Kokernot v. Roos

189 S.W. 505, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 1040
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 18, 1916
DocketNo. 5815.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 189 S.W. 505 (Kokernot v. Roos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kokernot v. Roos, 189 S.W. 505, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 1040 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

ELY, C. J.

This is an appeal from an order appointing a receiver and granting a temporary injunction against R. L. Ball, the trustee in a deed of trust given by the Summit Place Company to secure H. D. Kokernot in the sum of $30,000, and Lee C. Ayers, trustee for a second mortgage, to restrain them from selling certain lots in Summit place, in the city of San Antonio. The suit was instituted by Edward Roos, claiming to be a creditor and the owner of 25 per cent, of the corporate stock of the Summit Place Company, against that company, Frederick Terrell, R. C. Roos, H. L. Kokernot, R. L. Ball, Lee C. Ayers, and R. E. Weber, receiver of the Continental Trust Company, to dissolve the Summit Place Company, alleged to be an insolvent corporation which had forfeited its right to do business by a failure to pay the franchise tax, to have a receiver for the corporation appointed, and for injunctions to restrain the sale of the lots of the corporation under and by virtue of the deeds of trust given by it. The petition was filed on September 4, 1916, notice was waived and service accepted by Frederick Terrell as vice president of the Summit Place Company, and R. C. Roos accepted service for himself, and on September 5, 1916, without hearing any evidence, the court appointed a receiver and issued temporary writs of injunction against Ball, Ayers, Kokernot, and Weber restraining sale of the lots. No notice was given them of any application for the appointment of a receiver or injunction. A bond of $5,000 was required of Edward Roos before issuing the injunction, but the record fails to disclose that such bond was ever given.

[1, 2] Article 1203 authorizes stockholders of any insolvent corporation who own 25 per cent, of the stock to institute and prosecute a suit for the dissolution of the corporation. The article closes as follows:

“It is further provided that any such corporation proceeded against shall have ten full days notice prior to the day set for the hearing, on an application for the appointment of a receiver.”

We think the proper construction of article 1203, Rev. Stats., is that no notice is required to be given a corporation by a stockholder or stockholders owning 25 per cent, of the stock who may seek to dissolve it, and that the provision “that any such corpora-. tion proceeded against shall have ten days’ full notice prior to the day set for hearing on an application for the appointment of a receiver” does not authorize the appointment of a receiver by such stockholders. This provision is merely a recognition of the fact that a stockholder, under certain conditions, might couple with his suit to dissolve a corporation an application for the appointment of a receiver, and, should he do so, he must give the corporation ten days’ notice. It was an effort to prevent the appointment of a receiver, under the circumstances, without the notice. There is no authority given a stockholder in article 1203, to apply for a receiver, but to obtain this authority he must go to article 2154 Revised Statutes, where it is provided that:

“Any stockholder or stockholders of such joint-stock or incorporated company may have his or their action against such company, and may have a receiver appointed as in ordinary cases.”

The article places the stockholder in the same class with a creditor or other individual, and his right to a receiver must then depend on’ his ability to bring himself within the purview of one of the subdivisions of article 2128, which define the circumstances under which a receiver may be appointed. It would not matter whether the stockholder had 25 or 1 per cent, of the stock of the company; if he could show that he was entitled to a receivership the law would accord it to him.

In this case a stockholder sued the corporation and sought its dissolution, joining with it an application for the appointment of a receiver. Process was waived and service accepted by the corporation, the only one to whom notice was necessary, under the statute. In connection with the allegation that the plaintiff was a stockholder and that the corporation was insolvent and had forfeited its corporate rights, it was alleged that it was indebted to him in the sum of $4,000.

[3] Article 2154 having placed the stockholder in the same category of any other creditor, the same rules will apply to both, and in the case of Railway v. Davis, 30 S. W. 693, this court held that it was not essential that the claim of a creditor “should have become a judgment, or that he should have an express lien upon the property of the corporation.” He must, however, have a claim.

Again, in the case of People’s Inv. Co. v. Crawford, 45 S. W. 738, it was held by this court, in passing upon the application by stockholders for the appointment of a receiver, that:

“A stockholder seeking the appointment of a receiver for a corporation on the ground of insolvency, or imminent danger thereof, must show, to entitle himself to such appointment, that he has a cause of action against the corporation, independently of the receivership, that the corporation is insolvent, or in imminent danger thereof, and that his interest as such stockholder requires the appointment to be made.”

*507 The only allegation as to the indebtedness of the corporation is:

“That said Summit Place Company is indebted to this plaintiff in the sum of $4,000.”

Other indebtedness is also alleged to other parties. There is no prayer for a judgment against the corporation for the indebtedness, and it is evident the object of the suit was not to recover any sum against the corporation, but merely to throw it into the hands of a receiver and delay the collection of a first lien debt due to H. L. Kokernot. As said in Style v. Lantrip, 171 S. W. 786, speaking of the appointment of a receiver:

“The exercise of such appointing power is purely auxiliary, depending upon the pendency of a suit, seeking some other and ultimate relief, which is within the jurisdiction of the court.” Webb v. Allen, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 605, 40 S. W. 342; Hermann v. Thomas, 143 S. W. 195; Railway v. Gay, 86 Tex. 582, 26 S. W. 599, 25 L. R. A. 52; High on Rec. § 17.
“It is not only essential that the petition should state grounds calling for the appointment of the receiver to take charge of the property involved in the litigation, but it should also sho'w upon its face an independent cause of action within the jurisdiction of the court.”

That case was approved by this court in Toomey v. Mortgage Co., 177 S. W. 540.

In the case of Houston lee & Brewing Co. v. Clint, 159 S. W. 409, speaking of the appointment of a receiver at the instance of a second lienholder, this court held:

“In this case the applicant for the receivership had no interest in the property except in so far as there might be a surplus after paying off the first lien, and he had no right, and could not be endowed with the right by the court, to needlessly sacrifice the property of the first lien-holder. Under the allegations of the petition for the receivership, the court should not have entertained the suit, which could result in nothing but an impairment or sacrifice of the mortgaged property.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 S.W. 505, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 1040, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kokernot-v-roos-texapp-1916.