107 Ga. 545 | Ga. | 1899
In this case several amendments to the plaintiffs’ petition had been offered and allowed prior to the amendment which they filed on the 13th of August, 1897. This last amendment had not been allowed by the court when the case came on for trial at the March term, 1898, and the defendants then moved the court to disallow and strike it. After argument upon this motion, the court ordered all of this amendment stricken except the 13th’and 14th paragraphs thereof. Plaintiffs in error, in their bill of exceptions, allege that the court erred in disallowing the portion of the amendment which was ordered stricken. The stricken portions of the amendment consisted of a detailed statement of all that had previously transpired in the case, together with allegations in reference to the conduct of the defendant directors since the filing of the petition and the interlocutory hearing of the case. Its purpose seemed to be to obtain another interlocutory hearing of the application for injunction and receiver, upon the same pleadings and evidence which were before the judge when he denied the prayer for an injunction and refused to appoint a receiver; the plaintiffs claiming that they had failed to obtain a hearing in the Supreme Court u*pon their bill of exceptions to his decision to this effect, because of the failure of the judge to certify the bill of exceptions within the time prescribed by law. But no interlocutory hearing was ever had after this
2. After the court had allowed the plaintiffs to amend their petition by incorporating therein the matter included in the 13th and 14th paragraphs of this amendment, the defendants offered to demur to the petition as amended. The plaintiffs objected to the consideration of this demurrer, “ 1st, because the defendants had, at previous terms of the court, filed their answers to-
If a court of equity can not dissolve a corporation, can it do what would be — certainly in a case of the present character— tantamount to the same thing, that is, appoint a receiver, sequester its property, decree a sale of all of its property and franchises and a distribution of the fund arising from such sale among its creditors and stockholders? When the affairs of a railroad corporation are wound up, its property, including its franchise to construct, own, and operate a railroad between designated points, all sold, and the proceeds of the sale distributed to creditors and stockholders, is it not, for all practical purposes, dissolved? Theoretically it may not be dissolved, because having once been created and organized as a corpora-tion, so long as the mere right to be a corporation, which does not pass by a sale of its corporate franchises, continues, the mere, naked, legal entity, known by a designated name as a particular corporation, may still survive, but for every conceivable t practical purpose the corporation is' as completely destroyed as it would be if a decree of corporate dissolution had been regularly and legally rendered. The principle that a court of equity can not dissolve a corporation would be utterly useless if, upon the application of minority shareholders, a going railroad corporation can be put into the hands of a receiver, its property and franchises sold, and the proceeds thereof distributed to its creditors and stockholders. A railroad corporation shorn in this way of all its property and corporate franchises, helpless and hopeless, might exist, in legal contemplation, as a pure mental abstraction; but it would be mere mockery to hold that the court by the exercise of whose power it was reduced to this state of helpless and permanent inertia could not dissolve it. In our investigation we have found a few instances, in each of which an exceptionally
We are of opinion that the court had no power to grant the prayer for a winding up of the affairs of the corporation and a distribution of its assets among its creditors and shareholders. In support of this opinion we cite the following authorities: Thomp. Corp. §4539; Spelling, Extraord. Rel. §758; Hinckley v. Pfister, 83 Wis. 64; Strong v. McCagg, supra; State v. Merchants Ins. Co., 8 Humph. (Tenn.), 235, 252; Com. v. Union Ins. Co., 5 Mass. 230; Denike v. N. Y. Cement Co., 80 N. Y. 599; Baker v. Backus, 32 Ill. 79; Ramsey v. Erie Ry. Co., 7 Abb. Pr. (N. S.) 156, 181; Howe v. Deuel, supra; Latimer v. Eddy, 46 N. Y. 61; Belmont v. Erie Ry. Co., 52 N. Y. 637, 665; Hardon v. Newton, supra; Mason v. Supreme Court of Equitable League, 77 Md. 483; Brown v. Home Savings Bank, 5 Mo. App. 1; Wallace v. Pierce-Wallace Pub. Co., supra; Mor. Priv. Corp. 283; Bayless v. Orne, French v. Gifford, Atty. Gen. v. Bank of Mich., supra. It is, we think, very clear that the allegation of the insolvency of the corporation added nothing material to the strength of the plaintiffs’ case, so far as the other prayers of the petition are concerned. Whether they were, or were not, entitled to any particular portion of such relief did not depend upon the solvency or insolvency of the corporation. Certainly this is true in reference to the question whether they were entitled to an injunction restraining the defendants from a repetition of their fraudulent
Judgment reversed.