137 Ala. 325 | Ala. | 1902
The bill shows that the Commercial Eire Insurance Company, having its principal place of business in the city of Montgomery, was, on the lltb of April, 1878, duly organized under the general corporation laws of the State of Alabama; that after the expiration of the. time in which said corporation was organized to do business by its charter, namely, about the llth April, 1896, said corporation was dissolved by limitation, and the administration of its affairs passed into the hands of the managers of the business of the corporation at the time of its dissolution.Under the Code, sections 1298 (1690) and 1.299 (1691) such a corporation continues to exist as a body corporate for the term of five years after such dissolution, for the purpose of prosecuting or defending suits, settling its business, disposing of its property, and dividing its corporate stock, but not for the purpose of continuing its business. The: trustees or directors at the time of the dissolution continue to be the trustees of the stockholders and creditors, authorized to settle the affairs of the corporation, dispose of such property as is .necessary to pay its debts, and divide among the stockholders the money and property remaining after payment of the debts and necessary expenses.
The bill avers that the managers of the business of said corporation at and before the time of its dissolution, in April, 1896, were S. C. Marks, C. W. Buckley, M. P. LeGrand, H. O. Tompkins, F. Duncan, . J. H.
On its return to the lower court, the case was tried upon the demurrer to the bill as amended, and on a motion to dismiss for the want of equity. The court overruled the demurrer and the motion to dismiss, and defendants prosecute this appeal.
The grounds of demurrer were, that the bill fails to show any breach of trust by respondents; that it fails to aver any particulars of waste, or to show any instance of waste or any fraud on their part, and that it fails to aver that any of the notes set forth in paragraph 5 of the bill are assets of the dissolved corporation, or obligations of the parties making the same. The court, in the opinion rendered, stated, that it was “of the opinion that the equity of the bill depends upon the controversy over the notes which are said to have been given to preserve the capital stock of the defendant corporation. Neither in the original nor amended bill is there any admission on the part of complainants that such was the true and only office of the notes referred to. The complainants persevere in their allegation that- the said notes are a part of the assets of the corporation and charge defendants with culpable, failure and refusal to realize upon them. But for this feature of the bill, the demurrer would be sustained.”
The 6th paragraph sets up, “that one of the makers of said notes, H. C. Tompkins, died nearly twelve months ago and the chairman or president of the board of trustees, O. W.'Buckley, who had possession and control of said notes, failed to present said note or file it, (as a) claim against the estate of said H. O. Tompkins until recently, and not until requested and urged by complainant, Anderson, to present it before it became barred by. the statute of non-claim. * * * i:' Complainants charge that it is the purpose of said trustees to take no steps to collect said other notes herein-above named.” ;
Without, the averment of the bill as to these notes, it was without equity, and subject to the demurrer interposed. In nothing else'can its equity be rested. — • Jones v. Phillips, 77 Ala. 314, s. c. 82 Ala. 102.
On the averments of the bill that these notes are the property of the said insurance company, under the custody and control of the defendants as trustees, and that they have failed and refuse to recognize them as obligations due the company and to take, any steps to collect. them, the bill must, be held to contain equNy, and not subject to the demurrer interposed.
Affirmed.