Indianapolis MacHinery Co. v. Curd

221 N.E.2d 340, 247 Ind. 657, 1966 Ind. LEXIS 425
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 16, 1966
Docket30,929
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 221 N.E.2d 340 (Indianapolis MacHinery Co. v. Curd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Indianapolis MacHinery Co. v. Curd, 221 N.E.2d 340, 247 Ind. 657, 1966 Ind. LEXIS 425 (Ind. 1966).

Opinion

Arterburn, J.

This is an appeal from the appointment without notice of a receiver of the assets of the Indianapolis Machinery Co., Inc. Profit Sharing Trust and the Indianapolis Machinery Co., Inc. Profit Sharing Plan. The Plan and the Trust were established in 1952 by the Indianapolis Machinery Co., Inc. for the benefit of its employees and officers upon retirement. Its assets are now in excess of half a million dollars. The written articles of both the Plan and the Trust provided that the board of directors of the employer company should appoint the original management committee and trustees and any successors thereto.

On February 16, 1966 the plaintiffs and appellees herein, claiming to be beneficiaries under the Trust and Plan, filed in the Superior Court of Marion County a verified complaint asking for an accounting, the termination of the Trust and the Plan, the appointment of a receiver pendente lite and without notice, and for reasonable attorney fees and costs.

At the time of the filing of the verified complaint the Superior Court of Marion County entered an order appointing a receiver without notice upon the verified complaint, and also entered an order fixing the 7th day of March, 1966 “at which time the defendants and each of them shall have an opportunity to show cause, if any, why this court’s appointment . . . should not be continued. . . .” The appellants have perfected an appeal from this appointment without notice.

*660 A motion to dismiss the appeal was filed, based on the ground that the appellants have no right to appeal from an order appointing a receiver without notice. Acts 1881 (Spec. Sess.), ch. 38, § 254, p. 240, being Burns’ Ind. Stat. Anno. §3-2603 (1946 Repl.) provides:

“. . . in all cases ... in which a receiver may be appointed or refused the party aggrieved may, within ten days thereafter, appeal from the decision of the court to the Supreme Court, without awaiting the final determination of such case. . . .”

1 Clark, The Law and Practice of Receivers, Sec. 126.4 (3d ed. 1959) seems to indicate that where an order appointing a receiver is “tentative and does not represent the settled action of the court” it is not appealable. However, this statement does not take into consideration a statute such as we have in this State.

In Fagan, etc., et al. v. Clark et al. (1958), 238 Ind. 22, 27, 148 N. E. 2d 407, 410 we had under consideration the point of time at which the ten-day period began to run for an appeal from the appointment of a receiver. We held there that where notice is given and a hearing is had, that the ten-day period is “calculated from the date of the hearing after notice.” That does not necessarily, however, exclude the right to an appeal from an order made without notice and without an opportunity of the opposing party to be heard. We said in the Fagan case:

“It would be a sad state of affairs indeed if we should hold that a party against whom a receiver has been appointed without notice has no remedy by way of appeal if the ten day period expires following the appointment before he learns of the receivership or before he has had an adequate opportunity to be heard, yet this seems to be the rationale of appellees’ motion to dismiss this appeal.”

*661 *660 It is urged that the above case and the case of Welfare Loan Society v. Seward (1923), 193 Ind. 541, 141 N. E. 221 *661 should be distinguished from the present case before us, since in those cases the court, in its order appointing a receiver without notice, did not fix a time for notice and a prompt hearing. With this contention we cannot agree, except to say that it unquestionably is error for a trial court to appoint a receiver without notice and fix no time whatever for a prompt notice and hearing. Such were the facts in the two cases above. However, even if the court does provide for notice and a prompt hearing in its order of appointment without notice, the aggrieved party may appeal. The statute in no way limits the right to appeal to either the order made without notice or the order made after notice.

We recognize that it might be more prudent or practical in most cases for the aggrieved party to insist upon a prompt and early hearing on the petition for the appointment of a receiver, and even make a motion in court to dissolve the order of appointment without notice before perfecting an appeal, because if, pending the appeal for the order of appointment without notice, the trial court does hold a hearing and after such notice and hearing, either refuses to appoint or appoints a receiver, the issue on the appeal from the order without notice might thereupon become moot.

If the trial court delays or fails to grant a prompt hearing after notice, the aggrieved party, upon demand and refusal, could mandate a prompt hearing from which an appeal could be taken. Be that as it may, however, as we view the statute on appeals in this case, the appellant has the right “in all cases” if he so desires, to appeal from the order appointing a receiver, running the risk that the appeal might be moot before its final determination in this Court.

In this case, although the court fixed a date of hearing after notice for March 7, 196'6, there is no showing in the record that there has been any hearing on the merits of the petition for the appointment of a receiver pendente lite. Incidentally, it is urged that the notice in this case is *662 one “to show cause,” which places the burden on the defendant to resist the appointment. Although the notice may not be in proper form, it is sufficient, and it cannot and does not shift the burden of proof from the petitioner below. Stair v. Meissel (1934), 207 Ind. 280, 192 N. E. 453.

For the reasons stated, the motion to dismiss the appeal in this case was overruled.

We come now to the question of whether there was sufficient cause for the appointment of a receiver without notice, and in the consideration of this question we must confine ourselves to the verified complaint or application for the appointment of a receiver pendente lite.

Acts 1881 (Spec. Sess.), ch. 38, §253, p. 240, being Burns’ Ind. Stat. Anno. §3-2602 (1946 Repl.) provides:

“Receivers shall not be appointed, either in term or vacation, in any case, until the adverse party shall have appeared, or shall have had reasonable notice of the application for such appointment, except upon sufficient cause shown by affidavit.”

Relief by a receivership is an extraordinary remedy and radical in nature. Courts do not look with favor upon such remedies. A plain and clear case must be exhibited for such relief. In the case before us this reasoning is all the more compelling, since the receiver was appointed — not after a hearing — but instead without notice.

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Bluebook (online)
221 N.E.2d 340, 247 Ind. 657, 1966 Ind. LEXIS 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indianapolis-machinery-co-v-curd-ind-1966.