47 Conn. 167 | Conn. | 1879
This is a petition brought upon the statute (Gen. Statutes, p. 315, sec. 2,) for winding up the affairs and decreeing the dissolution of a joint stock corporation. The statute is as follows: “The Superior Court in the county where any joint stock corporation is located may wind up its affairs and decree its dissolution on the petition of one-third of its stockholders, and may proceed in the manner provided in respect to the dissolution of corporations on the petition of a single stockholder.” The petitioners in the present case are more than one-third of the stockholders of the respondent corporation.
The statute authorizing the winding up of a corporation on the petition of a single stockholder is found on page 281 of the General Statutes, (sec. 23,) and provides as follows: “ The Superior Court in the county in which any corporation organized under the laws of this state has its principal place of business, may as a court of equity on the application of any of its stockholders wind up its affairs and dissolve it, if said court shall find that said corporation has voted to wind up its affairs, or abandoned the business for which it was organized, and lias thereafter neglected within a reasonable time or in a proper manner, to wind up its affairs and distribute its effects among its stockholders, and for this purpose may appoint one or more receivers.”
The petition was brought to the Superior Court for Litchfield County at its April term, 1878, at which term the petitioners filed a supplemental bill, and at the same term the
The first question arising under the demurrer is, whether.the petitioners’ bill and supplemental bill are sufficient in law to confer jurisdiction upon the court to pass a decree in favor of the petitioners. The solution of this question depends, upon the construction of section 23, page 281, and section 2, page 315, of the General Statutes. The respondents claim that the Superior Court has no power independently of our-statute to wind up and dissolve corporations, and for this purpose has only such power as is conferred upon it by the statute. We may well concede that this proposition is correct; but it by no means follows that the inference is a correct one which the respondents claim is to bo drawn, namely, that the latter section gives no authority additional, to, or different from that given by the former section, and that therefore the court had no jurisdiction in the case. It will be-seen-upon-reference to the two acts of the legislature, passed, the first in.
It will be observed that this act applies to any corporation organized under the laws of this state, and is broad enough to embrace, and was undoubtedly intended to embrace, all •corporations, chartered as well as joint stock. It is a wise and wholesome provision, and was intended to protect the •interests of any and all stockholders, and to compel the cor•■poration to distribute its effects among those entitled to the •same within a reasonable time after it had voted to wind up its 'affairs or had abandoned the business for which it was •organized. No good reason can be suggested why under such circumstances the Superior Court should not decree a dissolution-and a distribution of the assets among the stockholders, and :any stockholder upon showing to the court that the corporation had voted to wind up its affairs, or that it had abandoned its business, and neglected to distribute its assets for an unreasonable time, is entitled to a decree of dissolution and distribution under this statute. But it is manifest that the act of 1871 is not to be construed as the same in effect with the act of 1869. If the act of 1871 gives no additional authority to the court the conclusion is inevitable that the legislature has done a work of supererogation—has passed an
The allegations in the petitioners’ bill in this case are ample and sufficient, and the demurrer was properly overruled.
The question raised upon the motion for a new trial is whether the former adjudication between the same parties was a bar to the present suit, and as evidence excluded the evidence offered by the petitioners in support of their bill, The former suit was between the same parties, and was a proceeding in equity, like the present one, for the appointment of a receiver and the winding up of the affairs of the present corporation, the allegations of the former bill being essentially the same as those of the present one. But a proceeding for the dissolution of a corporation and the winding up of its affairs, based upon its bad financial condition—a condition presumably involving an increasing indebtedness and diminishing assets, stands upon entirely different ground from a suit which is based upon a fixed and independent fact or facts. The very facts which existed at the former trial, but were held to be insufficient to sustain the petitioners’ bill, may have been held insufficient solely because they were immature, and in their then condition indecisive, while the lapse of a year, with no accession of any strictly new facts, may yet have rendered complete a former incomplete delay, or decisive a former neglect then held indecisive, or show a hopelessness of insolvency that did not then so clearly appear. It is like the case of a pauper whom a former adjudication may have held not to have acquired a settlement in a certain town that is sued for supplies furnished him. The time that has elapsed between the former adjudication and the present suit may have been sufficient to have perfected a settlement that had not then ripened. Or like the case of a person alleged to be insane; a former adjudication may have held his insanity not
A new trial is not advised, and there is no error in the decree.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.