22 Wash. 18 | Wash. | 1900
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The complaint in this action alleges that in May, 1893, the plaintiff and defendant E. W. Price formed a partnership for the purpose of carrying on a general brokerage and investment business, buying and selling bonds, warrants, stocks, and other securities, and dealing-in real and personal property; that they were to share equally the profits and losses; that respondent was to contribute the sum of $96,000, and the defendant E. W. Price $15,000, and no definite time was fixed upon for the continuance of the- partnership; that the plaintiff has contributed towards the capital of said partnership sums in excess of $96,000, and that Price has not in fact contributed the full sum of $15,000, which by the terms of the partnership agreement he was to contribute; that since the formation of the partnership Price has had almost exclusive control, management, and direction of the property and affairs thereof, and has in his possession the books of account, correspondence, and the property and assets of said partnership, except two stock certificates; that, of the investments made with the funds of the partnership in loans, stocks, notes, security, and real and personal property, large amounts have been made in the sole name of Price; that the Lumbermen’s Logging Company, a corporation, one of the defendants, was organized by the partners for the purpose of holding title to certain timber lands
“ This appointment of said receiver is temporary merely, and shall remain in force until the said hearing he had on plaintiff’s application for a receiver pending this action and until the further order of the court.”
The order also recites that, if the rebeiver is not appointed immediately, plaintiff is liable to suffer great loss and damage, and finds that an emergency exists, requiring the appointment without notice in order to secure justice to the parties. On the return day (but upon whose application, the record does not show) the hearing was continued until the 3d day of March, 1899. On that day the court denied defendants’ motion to vacate its previous order, and, after hearing and considering numerous affidavits for and against the appointment of a receiver, a receiver was appointed to take possession of the property of the partnership, including the property of the Lumbermen’s Logging Company, during the pendency of the action. This last order was based upon certain specific findings of fact set forth at length in the order of appointment, — among
Did the court err in its order of March 3d appointing a receiver ? This order was made after full hearing, but no statement of facts has been settled, and the affidavits used at the hearing are not before this court. Por a reversal of the order, appellants rely upon the alleged insufficiency of the complaint to justify the appointment of a receiver. .The principal ground of attack is that the complaint fails to allege the insolvency of the defendant, and much reliance is had upon the case of Wales v. Dennis, 9 Wash. 309 (37 Pac. 450), to support this contention. There is an essential difference in the cases. In the present case there is no answer or denial of the allegations of the complaint, while in the case referred to there was an answer which denied all the equities of plaintiff’s bill, and in addition to that the plaintiff in that case had been enjoined from conducting the partnership business. The conclusion reached by the court was right, and might have been safely rested upon the grounds noticed. But in the course of the opinion stress seems to have been put upon the failure of the complaint to allege the insolvency of the defendant, and, in so far as such failure was deemed fatal to the complaint, that case is without authority to support it, and it must be overruled. In an action between partners, where fraudulent conduct is alleged, and where a partner has been wrongfully excluded from participating in the management of the firm’s business, and
There is another reason why appellants’ contention in this respect could not prevail, and that is that error must he made to appear affirmatively before a reversal will be ordered, and, in the absence of a statement of facts, we are bound to consider “all amendments which could have been made as made.” Session Laws 1893, p. 135, § 36. And still another reason for affirming this order is that it was made after a full hearing upon the merits, and findings were specifically made to which no sufficient exception was taken. These findings are presumed to have been correctly made, and are sufficient to justify the appointment. Carstens v. Leidigh & H. Lumber Co., 18 Wash. 450 (51 Pac. 1051, 63 Am. St. Rep. 906, 39 L. R. A. 548); Hannegan v. Roth, 12 Wash. 65 (40 Pac. 636); Rice v. Stevens, 9 Wash. 298 (37 Pac. 440). Recitals in a judgment are prima facie evidence of the facts stated in them. Hayne, New Trial & Appeal, § 231. The general presumption applicable to courts of general jurisdiction is, that proof without which judgment could not have been given was duly made at the hearing.
Another contention is that it was error for the court include the property of the Lumbermen’s Logging Company, a corporation. Erom the allegations of the complaint, which come before us unchallenged and undenied, it appears that the corporation is a mere organization for convenience, and all of its capital stock and the assets and
Upon the record before us, the orders appealed from must be, and they are, affirmed.
Dunbab, Reavis and Rullebton, JJ., concur.