142 Ga. 796 | Ga. | 1914
1. In the case of Bank of Soperton v. Empire Realty Trust Co., 142 Ga. 34 (82 S. E. 464), the equitable petition which is the beginning of the present litigation in effect was held not to be maintainable, because equivalent to a suit by a corporation to marshal its own assets. In that ease it was said, that “No ruling is made at this time as to what effect, if any, the acceptance of the proposed surrender of the charter of the company, made by way of cross-petition in this proceeding, and further orders based thereon, might have. Such questions are left for determination when they may arise.”
2. The corporation whose affairs it was sought to wind up having been made a party defendant, the relief asked by it in its answer, namely, that it be dissolved in accordance with the provisions of the act approved August 13, 1910 (Acts 1910, p. 106), although sought in the form of a cross-bill, was, in view of the nature of the original bill, in practical effect an amendment to the corporation’s effort to liquidate its affairs.
3. The matter set up in the cross-bill, whether treated independently as a cross-bill, or in effect as an amendment to the original petition, is not
4. Such statutory proceeding is in no sense a part of or auxiliary to an equitable proceeding to liquidate the affairs of a corporation under alleged equitable principles.
5. The court erred in not sustaining the objections filed to the proceedings for dissolution sought by way of cross-bill, and consequently also erred in granting the further orders based on such proceedings.
Judgment reversed.