214 N.W. 705 | Iowa | 1927
The suit is in equity, by a minority stockholder of a corporation, against the corporation and the other stockholders, to enjoin action by the defendants under an amendment to the articles of incorporation, and to declare the amendment void. The petition alleged that, in a prior suit between *55 the same parties, the defendants had been enjoined from carrying on any business as a corporation, or for the corporation, in excess of the powers defined by the articles of incorporation, and that subsequently the articles had been amended, over the protest of the plaintiff, fundamentally changing the purpose of the corporation and the business to be carried on by it. It was alleged that the defendants were attempting to conduct a business other than that which they were authorized to conduct, and one which the former decision enjoined them from pursuing.
The answer denied all allegations of the petition not admitted or explained; denied that any injunction was ever issued, or any judgment entered in the former action; but alleged that the court in that action made a finding that the acts of the corporation had been outside of the powers conferred by the articles of incorporation, and that thereupon the articles were duly amended, to authorize the doing of the things and the transaction of the business which the corporation had been engaged in. Participation by the plaintiff, as an organizer, stockholder, director, and officer of the corporation in the business actually carried on, was alleged by way of estoppel.
After the answer was filed, the plaintiff, appellant, filed a motion to dismiss, under Section 11130, Code of 1924, and for judgment on the pleadings, and, subject thereto, a motion to strike portions of the answer. These motions were overruled, and the appeal is from the rulings.
The appellees move in this court to dismiss the appeal, on the grounds: (1) That the appellant did not elect to stand upon the rulings, and no final judgment was entered in the case; and (2) that the rulings did not affect the merits of the case or the final determination.
I. It is conceded, and properly so, that the motion to dismiss was the same, in effect, as a demurrer to the answer at law or under former practice in equity.
The appellant did not elect to stand on the ruling on his motion, and no final judgment was entered. We have repeatedly held that it is essential to a right of appeal from a ruling *56
1. APPEAL AND on demurrer that the defeated party should ERROR: when unequivocally elect to stand upon the ruling. In appeal lies: Hansen v. Independent Sch. Dist.,
"The cardinal principle of the rule thus established is that, in order to maintain an appeal from an adverse ruling on a demurrer, the appellant must stake his case upon the demurrer."
Here, as has been said, there was neither a formal election to stand upon the ruling nor a final judgment. The case still stands for trial in the lower court upon the issues joined.
Appellant insists in argument that he cannot plead further; that he has nothing to plead, to meet the allegations of the answer. This might have been a good reason for standing upon the ruling, but the admission in this court does not take the place of an election so to do, or a final judgment.
II. A motion by a defendant, after answer, for judgment on the pleadings cannot be considered as a demurrer; for the defendant cannot answer on the merits and at the same time demur to the petition; and our practice does not permit a 2. APPEAL AND demurrer to the issues. Fairmont Creamery Co.
ERROR: when v. Darger,
III. In general, an order overruling a motion to strike is not 3. APPEAL AND appealable. Specht v. Spangenberg,
The portions of the answer which the plaintiff moved to strike pleaded facts relied upon by defendants as estopping the plaintiff to have the relief sought, and amplified facts set up and relied upon in the petition as entitling plaintiff to relief, and as concluding the defendants. The motion was based on the ground that the allegations assailed were immaterial, irrelevant, redundant, and a statement of nonpermissible legal conclusions, and that the defendants were estopped by the decision in the former action to so plead.
In so far as the motion was directed to allegations claimed to be immaterial, redundant, or legal conclusions, the order overruling it was clearly not appealable. Specht v. Spangenberg, supra; Ida County v. Woods, supra.
The articles of incorporation contained a provision that they might be amended by the vote of a majority of the stock outstanding, at any regular meeting, or at a special meeting called for that purpose. The answer alleged facts showing that the amendment was duly adopted.
The ultimate questions in the case are: (1) Whether the amendment adopted worked such a fundamental change in the purposes of the corporation and the business to be transacted by it that it required the assent of all the stockholders, or was such an amendment as could legally be adopted by the vote of a majority of the stock, under the consent of the stockholders, given in the articles, that amendments might be made in that manner; and (2) whether, by the judgment in the former action, — if a judgment be assumed to have been entered therein, — the defendants were estopped to claim that the amendment was such as the stockholders had in the articles consented might be so made.
Manifestly, the ruling on the motion to strike could not affect the decision of the first question. And, in so far as the motion presented the contention that the claimed judgment worked an estoppel as against the defendants, had it been sustained, that issue would still have remained in the case, under the allegations of the petition. The order overruling the motion to strike did not involve the merits of the case, and could not *58 materially affect the final decision, and was not, therefore, appealable. Section 12823, Code of 1924.
The appeal is — Dismissed.
EVANS, C.J., and STEVENS, FAVILLE, De GRAFF, MORLING, and KINDIG, JJ., concur.
ALBERT, J., not participating.