its rights is to admit a party to the cause which is in no wise interested therein.
The complainants, in further reply to the contention of the demurrant that the corporation is not a proper party, insist that the fact that the entire stock of the corporation was originally owned by the victims of the fraud and is now owned entirely by one of them is sufficient to permit the joining of the corporation. This proceeds on the theory that, where the doctrine of distinct corporate entity is appealed to as a shield and protection to fraud, equity will disregard the theory and, looking only to the substance, will regard the corporation as in fact having the identity *109of the individuals who own its stock and administer relief in accordance with this conception.
It is manifest that when Ripka took title in his own name, Fielder being jointly interested with him, the device of the corporation was resorted to as a convenient method for the title to be carried in behalf of both of the purchasers. Ripka and Fielder each having an interest in an undivided moiety, Ripka conveyed the whole interest to the corporation and its entire stock was issued in equal shares to Ripka and Fielder. The consequence of this was that the equal shares of each in the property, instead of being held by each as a tenant in common, was now assured to each through an equal ownership of the corporate stock of a holding company. This being the true stiuation, the complainants contend that, notwithstanding the doctrine of distinct corporate entity, equity will for the present purpose regard the corporation as but another name for the individuals, Ripka and Fielder, and will consequently regard the corporation as a proper party to the cause, which seeks to redress the wrong done immediately to the individuals and mediately to itself. I am of opinion that this contention is sound so far at least as the mortgage lien is concerned. It would appear to be a culpably perverse devotion to theory and legal fiction for equity to hold that if a person acquires title to land in such way as to take it impressed with a lien obtained by a fraud perpetrated upon him in the act of acquisition, and then in ignorance of the fraud conveys it to a corporation entirely owned by himself for the more convenient holding of the title subject of course to the fraudulent lien, the corporation cannot be heard to complain but must undergo the hardship of having the lien permanently fastened to its assets. In that case the defrauded person, who though not the legal owner of the asset is nevertheless regarded in equity as beneficially interested therein, would find himself balked of redress and the wrongdoer secure in the er ioyment of his corrupt advantage. If this were held to be the 1aw, then equity, whose boast it is that fraud shall never be allowed to so immure itself as to escape its corrective power, would confess itself unable to surmount the obstacle of a mere fiction. While no case is cited to me which presents facts similar to this, yet the following cases announce principles which are applicable in sustaining the con*110tention of the complainants. Given v. Times-Republican Printing Co., et al., 114 Fed. 92, 52 C. C. A. 40; Aurora Daily News Co., et al., v. Frazier, 157 Ill. App. 456; Barnes v. Smith, 48 Mont. 309, 137 Pac. 541; Carrigues v. International Agricultural Corp., 159 App. Div. 877, 144 N. Y. Supp. 982. In our own State in a partition cause in the Orphans’ Court, where that court exercises general equity powers and frames its orders and decrees according as the right or justice of the cause may demand (Revised Code 1915, § 3301), the court, though no question of fraud was involved, carried the principle that the doctrine of corporate entity must give way in favor of the just rights of the owning stockholder to an even greater length than I am required to carry it here. Warner, et al., v. Logue Realty Co., 11 Del. Ch. 474, 107 Atl. 449.
In view of the foregoing, the conclusion is that the corporation is properly joined as a party complainant.
It remains to consider the first ground of demurrer assigned on the record, viz., that the amended bill is without equity. The argument advanced in support of this is that Gwinn owed no duty to Ripka and Fielder, that the transaction was in substance one of sale by Gwinn and that what the property cost Gwinn is of no moment. I do not look upon the transaction as one between vendor and vendee. Though in point of form it took the shape of a sale of real estate by Gwinn to Ripka, yet in view of the allegations of the bill such was not in truth the real nature of the transaction. The solicitor for Gwinn argues that it must be regarded as a straight transaction between vendor and vendee, for there is no relation of trustee and cestui que trust between Gwinn on the one side and Ripka and Fielder on the other, nor was there any relationship of principal and agent. Therefore, he argues, there was no duty which Gwinn owed to Ripka and Fielder to convey the property at what it cost. I cannot accept this argument.. There was an agency voluntarily assumed by Gwinn.' It may be, as contended by the solicitor for the defendant, that this agency was without consideration and that Gwinn was, therefore, under no obligation to proceed with the matter. If for instance Gwinn had after acquiring the property refused to make the transfer to Ripka and Fielder, it may be conceded as contended for by the defendant, that the latter could not have been held liable for the *111breach. Such appears to have been the situation in Walton v. Dore, 113 Iowa, 1, 84 N. W. 928, a case relied upon by the defendant as strongly in point. If the proposition which the Iowa case supports be conceded, it is of no assistance here for the reason that the amended bill presents an entirely different state of facts. It charges that Gwinn volunteered his services, that Ripka and Fielder accepted them, relying upon his experience, honesty and avowed desire to help them make a profitable investment; that Gwinn made the purchase, represented to them that it was for their sole benefit and that they were to pay only as much for the property as he had paid. He told them that the sum was forty thousand dollars. They accepted his statement and acted in accordance therewith. Even though Gwinn’s alleged agency so long as it remained executory may not have been legally existent, yet when it was acted upon and became executed his conduct must in equity be required to square itself with the principles applicable to the fiduciary relation of principal and agent. 1 Mechem on Agency, (2d Ed.) § 1223; C. J. 433, 722. He cannot offer himself as agent for others, be accepted by them as such, and then proceed with impunity to abuse the confidence reposed in him by cheating and defrauding those whose trust he had invited, on the plea that he was acting voluntarily without compensation. Hunsaker v. Sturgis, 29 Cal. 142; Salsbury v. Ware, 183 Ill. 505, 56 N. E. 149; Green’s Adm’r. v. Bryant, 2 Ga. 66. Even where there is no fiduciary relation between the parties it has been held that, if one agrees to sell at cost, he is liable if by reason of false representation he obtains more than cost. Gassett v. Glazier, 165 Mass. 473, 43 N. E. 193; Kohl v. Taylor, 62 Wash. 678, 114 Pac. 874, 35 L. R. A. (N. S.) 174; Barnard v. Coldwell, 39 Mich. 215; Pendergast v. Reed, 29 Md. 398, 96 Am. Dec. 539. See, also, Lord v. French, 61 Me. 420.
Taking all the allegations of the amended bill as true, the complainants are entitled to some relief. The demurrer is to the whole bill and for the reasons above indicated will be overruled.