280 F. 532 | 8th Cir. | 1922
The facts as they appear from the record in the case are:
On May 2, 1921, the appellee filed his complaint in equity in the District Court of the United States for the District of Minnesota, on behalf of himself and all other parties similarly situated, who may de
The prayer of the bill is to appoint a receiver of appellant’s property,, with the usual powers of a receiver, and an injunction, but does not ask that affairs of the corporation be wound up, or that it be dissolved. The complaint was duly verified. Upon presentation of the complaint, the court, on May 2, 1921, granted the prayer of the complaint, appointed receivers, and authorized the plaintiff to apply to any other District Court for ancillary proceedings. The receivers duly qualified. On-, May 14, 1921, appellant filed a motion to dismiss the complaint, upon two grounds. (1) That plaintiff’s claim was only for $2,100 and therefore insufficient to give the court jurisdiction. (2) That plaintiff is. only a simple contract creditor on a claim not reduced to judgment, and' without having exhausted his. remedy at law.
It also filed, at the same time, a motion to discharge the receivers and for a restoration of the property to its custody, or the custody of the-Department off Trade and Commerce of the state of Nebraska. The-Department has not intervened in the cause and has presented no claim. The grounds relied on in this motion are that the court was without jurisdiction, for the same reasons set out in the motion to dismiss the.
“Wherefore this plaintiff, the Department of Trade and Commerce of the state of Nebraska, prays that this court direct the Department of Trade and Commerce to take possession of the property, records, and effects and conduct the business of the defendant corporation, the Dion Bonding & Surety Com.pany, and retain such possession and conduct the business until such time as, after a hearing, it shall appear to the court that the cause of the order directing the Department of Trade and Commerce to take possession has been removed, and that the company can properly resume possession of its property, records, and effects and the conduct of its business, and further prays that an order may issue forthwith from this court, directing the defendant the Dion Bonding & Surety Company to show cause why the Department of Trade and Commerce should not lake possession of its property, records, and effects, and conduct its business, and further prays that, pending the return of such order to show cause and a hearing thereon this court may issue an order restraining the defendant the Dion Bonding & Surety Company from the transaction of its business, and from tbe disposition of any of its property, records, and effects until the further order of this court, and for such other and further relief as may to the court seem just and equitable under the circumstances.”
On May 30, 1921, after a hearing, the motion of appellant to dismiss the complaint and to vacate the appointment of the receivers made on May 2, 1921, was by the court denied, and from this order this appeal is prosecuted under section 129 of the Judicial Code (Comp. St. § 1121).
Prior to the hearing on May 30, 1921, on the 14th day of May, 1921, the appellant presented to this court, which was then in session at St. Paul, a motion under section 56 of the Judicial Code (Comp. St. § 1038) to disapprove the order appointing the receivers, which motion was heard by the court, composed at the time of the lamented Circuit Judge Hook, Judge Neblett, and the writer of this opinion. The grounds on which this motion was based were in effect the same as those set out in the assignment of errors on this appeal. The court denied the motion on May 31, 1921, all the judges concurring.
The-assignments of error are:
I. “The court erred in making and entering the order appointing receivers of the property of the Lion Bonding & Surety Company upon the application and bill of complaint of complainant, in that the bill of complaint showed on its face that the said court was without jurisdiction of the subject-matter of said suit, because the sum or amount in controversy therein is limited to §2,100, and does not equal or exceed, exclusive of interest and costs, the sum or amount of $3,000.”
II. “The court erred in making and entering the order appointing receivers of the property of the Lion Bonding & Surety Company, in that the bill of complaint of complainant showed on its face that the court was without power thereon to grant the equitable relief of appointment of receivers; the plaintiff claiming such equitable relief only as a simple contract creditor, without having reduced his claim to judgment, without having exercised or exhausted his remedy at law, and without presenting any specific lien upon or property interest of any sort in any of the said property of said Lion Bonding & Surety Company.”
III. “The court erred in making and entering said order appointing receivers of all of the property of the Lion Bonding & Surety Company upon an ex! parte application, and without notice to or knowledge of said defendant corporation; there being shown no imperative necessity or emergency for such judicial action without notice.”
IV. “The said court erred in making and entering the order appointing said receivers of the property of said corporation, in that the said suit is one of a local nature, and the object and purpose of said bill, as therein stated, ‘of closing up the business of said defendant,’ could only be granted and exercised by the courts of the state or district in which said corporation was created and wherein it is domiciled, namely, the state and district of Nebraska, and for that purpose the power of said court for the district of Minnesota is secondary and ancillary only, and the primary jurisdiction to close up the business of the corporation within the territory of the state by which the corporation was created resides in the courts exercising territorial jurisdiction therein.”
We concur in the conclusion of Judge Booth in his memorandum of opinion that—
“The bond (evidently the property and books intended) sought to be taken possession of and distributed in the receivership on behaif of the plaintiff and other creditors, in my judgment, is the amount involved, for the purpose of determining the jurisdictional question.”
“Xeitlier law nor equity requires a meaningless form. ‘Bóna, sed impossi-bilia, non cogit lex.’ It has been decided that, where it appears by the hill that The debtor is insolvent and that the issuing of an execution would be of no practical utility, the issue of an execution is not á necessary prerequisite for equitable interference.”
IV. The fourth assignment raises the important question whether, in view of the proceedings had in the district court of Dbuglas county, state of Nebraska, in the action instituted by the Department of Trade and Commerce of that state against this defendant, prior to the institution of this cause in the coprt below, and the order of that court, deprived the court below of jurisdiction to appoint the receivers, and for this reason it should have granted the motion of defendant to discharge them and restore its property to the defendant or custody of the Department of Trade and Commerce of the State of Nebraska.
Counsel for appellant contend that under the laws of the state of Nebraska the title to all the property of an insolvent insurance company, created by the laws of that state, no matter where situated, vests in the Department of Trade and Commerce, when, upon an application to a district court of the county in whith the principal office o£ the company is located, the court, by its order, places the property in the possession of that Department, and therefore this action is within the rulings in Relfe v. Rundle, supra, and the Converse Cases. The statute relied on is the act of 1919. Taws of Nebraska 1919, p. 573 et seq. The provisions of that act, on which counsel rely, are in section 4, art. 3, of that act and are as follows:
“I. Whenever any domestic company is insolvent, * * * or is found, after an examination, to be in such condition that its further transaction of business would be hazardous to its policy holders, or to its creditors, or to its stockholders, or to the public; or has willfully violated its articles of incorporation or association or any law of this state, or whenever any trustee, director, manager or officer thereof has refused to be examined under oath touching its affairs, the Department of Trade and Commerce may apply to the district court, or any judge thereof, in the county or judicial district in which the principal office of such company is located, for an order directing such company to show cause why the Department of Trade and Commerce should not take possession of its property, records and effects and conduct or close its business, and i'or such other relief as the nature of the case and the interest of its policy holders, creditors, stockholders or the public may require.
“2. On sucli application, or at any time thereafter, such court or judge may, in his discretion, issue an order restraining such company from the transaction of its business, or disposition of its property, records, and effects until the further order of the court. On the return of such order to show cause and after a full hearing, the court shall either deny the application or direct the Department of Trade and Commerce forthwith to take possession *■ * * and conduct the business until on the application of the Department of Trade and Commerce, or of such company, it shall, after a like hearing, appear to the court that the cause of such order directing the Department of Trade and Commerce to take possession has been removed, and that the company can properly resume possession of its property, records and effects, and the conduct of the business.
“3. If, on a like application and order to show cause, and after a full hearing, the court shall order the liquidation of the business of such company, such liquidation shall be made hv and under the direction of the Department of Trade and Commerce, which may deal with ihe property, records, effects and business of such company in the name of the Department of Trade and Commerce, or in the name of the company, as the court may direct, and it shall be vested by operation of lato toith title to all the property, effects, contracts and rights of action of such company as of the date of the order so directing it to liquidate. * * * ”
“It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the plaintiff herein, the Department of Trade and Commerce of the state of Nebraska, shall and is hereby ordered to take possession forthwith of the property, records, and effects and conduct the business of the defendant company, the Dion Bonding & Surety Company, and retain such possession and conduct the business of said company until such time as, after a hearing, it shall appear to the court that the cause of this order has been removed, and that the company can properly resume possession of its property, records, and effects, and the conduct of its business; and it is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the defendant company, its officers, directors, stockholders, and employees be and are hereby enjoined and restrained from in any manner interfering with the said Department of Trade and Commerce of the state of Nebraska in the carrying out of this order and in the taking possession of the property, records, and effects, and in the conduct of the business of the defendant company, the Dion Bonding & Surety Company.”
There is nothing in this order vesting the title to the property of the company in the Department, nor did the Department ask it in its petition. Under that order the Department could neither claim possession of any property of the company out of the state of Nebraska, nor maintain an action for its recovery in any court other than one of or in the state of Nebraska. As the company was admittedly insolvent, had large;property interests in the state of Minnesota, within the jurisdiction of the'court below, was unable to pay its debts tiren due, its assets and property in imminent danger of being dissipated by reason of these conditions, the court, upon the application presented by the plaintiff’s complaint; exercised proper discretion in appointing the receivers, and denying the motion of the defendant company to discharge them.
The decree is affirmed. Let the mandate in this case go forthwith.