153 P. 437 | Mont. | 1915
delivered the opinion of the court.
Appeal by plaintiffs from an order, made after notice and hearing, refusing to. appoint a receiver, which order the respondents defend upon the grounds: (1) That the complaint does not state any cause of action; (2) that, if the complaint states a cause of action, its allegations do not warrant a receivership; and (3) that the facts disclosed upon the hearing, under the issues joined and tendered by the answer, show no basis for such relief.
The material allegations of the complaint are to the following effect: The defendant St. Louis Mining & Milling Company is a corporation under the laws of Montana, with a capital stock of 500,000 shares, all issued and assessable, of which the plaintiffs are .holders of 47,000 shares. It is indebted to various persons in amount aggregating many thousands of dollars, some of which debts have been merged in judgment; but it possesses very valuable property, from the proper management of which profits can be made sufficient to meet all running expenses and to pay all its debts. Its board of directors consists of nine persons, among them the individual defendants, who hold more than 200,000 shares, who constitute the majority of said board,
1. It is conceded on all sides, as it must be, that there is no
2. It is also elementary, however, that the primary relief
3. Leaving the complaint, we note that the defendants answered, denying the neglect of duty imputed to them, and pleading, among other things, that they have endeavored in every reasonable way, and are still endeavoring and expecting, to raise funds with which to pay off the indebtedness of the company and protect the stockholders therein. The evidence taken at the hearing authorizes the view that the defendants, as directors, waived the right to sell the stock in payment of the assessment, reserving the right to enforce collection otherwise; that they were actuated in this course by the belief that financial and other conditions rendered the success of such a sale unlikely; that they have not paid nor attempted to enforce the collection of said assessment, because advised by competent counsel that the same is illegal and void; that they are anxious to secure funds with which to pay the obligations of the company, to redeem its property, and to restore it to activity as a profit-earning concern, and are convinced that they can more readily and promptly do so by means of bonds, with or without mortgage, as may be authorized by the stockholders; and that there was and is some justification for these opinions. This being true, it was entirely reasonable for the court to conclude that the equities of the complaint had been so met, for the time being, at least, that the propriety of the appointment was not established. It is no answer to this to say that the merits of the main case were not
On appeal from such an order, the question before us is not whether we agree in all respects with the views of the trial court, but whether a clear abuse of discretion is shown. Certainly, a
The order appealed from is affirmed.
Affirmed.