137 Minn. 65 | Minn. | 1917
This action was brought to wind up the affairs of the defendant corporation, for an accounting by the officers thereof, the appointment of a receiver pending this action, and for other relief. The complaint sets out the facts at length and in detail, the material portions of which are put in issue by the answer. The action was tried by the court without a jury, at the conclusion of which the court made and filed findings disclosing substantially the following facts:
The defendant National Advertising & Amusement Company is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of this state. Plaintiff owns one-half of the corporate stock and defendants Jacob and Annie Barnet, husband and wife, the other half. The sole business of the corporation is the operation of a moving picture theatre in Minneapolis. Subsequent to the organization of the company defendant Jacob Barnet was chosen president, plaintiff was chosen secretary and treasurer, and defendant Annie Barnet was named vice president. Under this manage^ ment the corporation did a profitable business and continued thereafter to be a paying and going concern. But dissensions arose between plaintiff and defendant Jacob Barnet, in apparent adjustment of which plaintiff relinquished his office as treasurer, Mrs. Barnet was chosen in his place, and plaintiff became vice president. Thereafter the Bar-nets, husband and wife, continued to conduct the affairs of the .company, and are now in control thereof. Further dissensions arose between the parties, as a result of which defendants have excluded plaintiff from participation in the property or affairs of the company, and since November, 1914, have conducted the business solely in their own interests. They have allowed themselves excessive salaries, and refused plaintiff access to the books, or to information concerning the profits or expenses of the company. The court further found that by reason of the situation enmity and ill-will had arisen between the parties, plaintiff on
Defendants appealed from an order denying a new trial.
Two principal questions are presented by the assignments of error: (1) Whether the findings of fact are sustained by the evidence; and (2) whether the conclusions of law are justified by the findings of fact.
The court was also right in the finding that the compensation defendants allowed themselves was excessive, and their contention that plaintiff, through his representative, acquiesced therein by not voting against the proposition submitted by them at a corporation meeting held on November 2, 1914, which had for its purpose a ratification of the allowance which had previously been ordered in violation of the rules of the company, is not sustained by the record. Plaintiff’s representative at that meeting vigorously protested against the proceeding, and his failure at that time to vote the stock of plaintiff against the proposition cannot well be said to constitute a waiver of such protest, or an acquiescence in the attempted ratification proceeding. It does not matter whether the proposed ratification, which was adopted by the votes of defendants, representing one-half the stock, was legal or not. Morrill v. Little Falls Mnfg. Co. 53 Minn. 371, 55 N. W. 547, 21 L.R.A. 174. The fact remains that they voted the salary to themselves, over the protest of plaintiff, and their wrongful conduct is disclosed by the finding of the trial court that the amount was excessive. That whole proceeding tends to characterize the arbitrary conduct of defendants, and their purpose to override plaiptiff and ignore all his rights and interests. So we conclude without further remark
We therefore hold, following the Thwing case and the rule there stated, which seems .in full accord with the trend of the more recent judicial opinion, that on facts like those here presented, where by reason of the misconduct of those controlling the corporation substantial injury will result to the stockholders, a court of equity may, without statutory authority and in the absence of corporate insolvency intervene by way of receivership, require an accounting from the delinquent officers, order a sale of the corporate assets and adjudge a
The authorities are not in harmony upon this question as applied to corporations not shown to be insolvent, where the court is without statutory authority to grant relief in such cases. This is pointed out in the Thwing case. But we find no real disagreement in the adjudications in cases where like relief, upon similar grounds, is sought in actions against mismanaged copartnerships. 1 Rowley, Partnership, § 586; 2 Id. § 715, et seq.; Moore v. Price, 116 Ala. 247, 22 South. 531; Whalen v. Stephens, 193 Ill. 121, 61 N. E. 921; Singer v. Heller, 40 Wis. 544. If the rule be sound as applied to copartnerships, the manner and form of the organization or corporation would seem not a sufficient reason for denying similar relief at the suit of stockholders thereof.
While it is clear that the court may, as a necessary step in the proceedings, appoint a receiver to take charge of the corporate business and affairs, to convert the property and effects into money, the question whether there should be a final dissolution of the corporation should not be left to the receiver to determine, but should be definitely declared by the court, and a time set for the sale and disposal of the property and a distribution of the proceeds among the stockholders. There should be reasonably prompt action in a ease of this kind, to the avoidance of a long-continued operation of the business of the company under the guidance and supervision of the court. If, within the time fixed by the court for a sale, the parties come to some amicable arrangement which will obviate further judicial proceedings, matters can readily be ad
This covers the case and all the questions requiring special mention. We have not overlooked any of the points nor arguments of appellant, but have considered all thereof, with the result that no error is discovered justifying a new trial.
Order affirmed. .