118 Ky. 851 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1904
Opinion op the court by
Reversing.
Appellant’s petition was dismissed on demurrer. He alleged that he had been appointed and qualified as receiver of the Industrial Mutual Deposit Company in an equitable action pending in the Fayette circuit court, and by order of that court directed to sue to recover all money and property belonging to the corporation, or which it had paid out during the past six months. It was alleged that the cor poration was insolvent at the time of the appointment of the receiver, and had been for six months prior. The nature of the action in which the receiver was appointed does not appear, other than it was a suit in equity against an insolvent corporation. The cause of action set up against appellee by the receiver in this suit is to recover certain sums from appellee, alleged to have been paid to him as a creditor of the corporation during the six months next before the suit was filed, paid while the corporation was insolvent, and to prefer appellee over others of its creditors, in contemplation of its insolvency. The demurrer is said to have been sustained upon the idea that the receiver could not maintain this action.
It does not appear whether the receiver of this insolvent corporation was appointed in a suit brought pursuant to sections 1911, 1912, Kentucky Statutes, 1903, allowing actions by any one in interest to be begun within six months from the preferential act. If he was, then by section 1913 he is expressly authorized to maintain an action to recover from the creditors of the insolvent and other persons moneys paid out within six months' of the cause of the original action. It may be fair, however, in the absence of allegations showing affirmatively such light in the receiver, to construe his pleading, wherein it is silent, as not bringing him within those provisions.
The question then recurs, can the receiver of an insolvent corporation, appointed in a liquidation suit against the corporation to reserve its assets, maintain an action, when ordered by the court appointing him to bring it, against the corporation and its creditors whom it has, in spite of the statutes above cited, preferred over other creditors in contemplation of its insolvency? Admittedly, the corporation could not maintain the suit. But the receiver represents more than the corporation. For certain purposes he represents it too. But the very purpose of his appointment was to bring into play rights hostile to the continued existence of the corporation. He represents the State, as well as the creditors and stockholders of the corporation. Wherein theii rights, and those of the corporation as a legal entity, are in conflict, he peculiarly represents creditors, and ultimately stockholders. If the corporate officers have fraudulently or illegally diverted its funds, so that they have been made to
It is stated in argument that the learned circuit judge felt constrained by the opinion of this court in Ray, Receiver, v. First National Bank of Louisville, 111 Ky., 377, 63 S. W., 762, 23 Ky. Law Rep., 717, to decide that the receiver could not maintain this action. Toward the close of that opinion
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and cause remanded with directions to overrule the demurrer to the petition, and for further proceedings not inconsistent herewith.