138 Iowa 259 | Iowa | 1908
In 1894 the plaintiff, who was the owner of thirty-eight acres of land adjoining the town of Mt. ■Vernon on which was situated a stone quarry with machinery, and which he had been developing and operating for about a year, entered into an arrangement with the defendant Kirby for the formation of the defendant corporation, the Mt. Vernon Stone Company; it being mutually agreed that plaintiff should turn his property over to the corporation, and receive in exchange therefor one hundred and fifty
In the articles of incorporation, it was provided that plaintiff, Kirby, and one Gregg, who was also an officer and stockholder in the Le Grand Quarry Company, should be directors until their successors were elected; Kirby being president and the plaintiff secretary and treasurer. At subsequent annual elections, as the record shows, the officers and members of the board of directors were re-elected from time to time. The business of the corporation was carried on without substantial disagreement between plaintiff and
Section 29 of chapter 1 in title 9 of the Code as reported by the Code Commission (being the chapter relating to corporations for pecuniary profit) was in the following language: “ When a corporation violates the provisions in this chapter in its management or the transaction of its business or becomes insolvent any stockholder may bring an action in equity to dissolve the same and wind up its affairs and a like action may be brought by the Attorney G'eneral in the name of the State. If the court decrees a dissolution it may at the same time appoint a receiver who shall under its direction proceed to close up the business of such corporation.” And with reference to the section thus reported the commission says: “ It is thought that the protection of the interests of the stockholders, as well as of the public, ought to be provided for when the corporation acts unlawfully or becomes insolvent.” When the reported Code was brought before the Legislature for consideration, the joint committee of the two houses in charge of the portion thereof which included the chapter above referred to reported a substitute
In construing similar language in an Illinois statute, the court of that State held that under it a court of equity did not have power to decree a dissolution of a corporation and appoint a receiver merely because the interests of the stockholders or some of them in equity and good conscience seem to demand it, and that the purpose of the provision was only to enable the court in cases in which its jurisdiction was properly invoked under the statute to afford complete relief, and that the “ good cause ” must necessarily be a legal cause, a cause for which the sovereign authority might by law resume the franchises granted; and further that it would not be presumed the Legislature intended by the use of the language employed to authorize a forfeiture of corporate franchises for causes for which the State might not procure judgment of forfeiture at law. Wheeler v. Pullman Iron & Steel Co., 143 Ill. 197 (32 N. E. 420, 17 L. R. A. 818). The case of Hitch v. Hawley, 132 N. Y. 212 (30 N. E. 401), is not in point in the construction of our statute, for in that State the court is expressly authorized to decree a dissolution when it will be beneficial to the interests of the stockholders, and not injurious to the public interests. Moreover, in that case it appeared that the dissolution was sought by a majority of the stockholders, and in this State we have recognized the right of a majority to determine whether the corporation shall be continued, or shall be wound up. Price