Cannon v. Brush Electric Co.

1 Balt. C. Rep. 594
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Balt. C. Rep. 594 (Cannon v. Brush Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cannon v. Brush Electric Co., 1 Balt. C. Rep. 594 (Md. Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

STOCKBRIDGE, J.

This is an application upon the part of certain alleged stockholders and bondholders of the United States Electric Power and Light Company, asking that the property now in the hands of the receivers be immediately sold, and that the proceeds of such sale be brought into this Court for final disposition upon the termination of the litigation.

The petitioners represent more than a majority of the stock of the supposed corporation, and the large majority of the outstanding bonds issued by it. The application is opposed by the plaintiff and others, who together are the holders of the minority of both stock and bonds, and also, though upon different grounds by the trustee under the mortgage given to secure the bonds of the supposed company.

The bill in this case was filed by the plaintiff, not against the United States Electric Power and Light Company as a corporation, but as against various parties who are or were supposed to be the stockholders interested therein, upon the theory that the attempted incorporation of the United States Electric Power and Light Company was ineffectual and void, and that therefore the parties who had supposed that they had subscribed to or purchased the stock of the corporation were in fact conducting a partnership business and not engaged as a corporation. The prayer of the bill asked the appointment of receivers and ultimately the sale of the property. Receivers were appointed, and now the petition for the sale comes not from the original plaintiff, but from the defendants, and is opposed at this time by the plaintiff, who asked that specific relief in his bill as the ultimate conclusion of the case.

It is perfectly manifest, so much so that the citation of authorities is unnecessary, that in order to make an effectual sale all parties in interest, or if a sale be ordered in advance of a determination of who the parties in interest actually are, all, who by any principle, could have an interest, must be parties to a cause before a valid sale can be made or authorized. It would be idle for a Court of Equity to decree a sale in a condition where parties having a possible interest were not parties to the cause, and, therefore, not in a [595]*595position to be bound by any decree passed. Tlie original bill did not make the United States Electric Power and Light Company a party as a body corporate, because it specifically denied that it had any valid corporate existence, and that question is, and must be the turning point in this case. While it has been elaborately argued upon the part of the original plaintiff, that the United States Electric Power and Light Company is not a corporation, yet in the form in which the pleadings of the case now stand, it would be scarcely just for the Court to attempt to pass upon this phase of the case.

After the filing of the bill and answers by the defendants named in the bill, receivers were appointed, and it is an acknowledged fact in the case that those receivers took possession of the property of the partnership or corporation, whichever it is, and have conducted the business of the same ever since the 17th of September last, yet not until the argument upon this petition had been begun, was there any request or application in the name of the supposed corporation to be made a party to the suit, and clearly until the corporation was so made a party to the suit any sale which might be ordered by the Court would, in the event of a final determination that the defendants were not partners, but stockholders in a corporation, be nugatory and void, since the legal creature which was possessed of the title to the property at the time of the appointment of the receivers was not in a position where it would be bound by the sale which might have been ordered.

During the hearing, application was made to the Court in the name of the United States Electric Power and Light Company as a body corporate for leave to appear and file its answer to the bill, adopting the answer of certain of its co-defendants, assenting to the proceedings had up to that time, and consenting to the sale prayed for by the petitioners, and though in the form presented the Court declined to allow the filing of such answer, it intimated to the counsel presenting it that when presented in regular form it would be proper that such answer should be admitted and filed, not to be construed, however, in any manner as being an adjudication upon the question of corporation vel non. Assuming that this proffer so made during the hearing either has, or shortly will be put in perfected form, it is but just that the main question involved in the petition and answers should be considered and determined.

In opposition to the petition it has been elaborately and earnestly argued that a Court of Chancery is without power to grant this application upon a variety of grounds; and in the second place, that even if it has the power, the present is not the time for such exercise of it by the Court.

With respect to Ihe first of these propositions, (as to the power of a Court of Chancery) it is undoubtedly true that the early adjudications respecting the rights and powers of receivers and of Courts in the control of receivers, indicated a limited scope, and was rarely, if ever, extended beyond the power for which such receivers wore originally appointed, and no better illustration of this can be found than in the elaborate and able opinion delivered by Mr. Justice Nelson in the case of Wiswall vs. Sampson, 14 Howard, p. 52; but, in the forty years which have passed since the delivery of that opinion, and in the phenomenal increase in cases in which the aid of Courts of Chancery has been invoked to appoint receivers and to conduct business through the medium of receivers, there has gradually come somewhat of a departure from the earlier doctrines. By the appointment of a receiver the property itself, which is the subject matter of the litigation, passes in custodia legis, and since it is a fundamental principle of equity to avoid the multiplicity of suits so far as consistent with established legal principles, it will, when all persons or bodies corporate who in any event can have an interest in the property, aré parties to the proceedings, adopt the relief in such form as shall seem to it best for the proper preservation of the interests of all parties.

The true doctrine of today seems to be that which is embodied in the opinion of the Supreme Court of Vermont in the case of Smith et al. vs. Burton et al., 67 Vt. 514 (B2 Atlantic Reporter 468), where the Court, citing with approval Section 192 of High on Receivers, says: “A Court of Equity appointing a receiver to take possession of property pending a litigation concerning the rights of the parties thereto is vested with the power of sale of [596]*596property in the receiver’s hands whenever such course becomes necessary to preserve the rights of all parties.” In that case, as in this, there was a dispute, not as to a fact of incorporation, but as to who was entitled to the property, which consisted of improved property in the village of St. Albans, and pending a determination of the rights of the parties, receivers were appointed to take charge of it and protect the property, and in that case, as in this, an application was made for the sale of the property pending a final determination of the questions involved. The same principle is to be found in the opinion delivered by Mr. Chief Justice Waite, in the case of the First National Bank of Cleveland vs. Shedd, 121 U. S. 74

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Related

First Nat. Bank of Cleveland v. Shedd
121 U.S. 74 (Supreme Court, 1887)
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131 U.S. 352 (Supreme Court, 1889)
Dixon v. Rutherford
26 Ga. 149 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1858)
Smith v. Burton
67 Vt. 514 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1895)
Cornell v. McCann
37 Md. 89 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1872)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Balt. C. Rep. 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cannon-v-brush-electric-co-mdcirctctbalt-1897.