Mansfield Hardwood Lumber Company v. Hattie A. Johnson

242 F.2d 45, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 2759
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 1, 1957
Docket16344
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 242 F.2d 45 (Mansfield Hardwood Lumber Company v. Hattie A. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mansfield Hardwood Lumber Company v. Hattie A. Johnson, 242 F.2d 45, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 2759 (5th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Chief Judge.

Filed on the 21st day of June, 1956, by appellees as former stockholders of the defendant, a corporation in liquidation, the suit was for the rescission of the sales to it by them of their shares aggregating 1156, and for an accounting.

Put forward in a lengthy complaint, the claim in brief was: that the company, through its president and vice-president, had fraudulently conceived and as fraudulently executed a scheme by and through which it had induced plaintiffs to sell their stock in the company for $400 a share, an insignificant part of the $2000 a share which it *46 was alleged was its true value; that the corporation was in liquidation, had already distributed to the stockholders, as shown on its books, large amounts of cash and was about to distribute to them its remaining cash and to convey to them its title to undivided mterest m reserved minerals; that, unless a preliminary injunction was issued to hold matters m status quo, the defendant would divest itself of all its assets and properties and would thereby defeat, or at least seriously embarrass and delay, satisfaction of plaintiffs claims. The prayer was for an interlocutory injunction and on final hearing that the sales be rescinded and a full accounting be made to them as stockholders.

The defendant moved to dismiss the complaint for: failure to state a claim; failure to allege a prior tender; laches; and failure to join as indispensable parties the two officers referred to and the other stockholders. Subject to its motion, it filed a verified answer, denying all the allegations of fraud and overreaching, and alleging ratification of their sales by two of the plaintiffs and laches by all of them in not sooner bringing the action.

The district judge issued a temporary restraining order maintaining the status quo and renewed it from time to time until August 10, 1956, when, in a lengthy opinion, reported in 143 F. Supp. at page 826, he fully canvassed and decided adversely to it the grounds put forward in. defendant’s motion to dismiss. On the basis of this decision and the supplemental reasons later filed by him on September 17th, he issued the preliminary injunction 1 which is the subject of this appeal,

In compiete disregard of the prineiple that the appeal from the in_ terlocutory injunction did not bring up the cauge ag a whole and that „the case> except for the hearing on the appeal from interlocutory order, is to proceed in the lower court as though no such appeal had been taken, unless otherwise specially ordered,” Ex Parte National Enameiing & Stamping Co., 201 U.S. 156, 26 S.Ct. 404, 406, 50 L.Ed. 707; Lea v. Vasco Pro., Inc., 5 Cir., 81 F.2d 1011. Douglass v. Pan-American Bus Lines, 5 Cir., 81 F.2d 222, 223; the defendant, instead of “pressing the cause to trial on its merits”, and then bringing them up, Douglass v. Pan-American, supra, 81 F.2d at page 225, while he presents here the sole issue available to it on this appeal, that the interlocutory injunction was improvidently and inequitably granted, has come here with a seventy-five page brief, with nearly fifty pages of it devoted to a discussion of the court’s ruling on the motion to dismiss, which is not before us for decision.

We recognize, of course, that “if insuperable objection to maintaining the bill clearly appears, it may be dismissed and the litigation terminated”, Deckert v. Independent Corp., 311 U.S. 282, 287, 61 S.Ct. 229, 232, 85 L.Ed. 189. Here, however, instead of determining whether *47 the injunction was improvidently granted, the defendant is undertaking to have this court determine whether the order denying the motion to dismiss was rightly entered, 2 an entirely different thing which is not before us.

The district judge, reserving until the trial his final opinion on the merits, 3 in a thorough-going effort to deal adequately with the motion to dismiss for the purpose of determining in connection with the prayer for a preliminary injunction whether it contained allegations which, if proved, entitled plaintiffs to some equitable relief, made it quite clear in his opinion: that substantial questions of law and fact existed; and that, on a balancing of conveniences, the complainants would suffer irreparable loss if the injunction did not issue, while defendant, if it did, would not. We regard the principle declared in the Mytinger case, supra, 215 F.2d at page 383:

“On appeal from decree from preliminary injunction sole issue before court was whether district court abused discretion, and merits of controversy would be left open for further consideration and future determination.” (Emphasis supplied.)

as correct and controlling here, and agreeing with the district judge that the case should not have been dismissed for want of indispensable parties, 4 we will not therefore attempt to deal with or consider the first question presented in the briefs, whether the court erred in denying the motion to dismiss, but will direct our attention to and consider only the second question discussed, whether, as claimed by appellant, the district court, in granting the interlocutory decree, transcended its powers or abused its equitable discretion.

An examination of the record, in the light of the briefs and arguments ox the parties, convinces us that the district judge did not exceed his powers in granting the injunction, and that he did not act other than, as a chancellor, he had a right to act — indeed ought to have acted. Though the district judge was troubled and did express grave concern over the form of the injunction, after full and careful consideration he concluded, and we agree, that, under the facts of this case, it was necessary, in order to preserve the equities and rights of the parties, for it to take the form it did.

In other circumstances than those prevailing here, it might well have seemed improvident, on a prayer for preliminary relief, to issue a manda *48 tory injunction, divesting the corporation of its remaining undistributed properties. We think it clear, however, for the reasons hereafter briefly stated, that, under the undisputed facts in this case, the injunction, though mandatory in form, did nothing more in fact and in law than, but exactly the same as, the restraining orders had done, preserve the status quo, and that, under the peculiar facts, its issuance was not beyond, but well within, the equity powers of the court.

When the suit was filed, the defendant, was in process of active liquidation under a plan to distribute all of its assets.

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Bluebook (online)
242 F.2d 45, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 2759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mansfield-hardwood-lumber-company-v-hattie-a-johnson-ca5-1957.