Guardian Financing Co. v. Davidson

154 N.E. 743, 23 Ohio App. 143, 3 Ohio Law. Abs. 253, 1924 Ohio App. LEXIS 81
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 10, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 154 N.E. 743 (Guardian Financing Co. v. Davidson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guardian Financing Co. v. Davidson, 154 N.E. 743, 23 Ohio App. 143, 3 Ohio Law. Abs. 253, 1924 Ohio App. LEXIS 81 (Ohio Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

"Washburn, J.

In the court below, certain stockholders brought an action asking that a receiver be appointed to take charge of and operate the business of the Guardian Financing Company. The record discloses that before the petition was filed, and before any summons had been issued thereon, *144 and without any notice to any one, said petition was presented to a judge of the common pleas court, which judge granted the prayer of the petition and approved a journal entry appointing a receiver for said corporation.

Such petition and journal entry were then filed with the cleric, the bond of the receiver was filed, and a summons was later issued and served. The corporation very promptly made a motion to discharge the receiver, for the reason that the judge had no power to appoint a receiver, there being no suit pending at the time of such appointment, and for the further reason that the allegations of the petition were not such as to authorize the appointment of a receiver without notice and a hearing upon evidence. This motion was overruled and exceptions taken, and such ruling is before this court on error proceedings.

Upon the hearing of such motion, no evidence was taken as to any of the allegations of the petition, the only evidence being as to the time of the filing of the papers and the circumstances under which the court acted in appointing a receiver.

The appointment of a receiver under such circumstances, when no suit was pending, was clearly unauthorized and void, and the motion to discharge the receiver should have been promptly granted.

But it is said that the hearing on the motion and the court’s refusal to discharge the receiver amount, in substance, to the appointment of the receiver upon hearing, as of the time of the decision on said motion. That might be true if such hearing had been upon the question of whether or not a receiver should be appointed, in which hear *145 ing evidence was taken as to the allegations of the petition, but no such hearing was had, nor was there any opportunity afforded for any such hearing; the hearing was confined to the palpable irregularity of the appointment and argument as to the allegations of the petition.

We do not regard the action of the court on the motion as tantamount to the appointment of a receiver upon notice and upon due and proper hearing, nor as legalizing an absolutely void appointment.

But there is another reason why the motion to discharge the receiver should have been granted. The action was not one for the dissolution of a corporation, brought by virtue of and in accordance with the chapter of the statutes providing for the dissolution of corporations, Section 11938 et seq., General Code. Neither was it an action for the appointment of a receiver under either subdivision 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 of Section 11894, General Code. It was an action invoking the power of a court of equity, independent of any statute, and the appointment of the receiver was improper unless sanctioned by the usages of equity.

It is true that a court of equity has inherent jurisdiction to appoint receivers of a corporation, in a proper case, independent of statutory authorization, and that the appointment of a receiver according to the usages of equity is, as a general rule, discretionary; but such discretion cannot be exercised arbitrarily, and courts of equity are properly very reluctant to assume the responsibilities involved in the appointment of receivers of corporations, because it is a practical displacement of the board of directors.

*146 “It is an assumption of the functions of the directors. It displaces the hoard of managers placed there by the stockholders, who sustain the relation of trustees for the stockholders, trustees for the corporation, and trustees for its creditors; and before the court will take charge of the corporation and thus displace its chosen directors and managers, it ought to have the clearest evidence of the absolute necessity for such extraordinary action for the protection of the creditors, stockholders, and all parties concerned. It is no slight matter for a court of chancery to lay its hand upon large business enterprises, take them out of the control of capacity and experience, and charge them with expenses and commissions. It should only be done when the court can point to the specific allegation or allegations, sustained by creditable evidence, that will justify such action.” 4 Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, Section 1538.

“It is not the province of a court of equity to take possession of the property and conduct the business of corporations or individuals, except where the exercise of such extraordinary jurisdiction is indispensably necessary to save or protect some clear.right of a suitor, which would otherwise be lost or greatly endangered, and which cannot be saved or protected by any other action or mode of proceeding.” Overton, Trustee, v. Memphis & Little Rock Rd. Co. (C. C.), 10 F., 866.

Moreover, “unless authorized by statute, there is no such thing as an action brought distinctly for the mere appointment of a receiver; to justify the appointment it is essential that some proper final relief in equity be asked for in the bill which will *147 justify the court in proceeding with the case.” 4 Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, Section 1539.

Without referring to the allegations of the petition in the case at bar, we think that if the facts alleged afford ground for any equitable relief separate and distinct from the appointment of a receiver, such relief is the ultimate dissolution of the corporation, and there is no allegation that the corporation is insolvent, or has forfeited its corporation rights, or that its dissolution will be beneficial to its stockholders and not injurious to the public interest, or that the objects of the corporation have wholly failed or been entirely abandoned, or that it is impracticable to accomplish such objects, some one or more of which allegations would be necessary in a statutory dissolution of the corporation; the provisions of the statutes not having been complied with, and the allegations of the petition not being sufficient to justify a dissolution of the corporation under the statutes, it would appear that the relief sought is distinctively for the mere appointment of a receiver to manage the corporation in the place of its directors; but if the petition can be-construed as stating facts entitling the stockholders bringing the action to some equitable relief, as to which the appointment of a receiver may be said to be ancillary, still, considering the petition as a whole, we do not think it sets forth a case where a court of equity is justified in taking over the management of the corporation.

The petition charges no misconduct against the present directors, nor does it connect them with the past wrongdoing of the president, and the allegations as to any threatened or contemplated future action are very meager and indefinite.

*148 “The principle must be borne in mind that a receivership is a preventative, not a punitive, measure.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 N.E. 743, 23 Ohio App. 143, 3 Ohio Law. Abs. 253, 1924 Ohio App. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guardian-financing-co-v-davidson-ohioctapp-1924.