78 Me. 221 | Me. | 1886
This is a suit in equity. The plaintiffs appear to be members of an unincorporated joint-stock companyand they pray that a receiver may be appointed, the property of the company sold, and the proceeds divided among the members.
We are not satisfied that the prayer of the plaintiffs ought to. be granted. The only property of the company is a building and its fixtures and a small amount of furniture, and less than a hundred dollars in its treasury, worth, all together, not more than ten or twelve hundred dollars. The building was erected by members of the Patrons of Husbandry, and has always been used by them as a place for holding their meetings, and apparently it is still needed by them for that purpose. The stock was divided into ten-dollar shares, of which the plaintiffs (four in number) own only twelve, the balance of the stock being owned
The bill when presented contained a prayer for an injunction against a proposed removal of the building from the lot on which it then stood to another. But a temporary injunction does not appear to have been obtained, and the removal has been effected ; and it is agreed that under the circumstances the removal was proper, and the claim for such an injunction is abandoned.
As the question has been very fully argued by counsel, it may not be improper to add that we do not doubt our jurisdiction in this class of cases. The ground of our decision is, not want of jurisdiction, but the absence of equity in the plaintiffs’ case sufficient to require us to exercise it in the manner prayed for in their bill of complaint.
Bill dismissed, with one hill of costs f or defendants.