47 So. 286 | Ala. | 1908
— This is a petition for a writ of mandamus to the chancellor of the Northwestern division, requiring him to vacate and annul a decree refusing to allow petitioner to intervene in a suit, pending in said chancery court, of the South & North Alabama Railroad Company against the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, and directing said chancellor to render a decree authorizing and allowing petitioner to intervene in said suit, as prayed in his petition filed in said case.
The substance of the petition for intervention is that petitioner is a minority stockholder in said South & North Alabama Railroad Company, which was originally incorporated to construct and operate a railroad from Decatur, Ala., to Montgomery, Ala.; that in 1871 said Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company commenced to purchase the stock of said South & North Alabama Railroad Company, and finally acquired 90- per cent, of said stock; that by virtue of owning said stock it has dominated the election of directors, etc., and practically dictated the policy and management of the affairs of said S'outh & North Alabama Railroad Company; that the suit into which petitioner seeks to intervene was filed by said South & North Alabama Railroad Company for
The petition to this court for mandamus sets out said original petition and the action of the court therein, as also the exceptions thereto, and prays for the annulment of the decree refusing to allow petitioner to intervene and that the chancellor be directed to render a decree allowing said intervention. The answer of the chancellor to the rule nisi sets out, by exhibit, the pleadings and proceedings in the case of South & North Alabama Railroad Company v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, showing that on March 10, 1905, further proceedings therein were enjoined; that after the disso
There seems to be some confusion in the minds of the profession as to the proper practice in cases of intervention. The greater number of the cases in the books, including those referred to by counsel, are based upon statutes in the various states providing for intervention. It seems that the regular and orderly course of procedure is first to file an application for leave to file a petition of intervention, of which the parties to the suit should have notice. This is determined from the face of the application. If the allegations of the application show a case in which intervention should be allowed, the leave is granted. The petition for intervention is then filed, on which the court examines the petition and answer, and such testimony, by affidavit or
The practice of interventions, which has groAvn up in our equity courts, seems to have been borrowed from the civil law, and Mr. Beach says: “Intervention is the generic designation in the civil law Of the various technical processes by which, when a suit is pending between two parties, a third party is allowed to interpose for the assertion of some collateral, implicit, or ulterior right, adverse to that of either or both of the others, or to defend a responsibility involved in the issue of the controversy. * * * No one, even in equity, is entitled to be made a party to the suit, unless he has an interest in its object; yet it is the common practice of the court to admit strangers to the litigation, claiming an interest in its subject-matter, to intervene in their own behalf, to assert their title.” —1 Beach, Modern Eq. Pr. § 571. Our own court has recognized the right of intervention, but held that a stranger could not intervene for the purpose of
The record in the Printup Case does not show distinctly just what position the intervener occupied. In one place it is stated that “unsecured creditors sought to intervene to defeat foreclosure,” and in another part of the opinion it is stated that, “in so far as it is sought. to intervene here in the capacity of stockholders of the Rome & Decatur Railroad Company,” the position of petitioners finds support in the case of Bronson v. La
- It is undoubtedly true that a stockholder cannot intervene, merely because he is a stockholder, if he is be ing properly represented by the constituted officers of his company; but inasmuch as their interests will be
We hold, then, that if the allegations of the petition had been sustained, and it had been alleged and shown that the facts came to the knowledge of the petitioner only since he requested the directors to bring suit, the petitioner would have been entitled to intervene — not, however, for the purpose of displacing the directors and dominating the litigation, but only for the purpose of presenting any matter and demanding any investigation or proceeding which the court might deem necessary to protect the interests of the minority stockholders who may choose to join with him. As his appearance relates only to his own interests, no attorney’s fee would be allowable out of the general fund. An examination of the evidence submitted shows that the chancellor was not in error in holding that the allegations of the peti-. tion were' not sustained.
Whether the intervention is by petition, or by an original bill in the nature of a cross-bill, it must be initiated
The writ of mandamus is denied..