Grohoma Growers Ass'n v. Tomlinson

1938 OK 32, 76 P.2d 404, 182 Okla. 17, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 43
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 18, 1938
DocketNo. 27437.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1938 OK 32 (Grohoma Growers Ass'n v. Tomlinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grohoma Growers Ass'n v. Tomlinson, 1938 OK 32, 76 P.2d 404, 182 Okla. 17, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 43 (Okla. 1938).

Opinion

CORN, J.

This presents an appeal from an order of the district court of Oklahoma county refusing to vacate the appointment of a receiver and approving receiver’s report. The plaintiffs in error were defendants below and the defendants in error were plaintiffs, and will hereafter be referred to as in the trial court.

March 15. 1930, Fred Groff, R. I). Rum-sey, and C. V. Stuart entered into a declaration of trust which was recorded July 18, 1930. By the terms of this agreement the parties formed the Grohoma Growers Association, with' themselves as trustees, for the expressed purpose of dealing in a certain grain known as “Grohoma,” which had first been produced by Groff.

Briefly, the plan of operation was as follows : The association sold seed to anyone desiring to plant it. The purchaser could then enter an agreement under contract with the association whereby, for each acre of land planted to the, seed, one unit certificate was issued to him. By the terms of this contract all seed produced was to be turned over to the association and -marketed by it for the benefit of the unit holders, according to the unit- interest they held in the whole.

The product was new and unknown, and it was necessary to conduct an extensive selling campaign. Sales fell short of expectations and the trustees realized they'had more seed on hand than could be sold. For this reason a resolution was purported to have been adopted whereby unit holders could •withdraw grain- from the association, in proportion to what they had put in.

Being dissatisfied with the arrangement, and having knowledge of certain other circumstances relative to the way in which affairs of the association were being handled by the trustees, the plaintiffs, on April 24, 1931, filed their petition alleging that Stuart and Rumsey, a majority of the trustees, were mismanaging the trust estate, dissipating the proceeds, and incurring indebtedness in the name of the association to such an extent that the entire business was in great danger of being lost; that the trustees in charge refused to account or to allow Groff, the other trustee, to have access to the records to investigate conditions of the association, and praying for the immediate appointment of a receiver. April 24, 1931, the district court ordered the appointment of E. R. Bradfield, and ordered him to take over the control and management of the association.

May 21, 1931, the defendants answered, denying the allegations and alleging that the association had assets which would far exceed all indebtedness. At the same time the defendants filed a motion to vacate the receiver’s appointment.

The receiver made application and was ordered to take charge of certain seed in Arkansas which Stuart alleged to have been his own, and also of two trucks standing in his wife’s name, but which it was alleged he had purchased with the association’s assets. Also, the receiver set up that large *18 quantities of seed had been shipped into Illinois and Tennessee and the parties holding the same refused to recognize the receiver. The court ordered him to take possession of such property and seed ancl to advance funds of the association as attorney’s fees for handling these matters.

At this point the defendant Giblet intervened, pleading that he had loaned the association $o,000, and that the association had assigned him a portion of the proceeds from the sale of seed shipped out of the state on consignment contracts. Under this arrangement only $750 had been paid upon these two notes, which were guaranteed by Stuart and Rumsey.

The defendants’ motion to vacate appointment of . the receiver had not been heard when the court granted the receiver’s application to proceed to Texas to bring suit there for recovery of seed alleged to belong to the association. This was done, the action being filed in the nam'e of the plaintiffs, rather than in the receiver’s name, and all expenses were paid out of the association’s funds.

On December 7, 1931, the court ordered the removal of Bradfield and the appointment of H. G. Provines as receiver, and on April 13, 1932, the court appointed a referee, to hear evidence and examine into the entire matter, and to report his findings to the court. Pursuant to such order the first hearing was held July 28, 1932, after which the referee made certain findings. However, no record of the testimony at this hearing was taken. The cause was continued from time to time until August 16, 1932, at which time objections to his report came on for hearing.

May 8, 1934, the referee filed his second amended report and a day was set for hearing defendants’ motion to confirm same. The matter was heard, and upon objections to the report, filed by R. E. Tomlinson, 'one of the plaintiffs, the trial court ordered a rehearing of the. matter. This was begun September 21, 1934, and at this hearing a record was made. September 12, 1935, the referee filed findings of fact and conclusions of law. to which the defendants and Brad-field excepted, and on May 11, 193G, a journal entry of judgment was entered in the district court of Oklahoma county sustaining all findings except those numbered 11, 12, 18, and conclusions of law No. 3, to which the court sustained Bradfield’s objection; overruled other objections to the referee’s report, approved the finding that appointment of the receiver was proper, and ordered that there be judgment against the defendants for costs.

Prom this judgment the defendants appeal, setting up seven propositions upon which they base their claim for reversal of • the trial court’s judgment sustaining the referee’s report. To facilitate the presenting of this opinion and because of the greát amount of closely related circumstances upon which the argument rests, these propositions will be combined and condensed wherever feasible.

The first proposition contended for by the defendants is that the judgment and decree of the trial court confirming the referee’s report is erroneous and void, in that no action was pending between the plaintiffs and defendants and the petition for appointment did not seek any primary relief or final judgment between the parties; therefore, the court being without jurisdiction to appoint a receiver, all acts and proceedings of the receiver were therefore void.

This proposition is based upon the claims that the petition did not allege insolvency of the association, and that there was no adequate remedy at law; that the relief asked whs insufficient to entitle plaintiffs to a receiver, and that the existing circumstances did not amount to an extreme emergency so that a receiver could be appointed without notice.

While true that insolvency was not alleged, this is reasonably explained in that Stuart and Rumsey, a majority of the trustees, effectively managed to prevent their cotrustee and the stockholders from knowing the true conditions of the business. Nor is particular attention to be paid to the argument that there was no allegation of a lack of an adequate remedy at law. The two trustees who so willingly managed the entire affairs of the association apparently concealed the affairs so that the plaintiffs could not know the real state of things. In truth, they were kept so much in the dark that they could scarcely be expected to know what kind of 'an action to bring or what relief to ask for.

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Bluebook (online)
1938 OK 32, 76 P.2d 404, 182 Okla. 17, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grohoma-growers-assn-v-tomlinson-okla-1938.