In Noble v. Gadsden Land & Improvement Co., 133 Ala. 250, 31 South. 856, 91 Am. St. Rep. 27, it is held that where a private business corporation,
The averments of the bill are sufficient to show an abandonment of their duties by-the stockholders. No meeting has been held Avithin the past five years, and no officer or agent of the corporation resides in the state and the business for which the corporation was organized has never been attempted. Mr. Beach, in his work on Corporations, at section 788, says: “Unless it appears beyond question that the continuation of a profitable business cannot be had, the dissolution of a cor
No complaint is made in the bill against the managing officers of the corporation in respect to the condition of its affairs. Indeed, the officers may have acted in the utmost good faith, and yet, notwithstanding, the condition of affairs averred could naturally have followed. Therefore a demand on the officers for a distribution is not necessary; and the board of directors would be powerless to take any action in respect to the property of the corporation such as is prayed. And if it can be said that, in a bill to distribute the property of a corporation, it is ever necessary to show a demand for action on the part of stockholders, and a refusal or failure on their part to act, we think the averments of the bill are sufficient to exempt it from the ground of demurrer raising this point.
It is insisted that the bill is multifarious, in that it seeks a distribution of the assets of the estate and to have declared that two-thirds of the stock is fictitious and void. The averment that the stock is fictitious is not essential to the equity of the bill, in respect to having the property sold and the proceeds distributed; but, according to the averments of the bill, that which makes the issuance of stock fictitious affects every share of stock that was issued. In other words, the shareholders contributed $80,000 for the purchase of the only prop
The demurrers to the bill were properly overruled, and the decree of the chancellor must be affirmed.
Affirmed.