155 Mich. 228 | Mich. | 1908
This is a bill filed in aid of execution and as a judgment creditors’ bill. The facts upon which the bill is based, briefly stated, are as follows: Complainant was a creditor of the Charlevoix Sugar Company, and on the 21st of September, 1904, commenced a suit in the circuit court for the county of Charlevoix against the company, and at the March term, 1905, recovered a judgment for $406.95 and costs of $21.69. On the 1st of December, 1904, Alva L. Coulter, one of the above-named defendants, who was a stockholder in the Charlevoix Sugar Company, filed a bill in the circuit court for the county of Charlevoix, in chancery, against the sugar company, the purpose of which was to secure the appointment of a receiver of the sugar company. This case came on to be heard before Hon. Frederick W. Mayne, circuit judge, and on the 3d of December, 1904, Judge Mayne appointed Samuel A. Marting receiver with full power to take possession of the property, etc. Mr. Marting proceeded to qualify as receiver. The plant, including the real estate appurtenant thereto, was subsequently sold under decrees of the circuit court for the county of Charlevoix, in chancery, in mechanics’ lien suits to satisfy the claims represented thereby. The circuit court commissioner being disqualified, the court appointed Samuel A. Marting as special commissioner to make the sale under the decree. Upon such sale, after satisfying the decrees in full, there, was a surplus of $1,477.48, which amount was by subsequent order of the court, on petition of the receiver, transferred from and paid by the special commissioner to himself as receiver. On the 19th of April, 1905, execution was issued on the judgment obtained by the complainant in its assumpsit suit, and, upon return nulla bona, ,an alias execution, on the 21st of June, 1905, was issued and placed in the hands of the same officer, and a levy was made upon certain real estate of the Charlevoix Sugar Company and a certificate of levy duly filed ‘in the office of the register of deeds for Charlevoix county. On the
It is alleged in the bill, and appears by the testimony? that the wife of Judge Mayne, who at the time he made the first order appointing a receiver was living, was a full sister of Flora E. Lewis, who was also living, and, at the time of making the order appointing the receiver, the owner, as administratrix, of 100 shares of the stock of the Charlevoix Sugar Company. The evidence shows that Flora E. Lewis was administratrix of the estate of her deceased husband, Fremont E. Lewis, and that the sole issue of the marriage of Flora E. Lewis and her husband
It is contended, however, that inasmuch as it appears that Mrs. Lewis was a stockholder only in her representative capacity as administratrix, a different rule should
It is contended that the nunc pro tunc order entered by Judge Shepherd July 5, 1905, cured the jurisdictional defect. We think no such force can be given to the order. The rights of the complainant had fully vested before Judge Shepherd assumed to make the order affirming the order of Judge Mayne appointing a receiver. Before that order was made, the present bill had been filed, and the void order attacked. The order was made without notice to the complainant, and its rights could not thus be defeated. Whitwell & Hoover v. Emory, 3 Mich. 84; Eslow v. Township of Albion, 32 Mich. 193, cited and approved in McDonald v. Board of Sup’rs of Alcona Co., 91 Mich. 459.
It is next contended that the complainant has waived its right to attack the jurisdiction of the court in appointing a receiver. The only ground, apparently, upon which this contention rests, is' that when the case at law of the present complainant against the sugar company came on for hearing at the December term, 1904, an objection was raised that a receiver had been appointed for defendant sugar company, and that the receiver should have been made a party to the suit, and that the Davis Colliery Company acquiesced in the view of the court that such action should have been taken, and the case passed the term. The plaintiff in the case, however, subsequently noticed the case for hearing in the regular way, and the case was tried and judgment obtained. We can discover
We think the complainant has shown itself entitled to the relief prayed, and should recover the amount of its judgment and costs out of the funds in the hands of the defendants.
The decree will be reversed, and a decree entered for complainant, with costs of both courts.