32 Ga. App. 479 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1924
Tbe plaintiffs in this action alleged, that they were the only stockholders of a private corporation previously dissolved by the superior court according to law; that all debts of the corporation had been paid prior to its dissolution; that it was the owner, in possession at that time, of a note payable to it by another company as maker, upon which the two individuals sued had indorsed a guaranty of payment, and of two “gold bonds” payable to a banking company as trustee or to bearer, issued by the same principal debtor, payment of which was guaranteed by the same individual defendants. The principal debtor or the maker of the note and the bonds was made a party defendant in the original suit, but later was struck on motion of the plaintiffs, who alleged that that defendant was insolvent, and proposed to proceed against the two individual defendants only, for the purpose of recovering the amount alleged to be owing and past due upon the note and the bonds, of which it is alleged that, the plaintiffs are now the owners of both the legal and equitable title.
Prior to the amendment to the petition one of the defendants
The estate of' a dissolved corporation is in its legal aspects somewhat similar to that of a decedent who dies intestate. It is provided by the Civil Code, § 3929, that upon the death of the owner of any estate in realty the title vests immediately in his heirs at law, but the title to all other property owned by him vests in the administrator of his estate for the benefit of the heirs and the creditors. Under this section it has been many times held that the heirs at law may sue for the recovery of realty where there is no administrator, or if the administrator appointed consents thereto. Civil Code (1910), § 3933. This is so because the title vests in the heirs at law. Even where am administrator is appointed, he does not take the title, but only has a qualified right, to be exercised under the law, for the purpose of paying debts and distribution. Redfearn on Wills & Administration of Estates, 476; Flint River &c. R. Co. v. Maples, 10 Ga. App. 573 (3) (73 S. E. 957); Bacon v. Howard, 19 Ga. App. 660 (7) (91 S. E. 1066); Johnson v. Hall, 101 Ga. 687 (29 S. E. 37); Collins v. Henry, 155 Ga. 886, 889 (118 S. E. 729); Weldon v. Weldon, 152 Ga. 550 (110 S. E. 273); Hoyt v. Ware, 156 Ga. 98 (6) (118 S. E. 734). By reason of the provision of the Civil Code that the title to all other property than realty owned by the decedent vests in the administrator for the benefit of heirs and creditors, it has been held, on the other hand, that no suit can be maintained by heirs at law of an estate for the recovery of personalty, or upon choses in action owned by the decedent at the time of his death. Hill v. Maffett, 3 Ga. App. 89 (59 S. E. 325); Denny v. Gardner, 149 Ga. 42 (99 S. E. 27); Wilson v. Brice, 23 Ga. App. 734 (99 S. E. 385); Buchholz v. Sapp, 148 Ga. 352 (96 S. E. 858). And this is true even though it be alleged that the decedent owed
It would seem that the title both to realty and to personalty which belonged to the corporation at its dissolution “descends” to the stockholders subject only to the claims of creditors. The status of the title is like that of realty which belonged to the estate of an intestate. It vests in the stockholders “as heirs at law.” If a receiver should be appointed he would not hold the title to the property, but would be only the custodian of the court for the purpose of paying the debts and of distribution, his right being similar to that of an administrator in realty. “An ordinary chancery receiver is not, as a rule, vested with the legal title to the property.” 23 R. C. L. 53, 57; Fountain v. Mills, 111 Ga. 122 (36 S. E. 428); Penton v. Hall, 140 Ga. 576 (79 S. E. 465). The petition in this case did not in terms allege that no receiver had been appointed. It did show, however, that the petitioners were the only stockholders, or the owners of all the capital stock, of the corporation, and that the company owed no debts. Was it necessary that the plaintiffs should allege the non-appointment of a receiver? It has been many times held by the courts of this
Under analogous principles, it affirmatively appears from the petition in this case that an administration of the assets of the corporation through a receiver was unnecessary. Section 4 of the act of 1910 provides for the appointment of a receiver only in case of necessity. It is the general law that the power of appointing receivers should be prudently and cautiously exercised, and except in clear and urgent cases should not be resorted to. Civil Code (1910), §§ 4538, 5477; Fountain v. Mills, supra; Cooleewahee Co. v. Sparks, 148 Ga. 211 (96 S. E. 131); Georgia Portland Cement Co. v. Jackson, 139 Ga. 668 (77 S. E. 1055); Planters Oil Mill v. Carter, 140 Ga. 808 (79 S. E. 1120). We should not presume, therefore, in view of the facts alleged, that a receiver had been appointed, but rather the contrary. Where heirs at law sought to maintain actions for the recovery of personal assets of an estate or upon choses in action due thereto, the Supreme Court has said that the rule that the right to maintain -such an action was solely in the administrator was not obviated by averments that the decedent owed no debts, because if the heirs of a decedent
We have noted the general similarity, in its legal aspects, of the estate of a dissolved corporation to that of a deceased intestate, and more especially to the realty of such intestate. Oddly enough, but more specifically, the relation of the stockholders to the assets of the dissolved' corporation is still more similar to the relation of a surviving husband or wife to the real estate of a spouse who died intestate, leaving no lineal descendants. Civil Code (1910), §§ 3930, 3931 (1). In Jackson v. Butts, 148 Ga. 312 (96 S. E. 630), which was a suit in ejectment by a husband as sole heir at law of his deceased wife, the Supreme Court said that it was unnecessary for the trial court to “instruct the jury that they must believe that there was no administration on the estate of Mrs.
We conclude that in such a case the appointment of a receiver should not be presumed, but that prima facie the right to sue upon the obligations was in the plaintiff stockholders, and that the suit could be brought in their own names. What is said by the Supreme Court in White v. Davis, 134 Ga. 274 (67 S. E. 716), with regard to the lack of power of the superior court to dissolve a corporation appears to have been met by the subsequent act of the General Assembly approved on August 13, 1910 (Ga. L. 1910, p. 106).
The conclusions which we have reached, we believe, are thoroughly consistent with the decisions in Venable v. Southern Granite Co., 135 Ga. 508 (69 S. E. 822, 32 L. R. A. (N. S.) 446), and
The court erred in dismissing the petition.
Judgment reversed.