95 S.W.2d 804 | Mo. | 1936
United Brick Corporation is a holding company, and as such owns and controls the entire capital stock of United Brick Tile Company, which latter company is the operating company, and is engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling brick and tile, and similar products, and owns some thirty-two properties, two of which are located in this State. United Brick Corporation engages in no other business than that of a holding company, and its sole source of income is by virtue of its ownership of the aforesaid stock. The officers of both corporations are in general identical, but not entirely so. Both maintain a common office in Kansas City, Missouri. Pratt, the petitioner in the mandamus suit in the circuit court, is a stockholder in the holding company. Neither the holding company, nor Ray C. Burch, as secretary-treasurer thereof (respondents in the suit below) are parties to this proceeding. The relators here are United Brick Tile Company (the operating company), and Ray C. Burch, as its secretary-treasurer.
Relators take the position that "the question of law raised by the facts in this case is the right of a court to disregard the separate corporate entity of a subsidiary corporation and to award to a stockholder in a parent corporation the right to examine the books and records of a subsidiary corporation in which he owns no stock, absent the allegation or finding of such facts as the court will recognize as a proper justification for disregarding the corporate entity in order to prevent fraud or injustice." Such proposition is admittedly one of first impression in this State, but in the view we take of the case, under the record before us, the issue to be determined is somewhat narrower than as stated.
I. At the threshold of the case, we are met with respondent's insistence that the writ was prematurely issued and should be quashed because there was no final appealable judgment in the lower court. This contention is based upon the record showing that the motions for new trial and in arrest were pending and undisposed of at the time our writ was issued. In that connection, it appears that the circuit court, on September 9, 1935, upon a hearing on its alternative writ theretofore issued, found the issues in favor of petitioner, Pratt, and rendered judgment accordingly; and on the same day, the peremptory writ so awarded was issued. It commanded the doing of the things required thereby "immediately upon receipt of this writ and *165
without delay." Thereafter, on September 12, and within the time allowed by statute, defendants (respondents) therein filed their motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment. On September 17, while said motions were still pending, relators herein applied for, and were granted certiorari. Section 4579, Revised Statutes 1929 (Sec. 4579, Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 2023), expressly deniessupersedeas on appeal or writ of error in any case of mandamus brought by stockholder to enforce his right of inspection of the corporate books. Under Section 4580, Revised Statutes 1929 (Sec. 4580, Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 2023), a corporation refusing to permit an examination after the issuance of a peremptory writ of mandamus may be placed in receivership and fined "any sum whatsoever." Relators say that the writ of mandamus was unauthorized in law, and because of the provisions of the statutes just referred to, their remedy by appeal or writ of error was inadequate, and so certiorari was properly issued. Undoubtedly the general rule is that "the writ will be refused where the proceedings in the lower tribunal are still pending and undetermined." [11 C.J., sec. 75, p. 126; State ex rel. v. Pearcy, J.,
II. Relators' principal contention is grounded upon the assertion that the court's findings of facts, made upon request, and in pursuance of Section 952, Revised Statutes 1929 (Sec. 952, Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 1225), are insufficient to sustain the judgment. But respondent says that question is not open in this proceeding for the reason such findings of fact constitute no part of the record proper, to which review is limited on certiorari. The statute reads: "Upon the trial of a question of fact by the court, it shall not be necessary for the court to state its finding, except generally, unless one of the parties thereto request it with the view of excepting to the decision of the court upon the questions of law or equity arising in the case, in which case the court shall state in writing the conclusions of facts found separately from the conclusions of law." Nichols v. Carter,
Relators characterize Snuffer v. Karr,
The question was fully discussed by this court in Fruin v. O'Malley,
"The Kansas City Court of Appeals has held that when a finding of facts is made, it becomes a part of the record proper, and the judgment may be considered as the court's conclusions of law, and reversed, if it is not properly supported by the finding of facts. [Nichols v. Carter,
"Section 1972, Revised Statutes 1909, provides that: `Upon the trial of a question of fact by the court, it shall not be necessary for the court to state its finding, except generally, unless one of the parties thereto request it with the view of excepting to the decision of the court upon the questions of law or equity arising in the case, in which case the court shall state in writing the conclusions of facts found separately from the conclusions of law.'
"It is manifest that the foregoing section contemplates that when so requested, a statement or conclusion of the facts proven in the case, and the court's conclusions of law, as applied to such facts, shall be written up and filed by the trial court. This statement of law and facts has no connection with the general findings which are usually recited in the judgment itself. Both the special finding of *168 facts and conclusions of law should be entirely separate from the judgment, to the end that the party requesting such finding may except to the `decision of the court on the conclusions of law or equity arising in the case.' This statute clearly means that such exceptions to the court's conclusion of law shall be saved as may be properly included in a bill of exceptions. The law never contemplates that exceptions shall be written into the record proper.
"In actions at law, where the trial court makes a special finding of facts and both parties acquiesce in such finding by neglecting to except to the same as being contrary to or unsupported by the evidence, there is no reason why the losing party by excepting to the conclusions of law, as announced on and applied to such finding of facts, should not be allowed to have the errors in such conclusions of law reviewed by an appellate court, if he preserves his exceptions to such conclusions of law by a proper bill; and this he may do without bringing up the evidence on which such finding of facts is based.
"A finding of facts in actions in equity stands upon an entirely different footing; for in that class of cases we may retry the whole case de novo, and disregard entirely the finding of facts and conclusions of law. [Fitzpatrick v. Weber,
"The case at bar is an action at law. The special finding of facts by the trial court was not a part of the judgment. This is disclosed by the action of the appellant in filing in this court a copy of the judgment which is legally sufficient within itself, and nowhere refers to the finding of facts. The defendants have not by bill of exceptions brought to our attention any errors of the trial court in the admission or exclusion of evidence; nor in its conclusions or declarations of law. In fact, it seems no declarations or conclusions of law were given or made by the court or requested by either party. The petition is legally sufficient to support the judgment; and with the record in this condition, there is nothing for us to do except affirm the judgment of the trial court." [See, also, Perringer v. Unknown Heirs of Raub,
We are of the opinion that the question is not an open one, and hold the record proper does not embrace the finding of facts made by the court, but not incorporated into its judgment.
No question is raised with respect to the jurisdiction of the circuit court over the parties or the subject matter in the mandamus proceeding. Nor, as we understand relators, do they take the position the petition (the allegations of which the alternative writ follows) wholly fails to state a cause of action. It was not challenged in any manner in the court below. The question resolves itself into this: Whether under any conceivable proof that might have been made *169 under the recitals and allegations of the alternative writ, the basic pleading in mandamus, the judgment rendered was warranted. Touching the relationship existing between the two corporations the petition alleged, in substance, the following: That the holding company, of which plaintiff was a stockholder, owned the entire capital stock of the operating company, that the officers of the holding company elected all of the officers of the operating company, which officers were largely identical with the officers of the holding company; that the officers of the holding company dominated and controlled the operations of the operating company and dominated and controlled the keeping of corporate books of the holding company; that the holding company engaged in no other business than that exercised during control and domination of the operating company; that the sole source of income of the holding company was through its ownership of said stock; that the books and records of the operating company were the records showing the financial condition of the holding company; that the corporate records of the operating company were subject to the control of the holding company; that the books of the holding company alone did not disclose the financial operations and condition of the holding company but that the same were disclosed by the books and records of the operating company which were under the dominion and control of the officers of the holding company.
A petition, after verdict for plaintiff, must be considered as having stated all essential allegations inferable from express averments, Brock v. Mobile O. Railroad Co.,
We think the judgment sustainable even under such cases as Berkey v. Third Avenue Railway Co.,
The writ of certiorari having been improvidently issued, should be quashed. It is so ordered. All concur.