58 Minn. 434 | Minn. | 1894
August 1,1893, the defendant bank, incorporated under the laws of this state, made an assignment under the insolvency laws to one Westfall, who thereupon qualified as required by statute, entered upon, and has ever since been engaged in administering, the trust contained in the deed of assignment. The plaintiff thereafter obtained a judgment against the bank, caused execution to be issued, which was returned unsatisfied, and then brought this action under the provisions of 1878 G-. S. ch. 76, for the purpose of sequestrating the property of the insolvent, and enforcing the constitutional liability of its stockholders. Upon the pleadings and some affidavits — the latter not being considered on the hearing — a motion was made by plaintiff for the appointment of a receiver of all property, moneys, and effects of said defendant, which motion was denied. The present appeal is to determine the correctness of the ruling whereby the court below refused to appoint a receiver. It may be well to say here that by the pleadings the legality of the assignment to Westfall was put in issue.
-In Olson v. Cook, 57 Minn. 552, (59 N. W. 635,) it was held that, pending proceedings against a corporation under the insolvency act Laws 1881, ch. 148, its creditors may maintain an action to determine the maximum liability of each stockholder under the provisions of 1878 G-. S. ch. 76, § 17, the courf to await the result of the insolvency proceedings to ascertain how much of this liability is to be enforced by execution. There is therefore nothing in the way of plaintiff’s prosecution of this action to the extent noted, if he chooses so to do, a receiver being wholly unnecessary for such purpose.
The distinction between proceedings under 1878 G-. S. ch. 76 and those instituted under the insolvency law, and that some of the remedies afforded under one of these enactments are not within the
A court in which proceedings under chapter 76 have been instituted might for good cause shown supersede an assignee or receiver under the provisions of the insolvency act theretofore appointed, or it might remove him altogether, or perhaps it might, at some stages of the two proceedings, direct a consolidation; but a plaintiff in an action brought under the provisions of chapter 76 has no unqualified right to have a receiver appointed in his action. In so far as was shown by the pleadings in the case at bar, the assignee in insolvency had for some time previous to the bringing of this action been actively engaged in the duty of collecting the assets of the insolvent, and converting them into dash. He was prior in point of time, and the plaintiff could not displace and supersede him merely by the initiation of an action under chapter 76. This was not the situation considered in the case of State v. Bank of New England, supra. When the court denied this plaintiff’s motion there was nothing which required the appointment of a receiver, nor will there be until assets shall arise from an enforcement of the stockholders’ liability, or from the hands of the assignee in insolvency. Of course we as
Order affirmed.
(Opinion published 59 N. W. 1077.)