127 P.2d 233 | Mont. | 1942
The uncontradicted facts affirmatively disclose that the receivership involved on this appeal is without foundation or cause. At the outset, too, one must bear in mind that a receivership is an extraordinary remedy, the last resort of the law to do justice between litigants. The need must be plain. The circumstances exigent. Danger of material and substantial loss imminent. (Brown v. Erb-Harper-Rigney Co.,
It was alleged in the Masterson Case, and there admitted for the purposes of the appeal, that the defendant "abused plaintiffs, treated them with disrespect and refuses to talk with them." Of such a state of affairs as grounds for a receivership this court wrote in language so plain that he who runs may read: "It is alleged that defendant has treated plaintiffs with abuse and disrespect and refuses to talk with them. But courts of equity will not interfere merely because of quarrels or disagreements between persons jointly interested in business * * * and it is not one of the functions of a receiver to establish or maintain the entente cordiale between partners. It is not alleged that this lack of harmony injuriously affects the business; *213 on the contrary, it is alleged that it is proceeding successfully." So at bar, there is neither allegation nor proof that the lack of harmony in anywise has injuriously affected the business. We may say in the language of the Masterson Case, on the contrary, the proof shows affirmatively "that it is proceeding successfully."
The case of Owen v. Cohen,
Bearing upon the personal relations of the parties there is in the complaint only the charge of misappropriation of the firm moneys and of the appellant's insolvency which are denied, and of which there was not the slightest proof at the hearing.Masterson v. Hubbert is controlling that no case for a receivership is here stated in the complaint or made out in the evidence.
To comment seriatim upon all the cases in point with our contentions as we read them, to cite even a respectable percentage of the holdings sustaining our position would extend our argument beyond all reason. Suffice it to note these further decisions which we ask the court to examine without partisan comment from us: Duke v. Allen,
To supplement our citation of authority we add the cases ofMcIntosh v. Perkins,
We submit these authorities declare principles of settled law. Consistent with those principles the receivership at bar cannot stand. Receivership is one of the oldest equitable remedies. It was well established in English chancery long before the American Revolution, and has naturally descended to and become one of the inherent powers of courts of equity. In nearly all states, those rules handed down by English chancery, have been codified in similar language, most of which conclude with the omnibus clause like subsection 6 of section 9301 of the Revised Codes of 1935. (1 Tardy's Smith on Receiverships, Chapter I; 23 Am. Eng. Enc. Law (2d Ed.) p. 1002.) Said section providing for the appointment of receivers reads in part as follows: *215 "A receiver may be appointed by the court in which an action is pending, or by the judge thereof: 1. In an action * * * between partners * * * where it is shown that the property or fund is in danger of being lost, removed, or materially injured. * * * 6. In all other cases where receivers have heretofore been appointed by the usages of courts of equity." Both of these provisions furnish ample grounds for the appointment of a receiver in this case under the facts shown. We believe the right is clear without necessity for search or inquiry into the history and ramifications of "the usages of courts of equity."
The appellant repudiated his obligations as a partner by continual withdrawal of partnership funds and violated the partner's agreement. "The collection of partnership funds and failure to divide them with a copartner in accordance with the partnership agreement, or the misappropriation of such funds to defendant's use, constitute grounds for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of partnership property pending, and in aid of, a settlement of partnership affairs." (Maple v.McReynolds,
We respectfully submit that the undisputed testimony of Mr. Stoner, including the showing of marked slump in the business during the year 1940, and up to the first day of May, 1941, clearly reflect a tangled financial condition and such a state of inharmony as to injuriously affect the business. This is especially true in view of the relationship of the partners to their creditors, and particularly the threatened, and in fact executed, intent of F.B. Mjelde to foreclose on the whole assets of the partnership because of the default by the appellant in the payment of the Mjelde (see Opinion) mortgage. While temporary quarrels will not justify a dissolution of a partnership, yet under the circumstances shown in this case "where the dissensions and lack of harmony and understanding are irreconcilable the court appoints a receiver upon the theory that if the partners will not trust each other equity will not trust either of them to settle an affair in which each of them but for their differences, would *216
be entitled to share in an equal degree." (I Tardy's Smith on Receivers, p. 399 (2d Ed.); Dolenga v. Lipka,
The relation of the parties was fiduciary, and each was bound to the utmost good faith in all respects pertaining to the partnership affairs. In fact by our statutes they are trustees for each other in respect to their common property and all the transactions relating thereto. (Secs. 7989-7991, Rev. Codes.)
We submit that the duty of the appellant to discharge the Mjelde mortgage was plenary. His neglect and dereliction dangerously imperiled the assets of the partnership which had been pledged or mortgaged as security for payment of his personal obligations. He thereby adopted a position of repudiation of his duties to the partnership. If the appellant was not insolvent, as contended in his brief, then by his neglect or refusal, without any apparent cause, to pay interest or principal on the Mjelde loan, his perfidy became aggravated. If the criterion adopted by him for determining solvency or insolvency is correct, it may truthfully be said he was solvent. But if the definition of solvency as set forth in Cunningham v. Norton,
This partnership was not created for any particular period of time. It was to continue only during the mutual will of the parties. It was, therefore, a general partnership. (Sec. 7995, Rev. Codes.) Being a general partnership and without agreement for duration over any specified period of time, dissolution was optional to either party at any time. (Sec. 8009.)
In this case there is no business enterprise to be rehabilitated. This is not a suit to preserve property for a party and have it turned over to him at the conclusion of the litigation, should he ultimately be found to be entitled to it. It was not for an *217
accounting before dissolution. The relief sought is to conserve the property for the purpose of liquidation for the benefit of the partners and their creditors, which admittedly must be done but cannot be accomplished by the discordant partners or at all except by the instrumentality of a receiver. The right of the respondent to have a receiver appointed to liquidate the affairs of the partnership is well stated in 1 Clark on the Law of Receivers, Sec. 119(b); see, also, I Tardy's Smith on Receivers, sec. 129-144 (2d Ed.). In situations of this kind involving partnership relations, the authorities are in general accord that a receiver of the partnership property and assets should be appointed. (20 R.C.L. 926, sec. 188; Ackel v. Ackel, (Ariz.)
Though the appointment of a receiver may not be demanded as a matter of right, yet it is a question that lies largely within the court's discretion. (Harnett v. St. Louis etc. Co.,
In the very recent California case of Owen v. Cohen,
Before discussing the facts it may be well to set out the[1, 2] statute under which the court is empowered to appoint a receiver in a case like this. Whether the court erred depends on whether the record brings this case within the statute. The court's authority comes from section 9301, Revised Codes of 1935. So far as here applicable, it provides: "A receiver may be appointed by the court in which an action is pending, or by the judge thereof: 1. In an action * * * between partners * * * where it is shown that the property or fund is in danger of being lost, removed, or materially injured: * * *."
Respondent urges that subdivision 6 of the above section also applies. It provides that a receiver may be appointed "in all other cases where receivers have been heretofore appointed by the usages of courts of equity." Whether the action of the court is tested by the provisions of subdivision 1 of section 9301, or by the common-law rules as contemplated by subdivision 6 of that section, the result is the same. In McIntosh v. Perkins, *219
While the court has a large discretion in denying or granting the application (Pereira v. Wulf,
It may be well to note, also, before examining the facts, the universal rule as stated by this court in Brown v.Erb-Harper-Rigney Co., supra: "The power to appoint a receiver is to be exercised sparingly and not as of course. A strong showing should be made and even then the authority must be exercised with conservatism and caution. * * * The appointment of a receiver is an extraordinary remedy to be resorted to only in cases of emergency." And in Montana Ranches Co. v. Dolan, supra: "Because of the extraordinary harshness of the remedy, courts of equity have ever been reluctant to apply it." InScholefield v. Merrill Mortuaries, Inc.,
The general rule as it appears in 53 C.J. 32, is stated thus: "The power to appoint a receiver is a delicate one which is jealously safeguarded, and reluctantly exercised by the courts, * * *. The power should be exercised sparingly with caution and circumspection, and only in an extreme case, under extraordinary circumstances." And this is particularly true where both parties have equal rights of possession and management of the property, as here (53 C.J. 44). It is there said: "But the courts are adverse to appointing receivers in such a case, and generally in the absence of fraud, waste or danger of *220 loss or destruction, and where neither has excluded the other from his enjoyment of his possession or rents and profits a receiver will not be appointed." With these rules in mind we turn to a consideration of the record.
The motion for the appointment of the receiver is based on the complaint seeking dissolution of the partnership. We look to it for the allegations supporting the appointment of the receiver for the matters charged as showing the partnership property to be in danger of being lost, removed or materially injured.
The complaint alleges, first, that the parties to the action entered into a general partnership for an indefinite period for the purpose of engaging in the business of selling gasoline products and other merchandise generally sold in gasoline filling stations; that for the purpose of conducting the business certain property was bought, and that since March, 1918, they have been engaged in the partnership enterprise. The first allegation upon which the plaintiff relies for the appointment of a receiver is that the defendant appropriated from the receipts and profits of the business to his own use large sums of money greatly in excess of the proportion to which he is entitled, and that he has attempted to conceal the misappropriations of that money, and that, in spite of demands on the part of plaintiff, the defendant at the time of the filing of the case has continued that practice.
The second allegation upon which plaintiff relies to bring this case within section 9301 is that the defendant borrowed $4,000 from one F.B. Mjelde, and as security for the payment of that sum he mortgaged to Mjelde an undivided one-half interest in the defendant's one-half interest in the business; that that money has not been repaid and that Mjelde threatens to institute proceedings against the business to enforce the claim; and further that the total of defendant's indebtedness exceeds the value of his assets, and that defendant is insolvent.
Lastly, the complaint alleges that the defendant has collected debts due the partnership and applied the money to his own use. *221
Upon the hearing further grounds were advanced for the appointment of a receiver by the testimony of the plaintiff wherein he stated that the partners no longer agreed and that the enterprise was no longer a profitable one.
In opposition to the motion for the appointment of a receiver, defendant filed his affidavit. In it he sets out that it has been the general practice of the partners, from time to time as their personal needs demanded, to draw from the partnership funds sums of money for which tabs or memoranda were made or kept, and that any sums he has withdrawn in the past have been in accordance with that general practice; that he has made no attempt to conceal any amounts which he withdrew, but on the other hand in every instance, by deposit of tabs or otherwise, reported to the other partner any sums of money which he so withdrew. He states that the same is true also as to accounts collected by the two parties. He denies that his obligation to the partnership exceeds the value of his share of the profits or of his interest in it, or that he is insolvent. He alleges that the business has been carried on at a profit over the years with a steadily growing surplus. He states that there has been no general accounting between the partners but that, on the other hand, from time to time informal accounts have been cast up between them and agreed upon, and that he stands ready and willing to account to the partnership upon an accounting at any time. He states that the plaintiff assented in writing to the loan to him by Mjelde and to the giving of security for its repayment. The affidavit concludes with a general denial of the allegations of the complaint.
The testimony of the plaintiff, who was the only witness called, when considered with the complaint and affidavit, amounts to an agreed statement of facts. The parties differ, of course, as to the inferences to be drawn from those facts.
Taking up first the matter of the Mjelde loan, shortly after[3] the inception of this suit, Mjelde filed a complaint in intervention seeking a foreclosure of his mortgage, and with it an application for the appointment of a receiver. This latter application *222 he abandoned. There appears in the record plaintiff's written assent to the Mjelde loan and to the pledging of one-half of the defendant's interest in the property as secured. In view of this situation we do not think the plaintiff can now complain. Further, it is clear that this situation, particularly the suit by Mjelde, does not jeopardize the partnership as is contemplated by section 9301.
The testimony of plaintiff, together with the exhibits, do not[4, 5] support the allegation that the defendant concealed or attempted to conceal, any amounts of money which he drew from the partnership funds. It does show that the defendant reported by tabs or otherwise any moneys he withdrew. Plaintiff admits that prior to a settlement of accounts in 1938 it had been the usual practice on the part of both partners to draw from the partnership funds for their personal use and to deposit tabs in the till to show the amount taken. He states that upon the accounting of 1938 it was agreed that that practice should be discontinued, and that since that time he had not drawn any money from the partnership funds in that manner. From 1938 on plaintiff testifies that certain funds were set over to each of the parties as salaries; however, except for 1939, these sums were small, and no specific agreement as to the amounts to be withdrawn as salary or as each one's share of the profits for the current year appears.
Section 7985 of our Codes provides that in the "absence of any agreement on the subject, the shares of the partners in the profit or loss of the business are equal." In the absence of an agreement, then, defendant was entitled to draw from the profits of the firm an amount up to one-half of those profits.
Plaintiff testified on the basis of certain records that in 1941 the partnership account carried a surplus of over $11,000 which came from accumulated profits of the business not withdrawn by the partners. The total amount which defendant withdrew, excluding salary beginning in 1938 according to the record, is $1,005.00. While the plaintiff testified to the effect that certain current accounts and debts were not being paid as rapidly *223 as they should be, yet the record does not reveal that these withdrawals on the part of the defendant in any way jeopardized the business; nor does the record show that the amounts withdrawn by the defendant are out of proportion in any way to the value of his interest in the partnership assets or in the profits. There is nothing in the face of these withdrawals, either in the amount or in the manner in which the withdrawals were made, which brings this case within section 9301. These withdrawals do not place the partnership assets in danger of being either lost, removed or materially injured.
In Masterson v. Hubbert,
What is true of these withdrawals is also true of partnership accounts which defendant collected. The practice over a period of years in the collection of some accounts was this: One of the partners would personally owe an obligation to some tradesmen, and in turn the tradesman would owe an obligation to the partners. The individual partner then assumed the obligation of the tradesman to the partners and thereby discharged his individual obligation to the tradesman. The account then *224 was considered as a withdrawal of the amount of the account on the part of the partner exactly the same as though that amount had been taken in cash from the till and a tab deposited in lieu thereof. This practice had continued over the years and, while the plaintiff alleged that the defendant had attempted to conceal and had concealed such transactions, the record does not bear out that allegation, instead the contrary appears true. The amounts so collected by the defendant were insignificant, and what is said as to the withdrawals applies with equal force to them.
In support of the appointment of the receiver plaintiff relies[7] on the fact that the partnership has been losing money. The record does not bear him out on this point. While it does appear that the amount of profit each year has perhaps been going down, yet, according to his own testimony, he figured the profit for the year 1940 at $3,438.90, if no salary for the partners is provided. However, even though the partnership were actually losing money, unless those losses endangered the partnership assets as provided in section 9301, they would afford no basis for the appointment of a receiver. (Buchhalter v. Myers,
Plaintiff testified that there were a number of partnership debts outstanding, some of them in a considerable amount. Not a word appears in the record, however, to show that any of them, with the exception of the Mjelde claim, was being pressed, and nothing to show that they in any way endangered the operation of the business enterprise by the partners, or that they brought the case within section 9301.
Finally plaintiff urges that upon his testimony that the[8] partners no longer agreed — and in fact were not speaking to each other — a receiver should be appointed. He admitted business was going on as usual, and that he and the defendant worked overlapping shifts. While he testified that they could no longer consult on anything, yet he did say that the business was open from day to day as usual, and nothing in this disagreement presents any emergency, as contemplated by the *225 cases, which would require the appointment of a receiver to operate the business during the pendency of the dissolution proceedings. No situation appears as that set out in 53 C.J. at page 44, where the disagreement between the parties was such that they could not agree on the management of the property, its disposition, or otherwise, and as a result the property was in immediate danger of being lost or materially injured. This court has passed directly upon the question involved, where the record showed a disagreement between the parties, in Masterson v.Hubbert, supra. The court there said: "It is alleged that defendant [one partner] has treated plaintiffs [the other partners] with abuse and disrespect and refuses to talk with them. But courts of equity will not interfere merely because of quarrels or disagreements between persons jointly interested in business (High on Receivers, 4th ed., sec. 474), and it is not one of the functions of a receiver to establish or maintain theentente cordiale between partners. It is not alleged that this lack of harmony injuriously affects the business." In this case it is not shown that the disagreement between the parties injuriously affected the business, and, at least, the record fails to show that the disagreement in any way endangered the partnership assets, as contemplated by section 9301.
The Montana cases quoted from in this opinion are merely a restatement of the holdings of the courts in common-law jurisdictions. In High on Receivers, 4th Edition, Chapter 13, page 666, in speaking of appointment of receivers generally in partnership cases, the author says that in order to justify the appointment of a receiver there must be "wilful acts of fraud by the defendant, such as misappropriations of firm funds, making false and improper entries upon the firm books, and depriving claimant of access to the books and concealing from him the true condition of the business," and a receiver may be appointed when "the pleadings disclose a serious and apparently irreconcilable disagreement between the partners both as to the control and disposition of their effects and as to their respective demands against each other," but "it should however *226 clearly appear that on account of the dissentions and disagreements complained of, serious injury will result to the parties unless a receiver is appointed, and such dissentions without fault of defendant, will not justify the summary interposition of a receiver unless it is clearly shown that the parties will suffer loss by continuing in possession of the property." The author then discusses specific situations in which the appointment of a receiver is made or refused. So, end of confidence between the partners is a sufficient ground for the interposition of a court of equity only "when one of the two partners has exclusive control of the firm business and so mismanages it that the firm speedily becomes insolvent and all friendship and confidence between the partners are destroyed," so that "the appointment of a receiver may be regarded as the only practicable method of speedily and peaceably winding up the affairs of the firm." (Page 667.) "Failure to cooperate in the management of the business no ground for receiver. * * * Nor does the fact that the partners' business has been unprofitable, or that it should be discontinued and the firm dissolved, warrant a court in taking property out of defendant's hands to be administered by a receiver." (Page 668.) "When the conduct of the defendant partner has been such as to satisfy the court that he is deliberately resolved to break up and ruin the firm business, * * * a fit case is presented for * * * a receiver." Also where it appears that the defendant partner "has acted in bad faith, has disposed of part of the property with an attempt to defraud creditors." (Page 669.) See also 47 C.J. 1220, and 47 C.J. 817, where it is said: "In accordance with general rules [of statute and common law] a receiver will not be appointed * * * in the absence of some clear breach of duty or conduct amounting to fraud, or fact showing a danger to the partnership assets." (Italics supplied.) And see 53 C.J. 39.
Bearing in mind, then, that provisions of the statute — sec. 9301 — and what this court and others have announced as the rule which must guide the court in determining whether or *227 not a receiver should be appointed, as set out in the first part of this opinion, and particularly bearing in mind that the appointment of a receiver entails great expense and hardship in the ordinary case, we are convinced that the showing here made in support of the application for appointment of the receiver falls short of that required by section 9301, subdivision 1. Therefore the trial court erred in appointing the receiver, and the order is set aside.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE JOHNSON and ASSOCIATE JUSTICES ANGSTMAN, ANDERSON and MORRIS concur.
Rehearing denied June 27, 1942.