WILLARD MALCOM AND EVELYN MALCOM, HUSBAND AND WIFE, PLAINTIFFS AND APPELLANTS, v. STONDALL LAND AND INVESTMENT COMPANY, A CORPORATION, DEFENDANTS, AND ALICE M. STONDALL, HELEN B. STONDALL AND MRS. ROBERT J. HOGAN, INTERVENORS AND RESPONDENTS.
No. 9283.
Supreme Court of Montana
Submitted March 9, 1955. Decided May 31, 1955.
284 Pac. (2d) 258
I therefore am unable to agree with much that is said in the majority opinion and particularly with what is there said concerning the self-imposed restrictions and limitations on this court‘s jurisdiction, although I concur in the result reached in this particular original proceeding.
Leavitt & Lucas, Miles City, Hansen, Jones & Culver, Baker, Al Hansen, Baker, for appellants.
O‘Neil & Cavanaugh, Desmond J. O‘Neil, Glendive, Thomas J. Cavanaugh, Glendive, for respondents.
Mr. Hansen, Mr. O‘Neill and Mr. Cavanaugh argued orally.
MR. JUSTICE DAVIS:
Appeal from an order of the district court for Fallon County,
The pertinent facts are few. The plaintiffs (appellants here) commenced an action under
Personal service of summons was had pursuant to
On December 14, 1951, a judgment by default was entered, quieting the plaintiffs’ title and adjudging particularly that they were the “owners absolute and in fee simple of all of the minerals in and under the premises” described.
The integrity and regularity of these proceedings are not challenged.
But subsequently the respondents appeared and moved under
With their motion the respondents tendered for filing a proposed amended answer and cross complaint made “for themselves and as the sole stockholders of said Company“, in which they alleged inter alia,
“* * * that the said Stondall Land and Investment Company ever since the 3rd day of November, A.D. 1919, has been and now is vested with the absolute title to all of the coal, iron, oil and natural gas and asphalt in and under the lands described herein * * *”
Thereon they prayed a decree, adjudging that these mineral interests are “owned absolutely by the defendant, Stondall Land and Investment Company,” and that the title of that defendant thereto accordingly be quieted.
This motion the lower court granted, thereby vacating the judgment or decree of December 14, 1951, against the corporation.
From that order the plaintiffs have taken this appeal.
Of the several questions raised or suggested and argued by counsel we find one which in our view is decisive of this controversy. It is therefore unnecessary for us to discuss any other.
That question is: May the respondents who variously describe themselves as (1) the sole stockholders, and (2) the heirs at law and successors to the interests of the sole stockholder of the defendant corporation appear in their own names and upon their own motion vacate the judgment against their corporation, thereafter answer to the merits in their own names but for the corporation, and thereupon in their own names prosecute the corporation‘s cause of action to quiet its title to the minerals in issue?
Upon the showing made we conclude they may not.
The short answer to the question put is that as a general rule stockholders may not sue upon a cause of action belonging to their corporation whether in their own names or in the name
The point has not been heretofore presented to this court by the sole or majority stockholders of a corporation.
But this court has repeatedly reached this conclusion where a minority stockholder has sought to sue for the corporation. Noble v. Farmers Union Trading Co., 123 Mont. 518, 216 Pac. (2d) 925; Cobb v. Lee, 80 Mont. 328, 260 Pac. 722; Allen v. Montana Refining Co., 71 Mont. 105, 121, 122, 123, 227 Pac. 582; Deschamps v. Loiselle, 50 Mont. 565, 573, 148 Pac. 335; Brandt v. McIntosh, 47 Mont. 70, 73, 74, 130 Pac. 413. See also 18 C.J.S., Corporations, section 559, pages 1272 et seq., section 560, page 1276; 14 C.J., Corporations, section 1444, pages 924 et seq., section 1447, pages 929 et seq.; 13 Am. Jur., Corporations, sections 461, 462, pages 504 et seq. The exceptions to this rule are as well defined as the rule itself. They are noted in the citations above, particularly in Noble v. Farmers Union Trading Co., supra, 123 Mont. at page 529 et seq., 216 Pac. (2d) 925. But none of these exceptions fits the respondents’ case, primarily because they are not minority stockholders. Taken at their word they are either the sole or majority stockholders of Stondall Land and Investment Company, or what is the same thing the heirs at law and successors to the interests of the sole or majority stockholder of that corporation. In either case they control the corporation.
And for this reason no decision which we have found in this or any other court of last resort where the common law obtains permits them to sue or defend for the corporation. The corporation itself must in such circumstances appear and plead; or there may be neither suit nor defense for it.
The underlying reason is, of course, that because the majority stockholders control the corporate machinery, they necessarily control the corporation and through its officers and directors the defense and the prosecution of any litigation involving the corporation. The sole or majority stockholders then have no need to resort to the indirection of a stockholders’ suit by
To turn specifically to the case in hand, we take judicial notice from the statutes of the State of Minnesota,
It follows that the respondents have no standing in a Montana court to sue for the corporation upon its cause of action pleaded in the proposed cross complaint at bar, or to defend for the corporation against the plaintiffs’ suit as is the proposed answer. Brandt v. McIntosh, supra, 47 Mont. at page 73, 130 Pac. 413; Cobb v. Lee supra, 80 Mont., at page 337, 260 Pac. 722; Noble v. Farmers Union Trading Co., supra, 123 Mont. at page 534, 535, 216 Pac. (2d) 925; Allen v. Montana Refining Co., supra, 71 Mont. at page 122, 227 Pac. 582.
Stated otherwise, the respondents may not assert in this suit the corporation‘s cause of action or defense, because unlike the minority stockholder who sued and was sustained in Sullivan v. Mountain, 117 Mont. 224, 160 Pac. (2d) 477, they cannot truthfully allege that the corporate officers and directors, whom they elect, control and may summarily remove, would not sue and defend in the name of the corporation and for it,
Fundamentally they cannot make the required showing, because as the sole stockholders of the defendant corporation they dictate corporate action, which wholly distinguishes their case from that of the minority stockholder in Sullivan v. Mountain, supra. There equity did for him what he could not do for himself. Here equity will not do for the respondents what they clearly can do for themselves.
And if they may neither sue nor defend here for Stondall Land and Investment Company, it follows that they may not move to vacate this judgment against it, even though they had sought to do so in the corporation‘s name. Hamill v. Great Northern Copper Co., 52 S.D. 271, 217 N.W. 195, decided under a statute substantially identical with section 93-3905, supra.
To sustain this conclusion further we need not resort to the opinions of other courts written in like cases. The decisions of this court suffice, for they are directly in point and therefore controlling. Compare Holt v. Sather, 81 Mont. 442, 445, 446, 264 Pac. 108. Nevertheless we find our view in accord with the precedents elsewhere. To the authorities noted heretofore we add Fletcher, Cyclopedia of the Law of Private Corporations (Perm. Ed.), Vol. 13, Chap. 58, section 5945 et seq., pages 301 et seq.
Some argument is made by counsel that the respondents should be admitted to defend in this action as unknown persons summoned under our statutes,
Moreover the dissent in this case views the record from this premise. There it is argued the respondents are not yet stockholders, but at best are only the heirs or next of kin of stockholders to whom distribution of their ancestor‘s estate has not yet been made, but who have acted here to protect their potential
Heretofore we have taken the respondents at their word that they are stockholders. But if we are mistaken in our appraisal of that record, our further answer to this argument is that the respondents’ case is then weaker than we had thought. For whatever may be said of the right of a stockholder to sue in this case, there is certainly no rule of law which in any case permits an action or defense for the corporation to be maintained by one who is neither an officer nor a stockholder however bright his prospects may be that some day he may become a member of the corporate family. If distribution has not been made to the respondents of the stock owned by Albert M. Stondall in his lifetime, the personal representative of his estate is then the “stockholder“; and these respondents are utter strangers to both the corporation and this record.
In such circumstances there is no precedent which permits them to represent the corporation in litigation involving corporate interests only, solely because they anticipate becoming the distributees of stock presently held by the estate of a deceased stockholder. And our attention has been directed to no case which supports a suit or defense by a stranger under any such circumstances.
It is equally futile as we read the record before us to speculate that the corporate life of Stondall Land and Investment Company has expired, and that therefore there is vested in the respondents a present interest or title to what was corporate property. All the facts set out in the motion, the affidavits, and the proposed answer and cross complaint of the respondents are to the contrary. An absolute title in the corporation alone is pleaded. Affirmatively it is alleged that “no person whomsoever has ever acquired any title to the said minerals, oil or natural gas from the Stondall Land and Investment Company“.
That “he [Sessions] made immediate investigation to determine whether or not said company [Stondall Land and Investment Company] is still in existence and that he discovered Albert M. Stondal, one of the incorporators and largest stockholder thereof, resided at Madison, Wisconsin; that he [Sessions] immediately made an effort to contact the said Albert M. Stondall, but he [Sessions] discovered that he [Albert M. Stondall] was deceased, and that he thereafter contacted Alice M. Stondall, Helen B. Stondall and Mrs. Robert J. Hogan, three of the heirs-at-law of the said Albert M. Stondall and explained to them that it was his opinion that the Stondall Land and Investment Company was still the owner of the minerals under the above described lands * * *,”
And despite the investigation made, the explanations given, and the effort put forth by Sessions there is no statement in his affidavit or anywhere in this record that the corporation itself is no longer in existence. In this connection it is to be remembered that the immediate purpose of the investigation undertaken by the affiant Sessions was to determine the present existence or nonexistence of the corporation and was not to find the heirs or next of kin of its president and principal stockholder. Indeed, if the corporation was not in existence when these proceedings were had in the trial court, the papers upon which the respondents moved to vacate this decree were at the greatest pains to conceal that fact in language which admits of nothing but the contrary conclusion.
Certainly we are not called upon to conjecture in the face of the positive recitals of fact before us what the respondents’ rights would be, if the case stated were that the life of their corporation had expired. Nor need we speculate on the record before us whether the respondents might appear and defend, if they had pleaded a personal interest in the described lands distinct from the absolute title of their corporation, or if they claimed to have
The order of the district court is reversed with directions to reinstate the judgment of December 14, 1951, and to deny the respondents’ motion to vacate, etc.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE ADAIR, and MR. JUSTICE BOTTOMLY concur.
MR. JUSTICE ANGSTMAN: (dissenting)
I think the trial judge properly exercised his discretion in setting aside the default judgment.
The judgment was entered on December 14, 1951. It quieted title to the lands in controversy in plaintiffs and adjudged that no other person or persons had any interest therein and specifically included the minerals and mineral rights.
The moving parties, who are the heirs of the only stockholder in the Stondall Land and Investment Company, did not learn of the entry of judgment until May 26, 1952. Under
Thus far I have assumed that the corporation is a going concern. The record however would seem to indicate that it no longer operates a business and probably has no officers. In obtaining an order to serve summons on the secretary of state for the corporation one of plaintiffs counsel filed an affidavit in which it is stated: “That after due and diligent search and inquiry in sundry places and of diverse and sundry persons, affiant is unable to learn or find the name of any one that is able to give affiant the name of any president, secretary, cashier, managing agent, or any business agent, principal director or anyone at all that may be connected with the said defendant Stondall Land and Investment Company, a corporation of the State of Minnesota, upon whom the service of summons in the foregoing action might be made.”
The complaint in naming the defendants says in part: “and all the successors, assigns, creditors, heirs of trustees of the above named corporation if it be terminated or expired * * *” All this would imply that the corporation long since ceased to do business and has no regular officers or directors and hence comes
The facts set forth in the answer are at least sufficient to show that there is a good and meritorious defense to the suit to quiet title and that the movants here are those beneficially interested in that defense. A party in interest who is prejudiced by the default judgment may apply to have it set aside even though he is not a party to the record. 49 C.J.S., Judgments, section 337, page 662; Annotation 135 A.L.R. 839.
The case of Hamill v. Great Northern Copper Co., 52 S.D. 271, 217 N.W. 195, denies the right of stockholders to move to set aside a default judgment against the corporation and holds that they must proceed by an independent suit in equity. In South Dakota however the courts relax this rule where a meeting of the board of directors may not be had, and permit stockholders under such circumstances to apply to the court for relief without first presenting to such board a request that it proceed to protect their interests. Frederick Milling Co., v. Frederick Farmers’ Alliance Co., 20 S.D. 335, 106 N.W. 298; and see Annotation 33 A.L.R. (2d) 492.
I think the district judge was right in setting aside the default judgment so that the movants may litigate their rights on the merits. If the facts are such that a demand must be made upon the officers before stockholders may assert the defense that still may be done and the answer amended accordingly and these procedural requirements fully complied with.
I think the order appealed from should be affirmed.
I concur in the above dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Angstman.
