Bull v. International Power Co.

92 A. 796, 84 N.J. Eq. 6, 1914 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 13
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedDecember 10, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 92 A. 796 (Bull v. International Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bull v. International Power Co., 92 A. 796, 84 N.J. Eq. 6, 1914 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 13 (N.J. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Walker, Chancellor.

The complainants, the owners of four hundred shares of the common stock of the par value of $40,000 and one hundred shares of the preferred stock of the defendant company of the par value of $10,000, out of a total issue outstanding of $6,400,-000 par value of common, and $6,000,000 par value of the preferred, stock of the company, filed their bill setting forth that the business of the company had been conducted at a great loss and in a manner greatly prejudicial to the interests of its creditors and stockholders, and praying that it might be dissolved [7]*7and its affairs wound up and the stockholders and creditors paid what is justly due to them, and that it might be enjoined from exercising any of its franchises and receiving any debts due to it and from paying and transferring any of its moneys and effects and from continuing its business, and that a receiver might be appointed to take and state an account of the assets and liabilities of the company, who should be directed and empowered to take into his possession all the property of the company, and that pending an accounting the company should be enjoined and restrained from the exercise of any of its franchises, &c., and that its officers should be enjoined and restrained from performing any acts as such and' from making payment of any and all salaries, &c.

Subsequent to the filing of the bill a stockholders’ committee was formed for the purpose of inviting other stockholders to become parties complainant, and those holding one thousand six hundred and sixty shares of the common, and two hundred and fifty shares of the preferred, stock of the company, deposited their certificates with the committee, to whom they conveyed the title to their stock, which committee has been by order of the court admitted as party complainant in the suit.

The company by its charter was authorized to manufacture, buy, sell and deal in locomotives, engines, cars and certain other mechanisms, and to purchase, mortgage and deal in stocks and bonds of other corporations, &c. It operates only as a holding company.

Notwithstanding a peremptory mandamus issued out of the supreme court of this state against the defendant company at the November term, 1913, for an inspection of its books, and notwithstanding that subsequently the supreme court made an order, directed to the company to bring its books showing its general financial condition into this state and deposit them in the office of a supreme court commissioner, to permit the complainants to examine and inspect the books, the company refused to comply with either the writ or the order.

On the filing of the bill in this cause an order was made requiring the defendant to show cause why an injunction should not issue according to its prayer, and why a receiver should not [8]*8be appointed under the general jurisdiction of this court, and, also, according to the statute in such case made and provided, namely, the amendment of 1912 to section 65 of the Corporation act, together with an ad mterim restraint, enjoining the defendant from selling or transferring any of the stocks, bonds or other securities, or other property owned or controlled by it, and from paying any salaries or other compensation to any officers or directors (except clerks and minor employes) and from contracting debts or entering into new obligations.

The bill did not allege the insolvency of the company, but gross mismanagement and fraud, for which, and for the disobedience of the writ and order of the supreme court, a receiver was asked under the general equity jurisdiction of this court, and also under the amendment of the statute.

On the return of the order to show cause the defendant company, through its counsel, stated that it would comply with the supreme court’s mandamus, and agreed forthwith to bring to its registered office in this state the books set out in the writ, to be subjected to the inspection and examination directed, and to keep them there until tire further order of this court. Hpon this being made to appear this court made an order tliat pending compliance by the defendant with the direction of the writ of mcmdamus and until the further order of this court, the order to show cause, and the restraint upon the defendant company contained in it, should be continued in full force and effect from week to week, with leave to the parties, or either of them, to apply to the chancellor for an amendment or modification of that order, or of the order to show cause, or that the latter be made absolute or discharged, or for further and other direction or relief. This order was complied with, and, after an examination of the books, the complainants, by leave of the court, filed an addition to their bill by way of supplement, setting forth conditions discovered by them in the examination of those books, which enabled them to aver that tire defendant was insolvent and unable to realize upon its assets even at a great sacrifice or by securing loans to pay its current obligations matured or which will mature in the near future, and that it was impossible for it to raise funds to enable it to prosecute its business with safety [9]*9to the public and advantage to its stockholders; that it had suspended its ordinary business for want of funds to carry on the same, &c., adding prayers for injunction and the appointment of a receiver.

The defendant answered the original bill before the supplement was filed, and on the return of the order to show cause why a receivers should not be appointed on the supplemental bill, filed its answer thereto and several affidavits.

As already stated, the complainants’ bill (including supplement) has a dual aspect, one for the appointment of a statutory receiver as for an insolvent, or losing, corporation, under section 65 of the Corporation act, amended by P. L. 1912 p. 535, and the other for a receiver under the general powers of the court because of gross mismanagement and fraud practiced by the officers and directors of the defendant company. In the view I take of this ease it will not be necessary to decide whether the bill is multifarious, and whether, therefore, both phases of the question at issue can be considered. If the allegations involved third parties under the general jurisdiction feature of'the bill, then surely it would be multifarious. Pierce v. Old Dominion, &c., Smelting Co., 67 N. J. Eq. 399.

In that case Vice-Chancellor Stevenson disregarded the bill so far as it undertook to present the statutory action against the defendant and decided it on the motion for a preliminary injunction in aid of the situation under the general equity jurisdiction of the court. The case at bar, as to this dual aspect, is the reverse of that in Pierce v. Old Dominion, &c., Smelting Co., and this case will be considered with reference to the application of the statute to it, and the appeal to the general equity jurisdiction will be disregarded. See, particularly, the remarks of Vice-Chancellor Stevenson (at p. 416) referring to the dictum of Mr. Justice Van Syckel in Franklin Electric Light Co. v. Fort Wayne Electric Corporation, 58 N. J. Eq. 543, in the court of errors and appeals, wherein the vice-chancellor points out the difference between an order appointing a receiver and a decree for an injunction. They need not be combined in one and the same decree, although they usually are.

Unless finality is to be attributed to the decree for injunction

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Bluebook (online)
92 A. 796, 84 N.J. Eq. 6, 1914 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bull-v-international-power-co-njch-1914.