Elchinger v. F.H. Koretke Brass Mfg. Co.

200 So. 314, 196 La. 962, 1941 La. LEXIS 997
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 6, 1941
DocketNo. 35934.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 200 So. 314 (Elchinger v. F.H. Koretke Brass Mfg. Co.) 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
Elchinger v. F.H. Koretke Brass Mfg. Co., 200 So. 314, 196 La. 962, 1941 La. LEXIS 997 (La. 1941).

Opinions

LAND, Justice.

This is an appeal from an ex parte order or judgment appointing a receiver for a corporation that has been defunct since 1925 by expiration of its charter. This appeal is taken under Section 4 of Act No. 159 of 1898, regulating the practice of appointing receivers of corporations.

The following motion to dismiss the appeal taken in this case by Mrs. Marie Olga Lacroix, divorced wife of Charles F. Elchinger, has been filed in this court by Charles F. Elchinger, appellee:

“On motion of Charles F. Elchinger, duly appointed, bonded and qualified Receiver of F. H. Koretke Brass & Manufacturing Company, Ltd., and Appellee herein, and upon showing to the Court that:
“1. Appellee was designated Receiver herein in accordance with the provisions of Act No. 26 of 1900, providing for the appointment of Receivers for corporations whose charters have expired by limitation, at the instance of the Attorney General or of any party in interest;
“2. Act No. 26 of 1900 contains no specific provision for appeals from such judgments so appointing Receivers, it being assumed that the fact of the expiration of .the *965 charter gives to the State or any interested person (such as a creditor or a stockholder) the incontestable right to apply for, and to the Court the right to make, such appointment ;
“3. None of the provisions of Act No. 159 of 1898 have been made applicable to proceedings under Act No. 26 of 1900, either by Statute or by the jurisprudence of this State;
“4. The appeal herein was obviously taken in accordance with, and upon the assumption that this is- a proceeding under Act No. 159 of 1898, the general receivership statute; that the inapplicability of Act No. 159 of 1898 has been expressed by this Honorable Court in the course of its opinion (though not in its decree) in case No. 35,712 (In re F. H. Koretke Brass & Mfg. Co., 195 La. 415 [196 So. 917], decided May 27, 1940), wherein this Court indicated that the sole and correct procedure for liquidation of a corporation whose charter had expired by limitation was Act No. 26 of 1900; that if this Honorable Court had been of opinion 'that Act No. 159 of 1898 were appropriate, then the liquidation of the corporation by judicial liquidators could not have been inferentially disapproved by this Court, because Section 1 (1) of Act No. 159 expressly provides that “ ‘the right of stockholders [of a legally dissolved corporation] to liquidate the affairs of the corporation in accordance with the charter shall not be affected thereby’;
“5. Accordingly, appellant has no right, capacity or interest to prosecute this appeal from the appointment and qualification of the Receiver herein under Act No. 26 of 1900, more especially as appellant strenuously contended in said case No. 35,712 that liquidation proceedings under the charter were improper, and that receivership proceedings under Act No. 26 of 1900 were alone proper, which view this Court adopted in the language of its opinion (not its decree) in said case (although appellee respectfully dissents from that opinion, in view of: Sec. 1 (1) of Act No. 159 of 1898; Secs. 53 and 54 of Act No. 250 of 1928; Board v. Meridith, 140 La. 269, 278 [72 So. 960];
“6. Admitting, arguendo, that this appeal is governed, by analogy, by the provisions of Act No. 159, nevertheless 'that Act provides (Sec. 4) that ‘Any person or persons who by affidavit appear to be interested’ may appeal from the order of appointment;
“Appellee shows that such interest on the part of appellee does not so appear; because appellant herself recites as the origin of her interest that the liquidation proceedings of F. H. Koretke' Brass & Manufacturing Company, Ltd. were dismissed by the Honorable the Judge of Division C of the Civil District Court on showing made to him that appellant (Marie Olga Lacroix) had an interest in the business of said corporation (see paragraph 7 of affidavit attached to motion of appeal), which recital was not substantiated by a copy of the judgment of dismissal, but which judgment appellee filed herein, in a Supplemental Transcript, and which disproves said recital by appellant;
“Appellee further shows that in said affidavit (Paragraph 10), appellant affirms *967 that, in the liquidation proceedings, she had established an interest in the assets and business of said corporation; appellee did not attach to said affidavit any testimony or evidence, taken in said proceedings, in support of her said statement, nor refer thereto, nor any ruling or judgment so declaring, for the reason that none such exists;
“7. Consequently, the basis declared by appellant to show her interest to justify her appeal, nowhere appears, and the authentic documents filed herein disprove the uncorroborated recitals contained in her affidavit ;
“8. Accordingly, this appeal should be dismissed, for the reasons above stated, to-wit, appellant has disclosed no interest in prosecuting same and has disclosed no legal right to appeal;
“9. This motion to dismiss is not required to be filed within three days, but ‘may be filed effectively at any time’, under James v. Fellowes, 23 La.Ann. 37; Jackson v. Vernon Parish, 150 La. 1057 [91 So. 509]; Sample v. Wheless, 159 La. 844, 847 [106 So. 325]; Lafayette v. Farr, 162 La. 385 [110 So. 624].”
“Wherefore, Appellee, Charles F. Elchinger, duly qualified Receiver of F. H. Koretke Brass & Manufacturing Company, Ltd., prays that this appeal be dismissed.”

The transcript in Re F. H. Koretke Brass & Mfg. Co., Ltd., No. 35,712 of the docket of this court, shows that no rehearing was applied for in that case.

The pertinent parts of the decision in Re F. H. Koretke Brass & Mjfg. Co., Ltd., 195 La. 415, 196 So. 917, 918, are as follows : “This is an injunction suit brought by plaintiff and appellant, Mrs. Marie Olga Lacroix, divorced wife of Charles F. Elchinger, in an effort to protect her share of the community property, which she charges that her divorced husband, together with his two atmts, Mrs. Emily J. Elchinger Koretke and Mrs. Henrietta Elchinger Foster, are attempting to deprive her of by collusion.

“There was no hearing had on the merits, but the trial judge maintained an exception of no cause or right of action. All of the well-pleaded allegations of fact in plaintiff’s petition must therefore be accepted as true.

“A summary of appellant’s petition is -as follows:

“(1) She was divorced from her husband by judgment of the Civil District Court, which became final on September 15, 1939, thereby dissolving the community of acquets and gains, which she accepted.

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Related

A. Baldwin & Co. v. Scotty Stores, Inc.
7 So. 2d 156 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1942)
Foster v. F. H. Koretke Brass & Mfg. Co.
3 So. 2d 668 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
200 So. 314, 196 La. 962, 1941 La. LEXIS 997, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elchinger-v-fh-koretke-brass-mfg-co-la-1941.