78 Wis. 404 | Wis. | 1890
The plaintiffs were partners under the firm name of Li allin <& Berman, and on the 10th day of January, 1890, they obtained a judgment against the J. & E. B. Friend Lace Importing Company, in the circuit court of the United States for the eastern district of Wisconsin, for the sum of $2,048.76, and an execution was issued thereon, and has been returned, “ No property on which to levy,” and wholly unsatisfied. The defendants are said corporation and its directors and some of its stockholders and many of its creditors. The said company is a corporation of this state, and insolvent, and has a great number of creditors. Some of its stockholders are supposed to have not fully paid up for their shares of stock by them subscribed. Some of the defendants who are creditors have colluded and conspired with the corporation and its directors to obtain an unjust preference over other creditors, by the attempted levy of attachments on the property of the corporation, and by an assignment of said corporation for their benefit. The action is brought also in behalf of any other of the creditors of the corporation who may come in under the same. The objects of the action are to have the stock,
Such is the substance of the complaint. A receiver was appointed, and a preliminary injunction was issued, as prayed. The answers of some of the defendants have been filed, but they are not important further than they deny the collusion and conspiracy charged, and admit, in effect, that the corporation is insolvent. The defendants moved to dissolve the injunction, and the motion was denied, and one of the appeals is from that order. There is also an appeal from so much of the injunctional order as restrains the defendants from proceeding in their actions in the superior court of Milwaukee county, and as continues the injunctional order; and also an appeal from the order that the receiver proceed forthwith to take possession of the property held by the sheriff, Burnham, and to sell the same, etc.; and an appeal from that part of the order that said
It will be observed that all of these appeals are embraced within the one general question, whether the action will lie. If the action can be maintained, then sequestration of all the property and assets of the corporation, the appointment of a receiver for all of such property and assets, and that persons having any such property and assets be ordered to deliver the same to the receiver, and that the receiver sell and convert the same into money, to be equally distributed among the creditors, and the injunction to restrain all the creditors from bringing or maintaining other actions, are necessary. Every one of such orders is necessary to the full remedy embraced in the action. If one them is wanting, the remedy would be incomplete. They are all necessary to the two general objects,— the closing up the affairs of the insolvent corporation, and the equal distribution of its assets among its creditors. The action has an indispensable unity, which would be broken or impaired by the absence of any one of the objects embraced in the orders appealed from. The question is therefore, Will the action lie just as it is, in all of its parts and purposes, in its general scope, and in all the particulars thereof, within the allegations of the complaint?
The eminent counsel on both sides have submitted very able briefs and arguments on the general question of the action, and the special orders made therein, in view of the general chancery jurisdiction of the court. The learned counsel of the respondent have attempted to sustain the action on grounds of general equity by the citation of many authorities, and the learned counsel of the appellant have not only questioned such authorities, but cited many others adverse to such a chancery jurisdiction. May any judgment creditor who has exhausted his remedy at law against an insolvent corporation, by the return of an execu
Although there is no special reference to the statute in the complaint, it is obvious that the complaint was drawn at least in attempted compliance with sec. 3216, E. S., and following sections. Sec. 3216 provides that an action may be brought against the corporation by a judgment creditor after an execution has been returned unsatisfied in whole
Whether there has ever been a precedent of a similar action without the authority of such a statute or not, there is certainly great equity in it, and the scheme of the statute to secure to all of the creditors a just and fair distribution of the property and effects of an insolvent corporation proportionate to their claims is most excellent and unexceptionable. That kind of diligence by which one creditor of an insolvent corporation secures to himself a prior, right to its property, and an unequal advantage over the other creditors, is without merit, and more selfish than just. The sections of the statute providing for such an action are clearly explained and construed, and a similar complaint and proceedings thereunder fully sustained, by the opinion of Mr. Justice Lyon in Powers v. C. H. Hamilton, Paper Co. 60 Wis. 23. This being a statutory action, no other authorities are necessary.
The only other material question in the case is whether the plaintiff, having obtained his judgment in the circuit court of the United States for the eastern district of Wisconsin, can avail himself of this statutory remedy. It is contended by the learned counsel of the appellant that the return of an execution on a judgment in a federal court will not sustain this action, and that such a judgment is that of a foreign court, or the same as one of a sister state. There may have been late decisions to such effect, but the current of authorities, as well as the laws of the United States and of this state, establish the rule that the judgments of the United States courts of the Wisconsin districts are to be treated as domestic judgments of a superior court of this state: (1) They are liens on the land of the defendants. Oh. 729, Acts of Oong. 1888. (2) They are admissible
By the Court.— The orders and parts of orders appealed from are severally affirmed.