116 Ga. 495 | Ga. | 1902
John Martin filed in the superior court of White county, in this State, a petition for relief against the Gold Reefs of Georgia Limited, the Reynolds & Hamby Estate Mortgage Company Limited, alleged in the petition to be corporations of the Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and there domiciled, and Frederick Hunt and Edwin Bowley, also alleged to be citizens of that kingdom, and the sheriff of White county, the last named being only a nominal defendant and not one against whom, under the decisions of this court, any substantial relief was prayed. A separate demurrer to this petition was filed by the Reynolds & Hamby Estate Mortgage Company on various grounds, which was overruled by tbe court below, and a bill of exceptions has been taken to the judgment of the court overruling this demurrer. The prayers of the petition are, for process against each of the defendants named, requiring them to appear at the next term of White superior court to answer the complaint; for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of and, under the jurisdiction of the court, enforce the collection of a judgment in favor of this company, against the defendant in error, set forth in the petition; to retain the proceeds of this judgment to answer such final judgment and decree as may be rendered in favor of the defendant in error; that the receiver be required to take possession of and hold, subject to the final decree and direction of the court, certain real property alleged to belong to the corporation known as the Gold Reefs of •Georgia Limited, one of the defendants, to the end, if the court should finally decree in favor of the defendant in error against the Gold Reefs of Georgia Limited that' this company is indebted to him in the sum of 1,826 pounds sterling, alleged to have been obtained from the defendant in error in consequence of a gross fraud, that the defendant in error might in this way realize on any judgment which might be rendered in bis favor in the premises; for a writ of injunction preventing this company from encumbering its Georgia property, and the Reynolds & Hamby Estate Mortgage Company Limited from assigning or setting over its judgment to
1. There is no statement anywhere in. the petition which suggests that any one of the four principal defendants has any residence of any kind in the County of White. All of them are alleged to be citizens and residents of the Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. Neither of the two corporations is alleged to have any agent of any kind in this county. The sheriff of the county is made a party defendant for the purpose of arresting his proceeding under the execution based upon the judgment above mentioned. His connection with the case as a nominal defendant would not give to the court jurisdiction of the case. Rounsaville v. McGinnis, 93 Ga.
2. Treating the petition as a proceeding in rem, that is to say, as an application for an equitable seizure through the medium of a receiver of the property of the defendant, to be held until the final decree in the case, and recognizing the ample power of a court of equity of this State to so seize such property and render a judgment against the same in a proper case made, we nevertheless hold that no such case is stated in this petition.
(a) We are unable to find how a fraud, in any legal sense, has been perpetrated upon the plaintiff below. He admits giving to the Reynolds & Plamby Estate Mortgage Company his bond under his hand and seal, whereby he acknowledges to have received from this company as a loan 4,000 pounds sterling, but says that at the time he executed this instrument he did not suspect, and had no
(b) It seems to us that the judgment obtained by the Mortgage company against the defendant in error, in November, 1901, concludes him as to the claims made in his petition for relief in the ease at bar. If what he says be true, and his allegations mean anything, they mean that he did not owe the Mortgage company 1,826 pounds of the 4,000 pounds embraced in the bond and the judgment. His contention seems to be that the consideration as to this part of the debt had really failed. In the latter -part of paragraph 8 he alleges that “ as a result of said conspiracy, so entered into between the said Gold Reefs of Georgia Limited, and the said Hunt and Bowley, and the said Reynolds & Hamby Estate Mortgage Company Limited, he has been robbed by the said Gold Reefs of Georgia Limited, the said Hunt and Bowley, and the said Reynolds & Hamby Estate Mortgage Company Limited, of the sum of 1,826 pounds.” In paragraph 10 he alleges that this mortgage company “ has caused the said mortgage given by him to seepre
(e) As we understand the petition, more than four years elapsed after the perpetration of the alleged fraud, before any application was made for relief. The petition suggests that the petitioner desires to rescind the contract under which he received this stock of the Gold Reefs company, because in the latter part of the petition, immediately before the prayers, appears the following statement:
3. We do not see how any relief can be granted the defendant in error against the two foreign corporations, or either of them, in which he became a stockholder. If the corporations were domestic corporations and the defendant in error were one of our own citizens, his case is not brought within the principles laid down in Alexander v. Searcy, 81 Ga. 548, and in other cases, and codified in section 1860 of the Civil Code. It must be a strong case to justify a court of this State in attempting to interfere, directly or indirectly, with the affairs of a foreign corporation or the administration of its corporate business. The fact that it proposes to take its assets to its own domicile, that which it had when the party asking for relief voluntarily became a stoekholdér, can not be such a case. The only authorities cited by counsel for the defendant in error upon his proposition that the courts of this State may, in a proper case, appoint a receiver fora foreign corporation,are 2 Cook on Stock & Stockholders, §746, and 5 Thomp. Corp. §§ 6860 — 6861. The former authority does not in this section deal with the subject of foreign corporations, and the language of the section is authority for the proposition that the case must be a strong one to justify the remedy against any corporation, and that the case made in this petition does not comply with the requirements laid down by this author. Judge Thompson is of the opinion that in the case cited by him, there “ may be the greatest propriety in a court of equity laying hold of the assets and impounding them for the benefit of the local creditors.” This citation suggests expressions that may be found in some of our decisions, to the effect that our courts will not send its citizens to a foreign jurisdiction. for the purpose of seeking redress, when a remedy can be afforded them by proceedings in rem against the property of foreigners. But this defendant in error does not bring himself within the principle of these decisions, either by averment of his citizenship or by stating a proper case for relief. It is true that he alleges in general terms
Without passing upon all the grounds of the demurrer, we hold that, for the reasons indicated in this opinion, the court erred in not sustaining the same and dismissing the petition; and the judgment is accordingly
Reversed.