49 Ind. App. 454 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1912
Appellee Mercantile Banking Company has moved that this appeal be dismissed, for the reason that no final judgment in the case has been rendered by the lower court from ivhieh an appeal to this court will lie.
Appellants brought this suit against the Mercantile Bank
The complaint was in one paragraph, to which appellee Mercantile Banking Company filed a demurrer. The demurrer was sustained, and the ruling thereon is the only error presented by appellants. On motion by appellee company, the court rendered judgment as follows: “Come the parties, and the court being fully advised sustains defendants’ motion for judgment in their favor on the ruling of the court sustaining defendants’ demurrer to' plaintiffs’ complaint. It is therefore considered and adjudged by the court that plaintiffs take nothing by their action and that defendants recover of plaintiffs their costs taxed at $-. ’ ’
It is presumed, therefore, for the purpose of the motion to dismiss, that the ruling on the demurrer of appellee Mercantile Banking Company disposed of all the issues as to all
The demurrer was for (1) the insufficiency of the facts alleged to state a cause of action, and (2) defect of parties plaintiff in this, that the right of action relied on can be enforced only by the Auditor of State.
Prayer for an accounting, for a dissolution of the partnership, and for the appointment of a receiver.
Section eight of the act of 1907 (Acts 1907 p. 174, §3409 Burns 1908), relating to private banks, provides, among other things, as follows: “The Auditor of State, once in twelve months, or as often as he deem it necessary, shall appoint a suitable person, or persons, to make examination of the affairs of every bank under this act, * * * and if such bank or its owners be in an insolvent, or failing condition, or if the assets thereof are being wasted or improperly used or converted, then, in any of these events, said examiner shall at once notify said Auditor of State, and if the owners are unable to satisfy said auditor that they can make good the assets of said bank, said Auditor of State shall thereupon direct said examiner, or some other person appointed by him, at once to take charge and control of said bank and all the books, notes, cash on hand and other assets, and said Auditor of State shall, upon five days’ notice being given to the cashier of said bank, thereafter .make application to the judge of the circuit court, or superior court of the county where such bank is situated, either during term time or during vacation, for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of said bank. * * * Said examiner shall
That the Auditor of State has the power under this act to bring an action for a receiver cannot be doubted, but does his right so to do exclude that of other interested parties? Our statute and the authorities before cited establish the proposition that before the act of 1907, supra, was passed a member of a copartnership could, upon proper showing, maintain a suit for an accounting, settlement of partnership affairs, and the appointment of a receiver, where the partnership assets are being wasted, or there is such a breach of the partnership obligations as to make it apparent that the interests of the parties will be best subserved by the intervention of a court of equity through the appointment of a receiver.
The ease just cited carried the doctrine farther, perhaps, than it is necessary to go in the ease at bar, to hold that a partner may maintain an action for the appointment of a receiver of the partnership business, for in addition to the existing legal right to bring such suit he has a business and property interest in the partnership, while the prosecuting attorney was only authorized to' act in his official capacity for the general good.
In holding that the remedy of a receiver, available through the Auditor of State, is only cumulative, and not exclusive of existing remedies available to an aggrieved partner, we are not unmindful of some expressions of our courts, which, on first impression, seem to indicate a different view; but on closer investigation of the questions actually decided the conflict is found to be only apparent and not real — in tlie language employed in' the reasoning, and not in the question decided.
In the case of Lowery v. State Life Ins. Co. (1899), 153 Ind. 100, a policy-holder on his own initiative brought suit to enjoin the insurance company from doing certain alleged illegal acts, and it was held that the suit could not be maintained because the act under which the company was organs ized and doing business (Acts 1899 p. 30, §4694 Burns 1908) provided that no such suit should be brought “otherwise than upon the application of the Attorney-General on his own motion, or after his approval of a request in writing therefor by the Auditor of State. ’ ’
In the case of Huntington County, etc., Sav. Assn. v. Fulk (1902), 158 Ind. 113, it was held that a receiver could not be appointed for such association, at the suit of a stockholder, without a recommendation of the Auditor of State, but the statute in that ease expressly provided that a share
In the foregoing case, and other cases, when the several statutes are considered, the decisions are in harmony with our conclusion. The rule is of general application, that where a remedy, which is not creative and which is not in derogation of some existing law or of some provision of the act itself, is given by statute, such remedy is not exclusive of existing remedies, but is only cumulative.
Our conclusion is that the remedy of a receiver prescribed by the private banking act (Acts 1907, supra) is not a new remedy, but only a different way of applying an old and previously existing remedy, and is not exclusive of such existing remedy in the aggrieved partner.
The reason for such inference is more conclusive when applied to the suit of a partner than to a stockholder in a corporation, for the latter depends wholly on the statute for existence.
We know of no authority so vested except the general power to try issues of- fact, to decide questions of law, to appoint receivers, and to transact business of a kindred nature when duly presented. This view is consistent with and strengthens the conclusion already announced.
The judgment is therefore reversed, with instructions to the lower court to overrule the demurrer to the complaint, and for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.