This appeal is taken from the action of the lower court, appointing a receiver without notice to the opposite party.
The complainants are the oivners of a majority of the stock in the defendant corporation. At a meeting of the stockholders, held in March, 1910, the defendants A. F. Stubbs and his wife, Mrs. Stubbs, including the complainant Mrs. D. M. Smith, were chosen as directors of the company. The said A. F. Stubbs was subsequently elected president of the company, and Mrs. Smith was elected as secretary. It is further alleged that subsequently W. L. Smith was elected president in the place of the said Stubbs. This statement is supplemented by the one further that a controversy arose between these
The following allegations are made, based on the mere “information and belief” of the complainants: (1) That the said A. F. Stubbs has turned over to a new corporate company, called by him the “Standard Disinfectant Company,” all the property and assets owned by the said Birmingham Disinfectant Company, including especially certain formulas purchased from Dr. Hayes and others. (2) That said Stubbs had'permitted a part of the property of said company to be sold at execution sale; and that his wife had become the purchaser. (3) That he had sufficient funds as president of the company to purchase the saiue, but permitted the property to be sold, so that it might be purchased by his wife and used in the new company; and that the commencement of the-suit had been fraudulently concealed, so as to carry out this purpose. (4) That the said company was believed to be insolvent. It is important to keep in mind, as we have before said, that these allegations are made merely on the information and belief of the complainants.
As said by Stone, C. J., in Thompson v. Tower Mfg. Co., 104 Ala. 140, 16 South. 116, and often reaffirmed by this court: “It should be a strong case of emergency and peril, well fortified by affidavits, to authorize the appointment of a receiver, without notice to the other party.” — Pollard v. Southern Fertilizer Company, 122 Ala. 409, 25 South. 169. These affidavits, moreover, are required to be distinct and precise. General allegations are insufficient, especially when fraud is one of the grounds relied on for the interference of the court. If fraud is claimed to be a ground of relief, the facts constituting it should be stated. In other words, the verifi
The allegations made in the petition that the defendant Stubbs had refused to allow complainants to examine the books of the company constituted no valid ground for the appointment of a receiver. The remedy was-in another forum and by another form of action. — Ala. Coal & Coke Co. v. Shackelford, 137 Ala. 224, 34 South. 833, 97 Am. St. Rep. 23; Original Vienna Baking Co. v. Heissler, 50 Ill. App. 406.
It must be assumed that the defendants are solvent, and not insolvent, as claimed on information and belief ; and such being the presumption the allegation that they are fraudulently misappropriating the assets of the company cannot avail to aid the complainants in obtaining the purpose of their prayer. — Hayes v. Jasper Land Co., 147 Ala. 340, 41 South. 909.
It has been well said that receivers should be appointed only to “prevent fraud, save the subject of litigation from material injury, or preserve it from threatened destruction.” — Briarfield Iron Works v. Foster, 54 Ala. 622. And the mere allegation of a disagreement among the directors or stockholders as to the management of the business, in the absence of fraud, would ordinarily be no sufficient ground to justify such appointment.— Little Warrior Coal Co. v. Hooper, 105 Ala. 665, 17 South. 118.
We are of opinion that the facts alleged within the knowledge of the complainants are insufficient to justify the relief granted by the court below. Justice will be
Reversed and remanded.