41 So. 909 | Ala. | 1906
The bill in this case.is by a minority stockholder, and in which the corporation and its president are made respondents. The purpose of the bill is to. require an. accounting by the respondent■ Mqsgrove, the president of the corporation, for certain alleged dealings and transactions by him as such officer, and the bill also prays for the appointment of a receiver for the respondent corporation, and is accompanied by.a petition to the chancellor for such appointment. On the hearing of this petition the chancellor refused to ap
•The equity of the bill, and the right of the complainant as a minority stockholder to file the same, are questions that, we need not consider. The chancellor, in his opinion accompanying the decree, • upheld the equity in the bill, and there is no contention by counsel for appellees that, the ruling of .the chancellor in denying the petition for a receiver should be here considered with reference to these questions, but solely with reference to the question of any necessity for a receivership, on the facts as presented by- the petition,- bill, answer, and affidavits, oh which the application for the appointment of a receiver was heard.
The bill, as amended, avers that of the 4,990 outstanding shares of the capital stock-of the Jasper Land Company, the complainant owns 22 1-3 shares, having purchased the same on the 2d day of September, 1905; that the respondent Musgrove has controlled the affairs of the land company since the 29th day of April, 1901, owning or controlling over 4,700 shares of said capital stock; that he has abused his control of said corporation and his trust, as vice president and general manager, and later as president; that he has loaned to himself, and to companies owned and controlled by him, large sums of money belonging to the land company; that he has called stockholders’ meetings without notice, and has presented and had allowed by the stockholders and directors unfounded claims and demands against the land company; that on September 13, 1905, he. procured to be declared a.dividend of |29.50 per share of the stock of the land company, which was paid out of the capital assets- of the company; that he has taken and is now taking from the treasury excessive sums in the form of salaries and expenses; that he is in the absolute control of the said land company, and of its money, and assets; and that, unless the same is taken from him aud protected by a court of equity, he will continue to appropriate the same to his own use, under various guises and devices, which would make it difficult, if not impossible, to trace
The general rule is well established that the power to appoint a receiver and sequestrate property will be exercised with great caution, and a resort to this remedy can only be had in extreme cases,,and where it appears that without it the plaintiff will sustain irreparable loss. —Alderson on Receivers, § 49; High on Receivers (3d Ed.) §§ 18,19; Randle v. Carter, 62 Ala. 95; Fort Payne Furnace Co. v. Iron Co., 96 Ala. 472, 11 South. 439, 38 Am. St. Rep. 109; Ensley Dev. Company v. Powell, 147 Ala. 40 South. 137; Gilreath v. Union Bank & Trust Company, 121 Ala. 204, 25 South. 581. Another principle of law, which seems to be as well settled, is that, to justify the appointment of a receiver in limine before the decree upon the merits of the. bill, two grounds must appear: First, a reasonable probability that the com
It has been ruled by this court that the fact that the directors and officers of a corporation are fraudulently misappropriating the assets of the company will not alone of itself constitute ground for the appointment of a receiver. If they are solvent, they can be brought to an accounting, which will afford complete relief and is therefore an adequate remedy. — Briarfield Iron Works v. Foster, 54 Ala. 622; Alabama Coal & Coke Company v. Shackelford, 137 Ala. 224, 34 South. 833, 97 Am. St. Rep. 23; Donald v. Export Company, (Ala.) 38 South. 841. The facts in the case before us are much like the facts in the case of Alabama Goal & Goke Go. v. Shackelford, supra, and clearly distinguish the case at bar from that of Morris v. Elyton Land Company, 125 Ala. 263, 28 South. 513. Without more, on the facts here presented, we might safely rest the determination of this case on the principles stated in the case of Coal & Coke Company v. Shackelford, supra, and hold on the authority of that case that no sufficient reason or necessity exists for the appointment of a receiver in this case.
It is insisted by counsel for appellant in argument' that the respondent Musgrove purchased the majority of the stock held and claimed by him in the respondent corporation with funds of the defendant company, that in so doing he violated his trust as president of the cor
We concur in the conclusion, reached by the chancellor, that the facts in the case do not justify the appointment of a receiver; and his decree will be affirmed.
Affirmed.