93 So. 860 | Ala. | 1922
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *35 [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *36 [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *37 Appellees, as minority stockholders of the Profile Cotton Mills, a corporation organized under the laws of this state, filed this bill against said corporation, Charles B. Henry and W. I. Greenleaf, as officers and directors thereof, and who own and control a majority of the stock. The remaining stockholders were also made parties respondent to the bill.
Respondents Henry and Greenleaf and the Profile Cotton Mills separately demurred to the bill, and from the decree overruling their demurrer have alone prosecuted this appeal. The other respondents taking no active part in the litigation.
Respondents Henry and Greenleaf are nonresidents of Alabama, residing in Vermont; and it is averred that Greenleaf is insolvent. The salient features of the bill are set out in the report of the case, and reference will be made herein to its averments in a most general manner.
Respondent Henry was president and treasurer of the corporation, and Greenleaf its vice president and secretary; and these two officers, with one Weaver who, the bill alleges, is their subordinate and subservient tool, constituted the board of directors. These three men are alleged to have the entire management and control of the corporation, and to manage and control the same without regard to the rights of the minority stockholders, but in opposition thereto. The bill further charges that, in 1911, the respondent Henry having acquired a majority interest in the stock, sent respondent Greenleaf to Jacksonville, Ala., for the purpose of acquiring the complete ownership of its capital stock and its properties, and that these two men conspired together to secure the entire control of the corporation by having themselves elected as officers and directors, and, after the accomplishment of this purpose to operate and conduct the affairs of *38 the corporation for their own unlawful profit and gain and to the detriment of all other stockholders.
The bill further charges that these respondents plan "to withhold all information from the minority stockholders, to allow them no representation of any kind, to declare no dividends out of the profits of said corporation, to refrain from holding regular meetings of directors, to refrain from making regular reports of the affairs and business of said corporation"; and that, pursuant to such conspiracy, they refused to declare dividends, and, as an excuse therefor, made false representations to the stockholders as to the condition of the property, throwing out no hope of dividends in the future, and thus securing a large amount of the stock of said corporation at a nominal sum; that these respondents have refused to give information requested by complainants, and they (complainants) were refused the right to examine the books and accounts of the corporation, and had to resort to the courts for mandamus proceedings to that end; and when it was at last accomplished, the examination was in every manner impeded.
These respondents are further charged with an effort to have the corporation issue either bonds or preferred stock in the amount of $600,000 with which to pay in part simulated debts, and in part in retirement of bonds not yet due. The averments of fraudulent conduct of these respondents in regard to the stockholders with reference to the issuance of these bonds or preferred stock, are set forth in detail in paragraphs 19, 20, and 21 of the bill, which appear more fully in the report of the case; and an injunction was sought against the issuance of these bonds.
Respondents Henry and Greenleaf are charged with having fraudulently and illegally paid out or obtained for themselves secret profits in large sums of money at varying times, which are set forth in detail in the bill, approximating $2,500,000. Some of these sums of money are alleged to have been received by these respondents individually, and other amounts invested in farm property — where the title was taken in their names or for their benefit — and still another large sum used in another business, not within the charter powers of the corporation. The bill contains the further charge that, pursuant to this conspiracy, these officers held from the market large quantities of manufactured yarn at a loss amounting to $1,000,000; and made false statements to the federal government on income returns, resulting in the payment of large sums by way of penalty and interest.
The bill seeks to make permanent the temporary injunction restraining the issuance of the bonds or preferred stock; an accounting against these respondents of moneys which they have illegally and fraudulently received; a removal of these respondents from the further control of the corporation, and the appointment of a receiver to take possession of the property and assets of the corporation, to operate its business under the direction of the court for such time as the court might determine that it is to the interest of the corporation and its stockholders, that it be returned to the management of the stockholders, or, if not that, it be dissolved, and its assets properly distributed.
The assignments of demurrer which are discussed by counsel for appellant on this appeal are those which take the point that the bill is multifarious, as to so much of the bill as seeks the appointment of a receiver upon the ground that it does not appear that the corporation and respondent Henry are insolvent, and as to so much of the bill as seeks removal of the respondents Henry and Greenleaf as officers of the corporation, and the dissolution of said corporation; and, lastly, for a failure of the bill to show application by complainants to the board of directors of said corporation for redress of the alleged grievances, or sufficient excuse for failure to make such application. These constitute the only questions presented by counsel for appellant, and we will briefly treat them in the order stated.
It is argued that there are many items in the bill, which complainants claim should be accounted for by respondent Henry individually, and others which should be accounted for by Greenleaf individually, while still others which should be accounted for by Henry and Greenleaf jointly, and that it also calls for an accounting between the corporation and these respondents separately as well as jointly.
It is also insisted that still another entirely distinct relief is sought in the injunction against the issuance of the preferred stock, and that the matters in which an accounting is sought are in part at least an action directly in behalf of the corporation, and can be maintained by complainants, if at all, merely because, as alleged in the bill, it is controlled by these respondents who are charged with wrongdoing. Counsel cite many authorities in this state upon the question of multifariousness, among them Singer v. Singer,
We are persuaded, however, that the bill is not objectionable upon the ground of multifariousness. It has often been stated by this court that no universal rule is admitted to be established as to cover all possible cases. It is largely a matter of discretion to be determined by the court in each particular *39
case from the facts there presented, governed by what is convenient and equitable, subject of course to the recognized principles of equitable jurisprudence. In the case of O'Neal v. Cooper,
"Multifariousness, abstractly, has been properly said to be incapable of an accurate definition; but is generally understood to include those cases 'where a party is brought as a defendant on a record, with a large portion of which, and in the case made by which, he has no connection whatever.' Story's Eq. Pl. § 530; Kennedy v. Kennedy,
It is well recognized that it is not necessary that all the parties to the bill should have an interest in all the matters in controversy, but it is sufficient if each defendant has an interest in some of the matters involved, and they are connected with the others. Truss v. Miller,
The principal purpose of this bill is to rescue the corporation from impending ruin as the result of the wrongful and fraudulent conduct of the officers who have entire control of its affairs, and to save the corporation for the benefit of the complainants who are minority stockholders, as well as the remaining stockholders who are made parties respondent to the bill. The principal subject-matter therefore, of this litigation, is the corporation, and the primary controversy relates to the continuance in control and management of its affairs by these officers, and the accounting sought, together with other relief sought in the bill, incidental and intimately connected with this main purpose. The assignment of demurrer as to multifariousness was not well taken, and was therefore properly overruled.
The second ground of demurrer argued, relating to that feature of the bill seeking the appointment of a receiver, seems to be based upon the theory that insolvency of these respondents and the corporation is necessary to be averred to justify the appointment of a receiver in any case, under any circumstances; and our attention is specifically directed to the following cases in support of this contention: Hayes v. Jasper Land Co.,
We have examined these authorities with care, and a discussion of each of them, noting the points of differentiation, would serve no useful purpose. The language in some of these authorities, quoted and relied upon by counsel for appellant, was used in support of the ruling of the court in those particular cases by way of reasoning and denial of the receivership under the facts there presented; but we are unable to find in the holding of these cases anything indicating that insolvency is necessary to be shown for the appointment of a receiver in every case and under all circumstances. Indeed, that such is not the rule as recognized in this state appears from a reading of the case of Jasper Land Co. v. Wallace,
"It is plain to us that neither set is so in possession and control of the property and affairs of the company as to be able to take the necessary steps to the effectuation of the relief the stockholders are entitled to. In such case the appointment of a receiver, even though the corporation be solvent, to take charge and control of its effects and concerns, at least until there is a recognized board of directors competent to faithfully and efficiently conserve the interests of all the stockholders, is within the proper exercise of the jurisdiction of the chancery court."
And again, in Bridgeport v. Tritsch,
110 Ala. 274 ,20 So. 16 , is the following language here pertinent:
"Again, in Roman v. Woolfolk,
Nor is this contention in keeping with the weight of authority, or supported by sound reasoning. The question of solvency, when discussed in this connection, relates, after all, only to the matter of the adequacy of the remedy at law. As to the respondent Greenleaf and Henry, however, Greenleaf is alleged to be insolvent, and he and Henry are nonresidents of the state. The nonresidence of Henry, though solvent, renders any remedy against him inadequate, and thus the contention resolves itself into the proposition that the corporation, being solvent, in no event should a receiver be appointed.
It is recognized by all the authorities that the appointment of a receiver upon application of the minority stockholders is a power exercised with the greatest caution. Several of the authorities illustrating that this power should be exercised only in the plainest cases are found cited in the recent case of Dixie Lumber Co. v. Hellams,
The case made by the bill here presented is not an ordinary one, and, as said in brief of counsel for appellees: "It would be difficult to imagine a case more thoroughly saturated with fraud than presented under the facts alleged." Counsel for appellees have summarized the salient features of the bill's averments, which we conclude is a fair presentation of what they complain, and which we here quote as giving in brief manner what is embraced within the charges made against these respondents:
"The respondent directors have acquired complete charge of the management of the property. They have conspired to enrich themselves and defraud the minority stockholders. They have, pursuant to their conspiracy, impaired the value of the stock by false representations until they have succeeded in compelling timid stockholders to sacrifice valuable stock for 10 cents on the dollar. Instead of paying dividends, as other corporations, honestly managed, under similar conditions have paid, they have announced a definite policy of not declaring dividends now or in the future. The dividends, in-instead of being paid, have been put in their own pockets. They have misappropriated moneys and assets of the corporation approximately $3,000,000. These sums they have converted to their own use. They have used their powers of trusteeship to make from the corporation secret profits in large sums. They have deliberately made false statements to the government in reference to the income taxes of the corporation, and thereby subjected the corporation to large penalties. They have used moneys of the corporation to buy, improve, and equip farms for their own personal use and carrying the title in their own name. They have gone beyond the charter powers of the corporation, engaged in the business of mining, and subjected the corporation to losses aggregating thousands of dollars. They have simulated debts to themselves as creditors of the corporation, and to secure the payment of these debts attempted improperly to issue preferred stock or bonds of the corporation, and, in order to accomplish their purpose in this regard, falsified the minutes of the corporation and then, when such acts were enjoined in contempt of court paid to themselves interest amounting to thousands of dollars on bonds or preferred stock which has never been issued. They have denied to the stockholders knowledge of its affairs, and have given to them false information. They have compelled the minority stockholders to resort to the strong arm of the court in order to have their right of examination of the books and papers of the corporation, and when the right was given to them by the court, delayed and impeded its execution, and stand convicted of contempt of the court's order."
As pertinent to a bill of this character, Mr. Thompson, in his work on Corporations (2d Ed.) vol. 4, § 4622, has the following:
"A stockholder has an unquestioned right to the appointment of a receiver where the facts disclose a scheme on the part of the directors or majority stockholders to wreck the corporation and dissipate its assets. Said one of the courts, after noting the hesitancy of courts to interfere in the management of corporations: 'It may further be said that this court has never denied power in a chancellor to prevent a scheme of irreparable injury and wrong, merely because the movers in that scheme speak and act in a corporate capacity rather than in an individual capacity. That solvent corporations are wrecked for purely selfish and illegal purposes, that minority interests are "frozen out," that business immorality has run amuck under the assumption that courts are powerless, is too true. But the assumption is wrong. Judicial hesitancy does not mean judicial atrophy or paralysis. The board of directors of a corporation are but trustees of an estate for all the stockholders, and may not only be amenable to the law, personally, for a breach of trust, but their corporate power under color of office to effectuate a contemplated wrong may be taken from them when, by fraud, conspiracy, or covinous conduct, or extreme mismanagement, the rights of minority stockholders are put in imminent peril and the underlying, original, corporate entente cordiale is unfairly destroyed. It would be a sad commentary on the law if, when the trustee of a corporate estate is making an improper disposition of it, or has shown improper partiality toward one of its conflicting parties or has put the estate in a fix it is liable and likely to be either wasted or destroyed, or mercilessly taken from all and given to a part, a court could not reach out its arm and preserve and administer the estate. We have never so declared the law.' "
And in Foster's Federal Practice (4th Ed.) vol. 1, pp. 468, 469, is found the following, with cases cited in the note in support thereof:
"Independently of statutory authority, a court of equity will ordinarily appoint a receiver of the property of a corporation only in eight classes of cases: Firstly. * * * Secondly. * * * Thirdly, at the suit of persons interested in the property, whether as stockholders *41 or creditors * * * where there is a breach of duty by the directors, actual or threatened damage of a serious nature, although there is no insolvency."
Many authorities are also cited in the case of Columbia, etc., Co. v. Washed Bar Sand Co. (C. C.) 136 Fed. 710, to the effect that while a receiver will not be appointed in such a case without a grave necessity therefor, yet where the facts recited charging mismanagement, show that the board of directors who were responsible were the majority stockholders, and were managing the corporation for their own benefit and diverting the funds and income to themselves, relief will be awarded the minority stockholders either by injunction, if that remedy could correct the evil, or, if necessary, by the appointment of a receiver. The rule is likewise recognized in Smith on Receivership, p. 359. An interesting discussion of the question is found in Green v. Nat. Advertising Co.,
Without further discussion of the question, we conclude that the averments of this bill present a case justifying, if true, the appointment of a receiver, though the corporation may be solvent. We are convinced from an investigation of the subject that this conclusion is supported by the decided weight of authority, as well as by sound reasoning, and a true sense of justice and fair play.
The question raised as to the dissolution of the corporation needs but brief consideration. It is to be noted that complainants first seek a return of the corporation to the management of the stockholders at such time as the court should determine that it is to the interest of the corporation, or, not so determining, then that dissolution be had, and distribution of its assets. In Decatur Land Co. v. Robinson,
"When it has become impossible to accomplish the chartered purposes of the corporation, or when its affairs have been so managed that failure or ruin is inevitable, it would be a reproach on the administration of justice if a court of equity, on the application of a stockholder or a minority of the stockholders, could not extend relief, and this without any express statutory authority."
The Supreme Court of Michigan, in Miner v. Belle, etc., Ice Co.,
"This corporation has utterly failed of its purposes, not because of matters beyond its control, but because of fraudulent mismanagement and misappropriation of its funds. Complainant has a right to insist that it shall not continue as a cloak for a fraud upon him, and shall not longer retain his capital to be used for the sole advantage of the owner of the majority of the stock, and the court of equity will not so far tolerate such a manifest violation of the rules of natural justice as to deny him the relief to which his situation entitles him."
See, also, State ex rel. Independent Tel. Co. v. Second Judicial Circuit,
We are therefore of the opinion the alternative prayer for relief by way of dissolution, if found necessary, is justified under the facts here presented, and this assignment of demurrer was also properly overruled.
The remaining objection to the bill, argued by counsel for appellants, relates to its failure to aver that application was made to the board of directors for a redress of the alleged grievances, or a sufficient excuse for failing to make such application. The bill shows that the respondent officers, who are also directors of the corporation, owning and controlling the majority stock, and who have entire control of the corporation, are charged with gross mismanagement, fraudulent conduct pursuant to a conspiracy to conduct its affairs for their own profit, and to the detriment and injury of all other stockholders. Under the averments of the bill the following quotation from Ellis v. Vandergrift,
"No demand or request of the corporate authorities is required to be made, as a condition to suit by the stockholder, where it can be inferred with reasonable certainty that it would be refused, actually or virtually, or where, being the wrongdoers, a majority of the governing body would control the litigation so requested or demanded."
See, also, Ala. Fid. Mtg. Bond. Co. v. Dubberly,
We have considered the assignments of demurrer argued in brief by counsel for appellant, and reach the conclusion that the court committed no error in overruling them, and the decree appealed from will accordingly be here affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE and MILLER, JJ., concur. *42