63 S.W.2d 327 | Tex. App. | 1933
On and prior to the 1st.day of July, 1933, the Farmers’ Co-operative Society No. 1 was a private corporation, duly incorporated under the laws of the state of Texas, and had built and was operating a cotton gin at Wellington, Tex., “for the purposes of ginning and marketing the cotton grown by its member-stockholders.” On said last-mentioned date its capital stock was $10,000, divided into two hundred shares of the par value of $50 each, of which amount M. C. Pigg and eleven others, appellees herein, owned one share each. On said date appellees presented their petition to the district court of Collingsworth county asking for the appointment of a receiver for said corporation and for a temporary injunction restraining the sale of certain property of said corporation. The City National Bank in Wellington, Tex., the Cicero-Smith Lumber Company, both private corporations, and all the directors of said ginning corporation were named as defendants. On the date said petition was presented, the said district court, without notice to any of the defendants and on' the allegations alone of said petition, appointed a receiver for said ginning corporation and ordered the issuance of a temporary injunction restraining the sale of the property of the said ginning corporation by the above-named two defendant corporations. From this order the two last-named defendants have appealed. The directors of said corporation have not joined in the appeal.
We have concluded that the petition failed to state facts showing the existence of such an exceptional emergency as would justify a court of equity in appointing ex parte a receiver with power to immediately dispossess another of his property and talcs full charge of same.
Omitting the formal and nonessential matters, appellees’ said petition, in substance, contains the following allegations of fact: That during the cotton ginning season of 1928-29, the directors aforesaid engaged “in a wild scheme of speculation in buying and selling cotton,” incurring a loss thereby of approximately $26,000; that such mismanagement has placed said corporation in imminent danger of insolvency, if, in fact, such losses have not caused it to be actually insolvent; that pursuant to their policy of gross mismanagement, said board of direc
This is, in brief, the substance of what we deem the essential portions of appellees’ petition.
It will be noted that the only matter that presented a pressing necessity for immediate action was the sale of the property. If we grant that a court of equity has the power to appoint a receiver under the facts of this case, it would undoubtedly have, as an incident of such power, the right to protect the property by the issuance of a temporary restraining order pending a hearing on the receivership, go far as we are aware, the rule is universal that it is an abuse of judicial discretion in cases of this character to appoint a receiver without notice upon an ex parte hearing, where a restraining order would adequately protect the property until due notice is given and the application for receiver heard and determined.
We quote: “A receiver may be properly appointed without notice and before giving the adverse party an opportunity to be heard in, and only in, an extreme and exceptional case in which there is a great emergency and an imperious and most stringent necessity for immediate appointment * ⅜ ⅜ and the rights of the complaining party may be amply and sufficiently protected in no other way * * * such as a temporary injunction or restraining order.” 53 C. J. pp. 59, 60. See, also, Amason v. Harrigan (Tex. Civ. App.) 288 S. W. 566; Hodges Drilling Co. v. Tyler (Tex. Civ. App.) 233 S. W. 548; Claunch v. Claunch (Tex. Civ. App.) 203 S. W. 930; Security Land Co. v. South Texas Development Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 142 S. W. 1191; 23 R. C. L., page 28.
Upon the hypothesis that the court in this case could legally appoint a receiver, it seems clear that the issuance of a restraining order against an immediate sale of the corporate property pending a hearing would have afforded full and ample protection to the appellees.
We deem it inadvisable to enter into a discussion of any phase of this case other than the one above. A full hearing may develop a state of facts justifying the appointment of a receiver. A detailed discussion by us might prejudice the rights of one or the other of the parties to this appeal or unduly interfere with the discretion which the law has lodged with the trial court.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded, the receivership vacated, and the said injunction dissolved.