212 P. 789 | Or. | 1923
The defendant, Almeda Consolidated Mines Company, an Oregon corporation, was organized in July, 1905. Its principal office and place of business was in Multnomah County, Oregon. Its property consisted of mining claims in Josephine County, Oregon. In August, 1913, it became financially involved and numerous suits were pending or threatened against it. Its affairs were investigated by the corporation commissioner of the state, and he, after a consultation with its managing officers and the Attorney General of the state, decided that a permit should not be granted for any further sale of the company’s stock, and requested the Attorney General to commence suit for the appointment of a receiver of its assets and property. Thereupon this suit was brought in the name of the state, on rela
The complaint was filed in the Circuit Court for Josephine County on August 19, 1913, and alleges that the corporation commissioner had made a careful examination of the affairs of the company and had found the corporation to he in imminent danger of insolvency, and prayed for the appointment of a receiver of its property and assets. Summons was regularly issued but not served. On the day that the complaint was filed, Mr. A. C. Hough, an attorney of this court, who had represented the defendant corporation in other litigation, was employed by the managing officers of said corporation to appear in said suit as attorney for said corporation and was directed to consent, on behalf of the corporation, to the appointment of a receiver as prayed for in the complaint. Acting under his said employment, he appeared and filed a general demurrer to the complaint and joined with the state in requesting the appointment of a receiver. The court thereupon appointed Thomas S. Burley as receiver of the assets and property of said corporation. Burley, at the time, was the president of the corporation.
Subsequently such proceedings were had in the suit that an order or decree was made and entered authorizing and directing- the receiver to sell the property of said corporation, and pursuant to said order the receiver did sell the property of said corporation to Nat P. Ellis and C. H. Huddle, for the sum of $224,812.88. The sale was duly confirmed on July 27, 1916.
By mesne conveyances the title to the mining property of the defendant corporation passed to and has become vested in another corporation known as
Pour years after the confirmation of sale, and on July 29, 1920, Paul C. Dormitzer, claiming to be a stockholder of the defendant company, filed a petition in the court below to vacate and set aside the order appointing the receiver and all other proceedings had in the suit since the filing of the complaint herein; and from an order denying and dismissing his petition, he has appealed.. Various charges of fraud are alleged in the petition, but no evidence was given or offered on the trial to support these charges or which tends in the slightest degree to support the charge of fraud against anyone connected with any of the proceedings herein.
Dormitzer’s contentions are that the Circuit Court was without jurisdiction to appoint a receiver because (1) the suit was not commenced in Multnomah County, where the defendant corporation had its principal office and place of business, but in Josephine County, and, it having been brought in the wrong county, that the court did not have and could not acquire jurisdiction by consent of the parties, and
When the defendant corporation was sued in Josephine County it did not insist, as it might have done, upon its statutory exemption from being sued in that county, but, on the contrary, it voluntarily appeared by attorney and filed a general demurrer to
The argument that parties, by consent, cannot confer jurisdiction upon a court, is inapplicable. Under the Constitution and laws of the state, that court had jurisdiction to appoint a receiver in a proper case. Its jurisdiction to appoint a receiver in this case was not conferred by, but existed independently of, any stipulation, consent or waiver of the parties. Defendant’s voluntary appearance merely brought the defendant within the existing jurisdiction of the court. It was not a case where the parties consented to the exercise of a jurisdiction over a case or class of cases not within the jurisdiction of the court and which the court had no power to hear and determine.
“Whenever it shall appear to the Corporation Commissioner that the assets of any investment company or stock broker doing business in this State are impaired to the extent that such assets do not equal its liabilities, or that it is conducting its business in an unsafe, inequitable or unauthorized manner, or is jeopardizing the interest of its stockholders or investors in stocks, bonds, or other securities by it offered for sale, or whenever any investment company or stock broker shall fail or refuse to file papers, statements or documents required by this act, without giving satisfactory reasons therefor, said Corporation Commissioner shall at once cancel its permit and if he shall deem advisable shall communicate such facts to the Attorney General, who shall thereupon at once make an investigation, and if the facts as presented to him by the said corporation Commissioner are substantiated, he shall thereupon apply to a court of competent jurisdiction for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of and ■wind up the business and affairs of such investment company or stock broker, and if such fact or facts be made to appear it shall be sufficient evidence to authorize the appointment of a receiver and the making of such orders and decrees in such cases as equity may require.”
In cases coming within its provisions, this statute expressly authorized the appointment of a receiver of an insolvent corporation. The statute has since' been amended, and this power has been withdrawn. But as the appointment was made under its authority, and at a time when it was in full force and effect, the appointment must be sustained.
Independently of this statute, it has always been held in this state that under Section 1108, Or. L.,
Every question involved upon this appeal, except the one hereinafter referred to, was raised and decided adversely to the petitioner’s present contentions in the case of Drew et al. v. Burley et al., decided by the District Court of the United States for the District of Oregon, on May 17, 1920, some two months before Dormitzer filed his petition herein. The opinion of the court in deciding that case does not seem to have been published, but a copy, admitted to be a true copy thereof, is set forth in respondent’s additional abstract of record herein. The petitioner Dormitzer was attorney for Drew in that suit, and Burley, the defendant named therein, was the receiver in this suit. The only distinction between the matters in issue in that suit and those involved in this is that this is a direct attack upon the proceed
If this objection had been seasonably made, and the objection had been sustained, an amended complaint could have been filed in which all essential jurisdictional facts could have been alleged, and the error in the appointment, if there was error, would have been cured. This objection has never been raised before. And it has never been presented to the lower court for determination. It is now made for the first time, nearly ten years after the receiver was appointed, and nearly seven years after the property was sold and the sale thereof confirmed. It is raised upon a petition that was not filed until July 29, 1920, and is the first and only direct attack ever made against the validity of the order appointing the receiver or any proceedings had thereunder.
As heretofore stated, the receiver was appointed in a suit brought in the name of the state by the officers of the state in conformity to the provisions of a statute designed to protect the public from the purchase of worthless stock and other securities of insolvent
For these reasons the decree appealed from will be affirmed. Aeeirmed. Rehearing Denied.