116 N.J. Eq. 483 | N.J. Ct. of Ch. | 1934
The bill is filed for the appointment of a receiver pursuant to sections 65 and 66 of the Corporation act. Comp. Stat. p. 1640.
In order that the court may exercise the powers given it by the statute, it must appear that the defendant is a corporation. It need not be a corporation de jure but may be one de facto.McCarter v. Ketchem,
These allegations do not show the existence of a corporation. To establish the existence of a de facto corporation, it must be shown: That there is a law under which a corporation with the powers assumed might be incorporated; that there has been a bonafide attempt to organize a corporation in the manner prescribed by the statute, and that there has been an actual exercise of corporate powers. Stout v. Zulick,
Counsel appeared for the alleged corporation and fully admitted its existence. This is not surprising, for if there is no corporation Carroll is personally liable for the debts *485 created by him in the name of the Dye Works. This admission does not, as it seems to me, justify the court in assuming the existence of the corporation, in face of the facts recited and which are uncontradicted, and in the absence of proof of other facts which might help spell out a de facto corporation.
However, I will not rest my decision solely on the one point. Complainants allege that they are creditors to the extent of $458 but they do not show how the debt arose. Defendant presents an affidavit of Carroll denying that anything is owing to complainants. This issue must be decided in favor of the defendant. Complainants also allege that they have guaranteed the accounts of the Dye Works with half a dozen supply houses in various amounts up to $2,000. They do not claim that they have been called upon to make any payments on account of their guarantees.
The statute requires a bill of this character to be filed either by a stockholder or by a creditor. "It is settled," said Vice-Chancellor Stevenson, "that the word `creditor' is not used in our statute in a narrow technical sense. It is used in a broad sense and I think it is safe to say that the general intention is that if a party is so related to the corporation and its assets as to be entitled to a share of what is divided among creditors — if the party can come into the proceedings as a claimant and prove his claim so as to be entitled to a dividend — it must be generally sure that he is qualified as a creditor to institute the proceedings which result in the distribution of the assets in part to himself." Gallagher v. Asphalt Co., of America,
Lastly, the proofs indicate that the defendant is not insolvent. The bill will be dismissed. *487