Darmana v. New Orleans Stock Yard, Inc.

77 So. 2d 528, 226 La. 897, 1954 La. LEXIS 1392
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 13, 1954
Docket41616
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 77 So. 2d 528 (Darmana v. New Orleans Stock Yard, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darmana v. New Orleans Stock Yard, Inc., 77 So. 2d 528, 226 La. 897, 1954 La. LEXIS 1392 (La. 1954).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Justice.

A group of minority stockholders of New Orleans Stock Yards, Inc., instituted this proceeding in which they seek injunctive relief from the action of the majority of the Board of Directors of the corporation in having voted certain salaries for its officers which, it is alleged, are an unwarranted outlay of corporate funds and for which the corporation is receiving no consideration. In the alternative it is alleged that if there is consideration, the same is inadequate. They prayed for a temporary restraining order, pending trial of a rule nisi for a preliminary injunction, forbidding the payment of the salaries listed in their petition, and in due course for the preliminary injunction.

The district judge was of the opinion, from the facts appearing in the petition and supported by affidavit, that irreparable loss or damage might result to the plaintiffs and he accordingly granted a temporary restraining order conditioned upon their furnishing bond in the sum of $1,000.

The salaries which plaintiff alleged constitute an unwarranted expenditure of funds and for which the corporation would receive no consideration, consist of the following: Joseph Mereaux, $100 per week; Andrew Hillary, $100 per week; Frank Schnell, $100 per week and L. G. Heier, Sr., $150 per month.

In their petition, plaintiffs alleged that Joseph Mereaux, Frank Schnell, Andrew Hillary, L. G. Heier, Sr., L. G. Heier, Jr., I. J. G. Janssen, Ewell Potts and George Hillary, members of the Board of Directors, all made defendants together with the corporation itself, belong to a group of majority stockholders who have conspired and effected a system whereby the assets of the corporation would be dissipated, in order to defeat the rights of the minority stockholders to dividends on their stock, and waste the assets to such an extent as to materially affect the existence of the corporation and endanger its continued operation.

The plaintiffs furnished a bond in the sum of $1,000 with one of them, Roy Hodges, as principal and John F. Klees, Jr., as surety and the temporary restraining order issued. Defendants then filed a motion to test the surety on the bond and also a motion to dissolve the temporary restrain *901 ing order on several alleged specific grounds.

The motion to dissolve the temporary restraining order was not acted on until the hearing of the rule for a preliminary injunction. Neither for that matter was the rule to test the surety on the bond. This rule appears to have been involved in one of the grounds on which the motion to dissolve was based. The district judge refers to this in deciding all matters on the day he handed down reasons for his decision on the rule for the preliminary injunction.

At any rate, the temporary restraining order was extended as required by the injunction law of this state, LSA-R.S. 13 :- 4064 and was kept in force during the time the rule for the preliminary injunction was put at issue by the answer of the defendants and until it was acted upon by the trial judge. In their answer to the rule as well as in exceptions of no right and of no cause of action which they also had filed, the defendants contested the rights of the plaintiffs to the injunctive relief sought and they also denied the allegations of fact upon which their demands were based. The trial judge rejected their contentions and ruled in favor of the plaintiffs granting them the preliminary injunction as prayed for. The defendants then moved for a suspensive and .devolutive appeal to this Court. They were refused a suspensive appeal but granted a devolutive one which they have perfected.

One of the errors complained of is the refusal of the trial judge to have granted defendants their motion to dissolve the temporary restraining order, but it is well settled that an appellate court will not review the action of the district court in refusing to dissolve a temporary restraining order. It cannot do so in face of the positive provision of section 5 of the original injunction act, No. 29 of 1924, now LSA-R.S. 13:4070, that “No appeal shall be allowed from any order granting, continuing, refusing or dissolving a restraining order, * * As pointed out in Ducros v. St. Bernard Parish Police Jury, 200 La. 766, 8 So.2d 694, to review and pass on the correctness of the ruling by the district court on such motion would be tantamount to allowing an appeal from the order in plain violation of that section of the law. Like the temporary restraining order in that case, the one in this case expired in accordance with law when the preliminary injunction issued. After that it served no further purpose; it was dissolved by its own limitation, and we are not concerned on this appeal which is from the order granting the preliminary injunction, with the reasons of the district judge why he granted it or why he refused to dissolve it.

Counsel for appellants state that they are aware of the ruling of this Court in the Ducros case, supra, but they urge that we consider the matter in the instant case because the lower court’s ruling is so clear *903 ly erroneous. That was also one of the reasons why the Court was asked to consider the lower Court’s action in refusing to dissolve the order in the Ducros case, another reason being that the defendant was entitled to recover attorney’s fees for its wrongful issuance, and still this Court found itself powerless to do so for the reasons which have already been stated.

In considering the merits of the rule for the temporary restraining order we find ourselves confronted with two propositions: The first, whether injunction is the proper remedy to be used in contesting the action of the officers or the board of directors of a corporation in matters such as are complained of in this case, and second, granting that it is, do the facts adduced in tire case justify relief by injunction. The district judge resolved both propositions in favor of the plaintiffs.

It seems to be well established by the jurisprudence of this State as well as that of other jurisdictions that injunction is an appropriate remedy by which minority stockholders in a corporation can seek relief oír a complaint by them charging that the directors and officers who hold or control a majority of the stock are illegally diverting and appropriating to themselves, as salaries, the property of the corporation.

In the case of Marcuse v. Gullett Gin Mfg. Co., 52 La.Ann. 1383, 27 So. 846, 851, that was one, among others, of the complaints by a single stockholder against the officers and directors of the corporation on which he predicated his demand for a receivership. In rejecting his demand in the form in which he had made it, the Court stated:

“Receivership, as a remedy, looks rather to the prevention of future injuries, than for the redress of past grievances. If plaintiff has just reason to complain of the course pursued by the board of control in the past, it strikes us that an injunction to prevent its further continuance zvould be a remedy more appropriate and proper than a recivership. Pollock v. [Farmers’ Loan &] Trust Co., 157 U.S. [429], 553, 15 S.Ct. 673, 39 L.Ed. 759; Ziegler v. Hoagland [52 Hun 385], 5 N.Y.S. 305.” (Italics ours.)

The foregoing statement is approvingly quoted in Carey v. Dalgarn Const. Co., Inc., 171 La. 246, 130 So. 344, 348, following which the Court said:

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Bluebook (online)
77 So. 2d 528, 226 La. 897, 1954 La. LEXIS 1392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darmana-v-new-orleans-stock-yard-inc-la-1954.