The complaint states that the plaintiff “was duly appointed receiver for the Zion Institutions and Industries, Inc., in an equity proceeding in the district court of the United States for the Northern District of Illinois,” and that prior to his appointment the corporation for which he is receiver sold and delivered to the defendant two bills of goods on which there is due and owing “to the plaintiff” a sum stated, for which he demands judgment.
To this complaint the defendant demurred in one paragraph'—
“. . . for the reason that it appears upon the face thereof that the plaintiff was appointed receiver in an equitable action in a court of a foreign jurisdiction without any appointment as receiver by a court within the State of Wisconsin and without any title to the cause of action by assignment or otherwise, and that the said receiver has never obtained leave of any court to sue.”
In another paragraph the demurrer was grounded on the insufficiency of the facts stated to constitute a cause of action. The trial court overruled the demurrer, and the defendant appeals.
Upon the authority of Swing v. White River Limber Co. 91 Wis. 517, 65 N. W. 174, we are constrained to rule that the demurrer should have been sustained. That was an action brought by a trustee of an insurance company ap
Two cases are cited in the opinion in the Swing C.ase, siipra, illustrating the nature of the allegations in a complaint necessary to support an action by a foreign receiver in this state. It must be stated that the statutes of the state in which the receiver is appointed, or the judgment of the court that appointed him, vested power in the receiver to maintain the action. Gilman v. Ketcham, 84 Wis. 60, 54 N. W. 395, is cited as to the first, and Parker v. Stoughton
By the Court. — The order of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
