22 S.E.2d 163 | Ga. | 1942
The superior court of Coweta County was without jurisdiction to entertain a suit in equity against a dissolved corporation chartered by the superior court of Fulton County and having its principal office therein.
At interlocutory hearing on the prayer for a receiver, Newnan Motors Inc. made a special appearance for the sole purpose of objecting to process, service, and jurisdiction, and a motion to dismiss the action. The plaintiffs offered no evidence, and relied solely on their petition verified as follows: "Georgia, Coweta County. Personally appeared W. A. Hart, attorney for petitioners, who, being duly sworn, deposes and says under oath that facts set forth in this petition are true in so far as they relate to matters therein which are in his own knowledge, and in so far as same relate to matters within knowledge of others he verily believes them to be true. [Signed] William A. Hart." The affidavit was attested by a Notary Public of Coweta County.
Newnan Motors Inc. introduced the following evidence: (1) Certificate of the Secretary of State of Georgia, showing incorporation of Newnan Motor Company Inc., in Fulton County. (2) Copy of charter, application, and order thereon in Fulton superior court, certified by J. W. Simmons, clerk of said court. This documentary evidence showed that the principal place of business of said corporation, as fixed by its charter, was Fulton County.
The defendant moved that the action be dismissed, because the petition was not positively verified as required by law. The court disallowed the special appearance objecting to jurisdiction, overruled the motion to dismiss, appointed a receiver for the assets of Newnan Motors Inc., dissolved, and ordered the receiver to take possession of the property of the dissolved corporation. To these rulings the defendant excepted.
Since the question of jurisdiction is controlling, the assignment of error on failure to dismiss the action because of absence of positive verification of the petition need not be passed on. If it be made clearly to appear to the judge that the suit is brought in the wrong county, he should for that reason refuse to grant interlocutory relief.Trimble v. Knight,
From the date of the application for charter of the plaintiff in error, and from the certificates appearing in the record, it is apparent that it was chartered under the corporation act approved January 28, 1938 (Ga. L. Ex. Sess. 1937-38, pp. 214-247); Code Supp. Ann. § 22-1801 et seq. One section of that act, now appearing in the Code Supplement as section 22-1877, makes it plain that the General Assembly never intended to suggest that a receiver for a dissolved corporation could be appointed except by the judge of the superior court of the county in which its principal place of business is located. The first part of that section declares: "When any corporation incorporated or reincorporated under this Chapter shall be dissolved or cease to exist in any manner whatever, the judge of the superior court, of the county in which its principal place of business is located, on application of any creditor or stockholder at any time, may either continue such directors as trustees, as aforesaid, or, upon equitable cause being shown therefor, appoint one or more persons the receivers of and for such corporation," etc.
The statement in the petition, not positively verified, that this corporation had its principal place of business in Coweta County does not contradict the statement in its charter that "The principal office of said corporation shall be in Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia." *573
The superior court of Coweta County was without jurisdiction to appoint a receiver, and its judgment in so doing must be
Reversed. All the Justices concur.