137 Ala. 224 | Ala. | 1902
It/is no ground for the appointment of a receiver of a corporation that 'tire directors in office are holding over after' the year 'for which they were elected in default of the election of their successors by the stockholders. And the- cause of such default is of no consequence. It may be that 'the stockholders desired the directors to.continue in office and it was inconvenient to meet and re-elect them, or that an. election was permitted 'through mere inadvertence, or 'that there were such dissensions among the: shareholders and the holdings-of the, dissentients were, so equally divided that a majority could not be brought to the support of any set of individuals for the directorate; but whether the failure to elect 'resulted from any one or the other of these pauses or any other whatever, it would leave and continue in office — whether de jure'ox de facto is immaterial-directors competent to conserve the ¡property and carry on the business of the corporation, and there would be no-necessity to take the concern- out of their hands and commit it-to a receiver. If 'the corporation had no directors and none could be elected, a different case would be presented. If there were directors among whom such dissensions existed as that the-corporate1 functions could not be discharged and its assets and business were imperiled in consequence, necessity for the!.intervention of the court of chancery by the.appointment
It is made to appear in the case that practically the only business of this corporation was the collection of a large judgment it had recovered for the taking- of coals out of its lands, the settling of titles to its lands, the prosecution of an action for the recovery of certain parcels of it held by a trespasser, and the sale of its lands. The directors in office are not only fully competent to carry on all this business, hut they are prosecuting it diligently and properly so far as appears. If any difficulty should arise in the sale of the lands, it can only come from Shackelford’s own unwarranted and capricious objection as a stockholder under the by-law adopted at- his instance and to which we have referred above; and surely he cannot invoke the action of a court of cquitv to meet a necessity thus produced bv his own v rong.
■ As to the action prosecuted by the corporation for the recovery of parcels of its lands, and which is now pending in this court on. appeal from a judgment in its fav- or, it transpires that the Taw Coal & Coke Co-, is- the defendant in that action, and Shackelford is the president
On the case submitted to the chancellor and now again submitted to us, we find no necessity for the appointment of the receiver. The order annotating him must be reversed, and an order will be here entered denying and dismissing the application for the auno’Tdment.-
T’eversed and rendered.