270 S.W. 916 | Tex. App. | 1925
The grounds for vacating the order were general, and the petition was not specifically assailed, but in the vaguest and most indefinite terms, such as it was insufficient in law, and stated no cause of action and no ground for the appointment of a receiver or that the plaintiffs were entitled to relief. Not only was the motion to vacate in general and indefinite terms, but appellant after giving notice of appeal filed no assignments of error, and consequently none *917 should be copied into the brief. The statute, art. 2079, which authorizes appeals from an order appointing a receiver or trustee, provides that such appeals shall take precedence in the appellate court, but does not, as in the case of appeals from interlocutory orders as to temporary injunctions, provide that it is not necessary to file briefs. Even in the case of temporary injunctions the statute has not in terms dispensed with assignments of error in the record. Assignments of error should have been placed in this record, as is required in any other case, and in their absence we have considered the record only to ascertain if any fundamental error was committed.
Appellant was not notified of the appointment of the receiver, but came voluntarily into court after the order of appointment, and thereby obtained all the benefits of notice. Notice is usually required before a receiver is appointed, but the appearance of a defendant after the appointment to request a vacation of the order of appointment cures any error in the appointment as to notice. Cotton v. Rand (Tex.Civ.App.)
No special exceptions were urged to the petition and under the general attack made on the petition it was sufficient to form a basis for the appointment of a receiver. It was alleged that the defendant corporation was insolvent and alleged several acts which led and would lead to insolvency. The statute provides that a receiver may be appointed "where a corporation has been dissolved, or is insolvent, or is in imminent danger of insolvency." Fraud is also alleged in disposing of the property of the corporation.
Under the allegations of the petition the corporation had transferred its merchandise "otherwise than in the ordinary course of trade in the usual and regular prosecution of the seller's or transferor's business," and the sales were void so far as the creditors were concerned. The sales were fraudulent transactions. Article 3971, Revised Statutes. There is no fundamental error in the action of the court in appointing the receiver.
The judgment is affirmed.