Miller v. Kitchen

103 N.W. 297, 73 Neb. 711, 1905 Neb. LEXIS 120
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1905
DocketNo. 13,693
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 103 N.W. 297 (Miller v. Kitchen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Kitchen, 103 N.W. 297, 73 Neb. 711, 1905 Neb. LEXIS 120 (Neb. 1905).

Opinion

Letton, C.

This is an appeal from an interlocutory decree appointing a receiver in a stockholder’s suit. The plaintiff, Rome Miller, is a stockholder in the Kitchen Brothers Hotel Company, and brings the action against James B. Kitchen, as president, and the corporation itself, alleging fraud and mismanagement on the part of the officers of the corporation and praying for an accounting and a receiver, but not asking to wind up the corporate affairs. The findings of fact upon which the receiver was appointed are substantially, though much abridged, as follows: Kitchen Brothers Hotel Company is the owner of certain hotel property in the city of Omaha known as the Paxton Hotel, with a capital stock of 500 shares of a par value of $1,000 each. In June, 1890, all of the stock of said corporation was owned by the defendant, James B. Kitchen, and his brother, Richard Kitchen, each owning 250 shares. Richard Kitchen died on the 29th day of June, 1890. Part of his shares of stock were bequeathed to various relatives and legatees and the balance of the shares, being 157 in number, were sold under a decree of the probate court to one Perkins, who sold the same on the 3d day of June, 1901, to the plaintiff, Rome Miller. Elizabeth Whalen, who intervened in the action to participate in the relief granted plaintiff, is the owner of five shares of stock acquired under the will of Richard Kitchen. The defendant, James B. Kitchen, owns 2931 shares of stock and ten other per[713]*713sons own shares of stock varying in number from one to 13-8-. Ever since the death of Richard Kitchen, the defendant, James B. Kitchen, has had the absolute control and management of the affairs of the corporation, and has caused to be selected as directors, George E. Pritchett, his attorney, J. J. Points, his bookkeeper, Ralph Kitchen, his nephqjv, and Elizabeth Kitchen, his wife, having given to each of said parties, except Ralph Kitchen, a share of stock to qualify them to act as directors. The court found further that the defendant James B. Kitchen has controlled the affairs of the company for his own personal interest without any regard whatever for the interests of the other stockholders; that no stockholders’ meetings have been called; that he has executed leases of his OAvn property to the corporation for large and extravagant rental; that he has carelessly permitted the books of the company to be lost or destroyed, and has kept the books in such a manner that they fail to shoAV the correct amount of receipts and disbursements of said company; that he has received large sums of money for AAdiich he has not accounted, and has caused to be conveyed to himself certain real estate* of the company for a grossly inadequate consideration; .that he caused to be sold to the company certain premises belonging to him individually, adjoining the hotel upon the Avest, at an excessive price, and executed a mortgage to himself as an individual upon the hotel property to secure deferred payments upon the same; that for many years the profits of the business have been large and that the defendant has failed to satisfactorily account therefor. As a conclusion the court finds that ever since the death of Richard Kitchen, the defendant James B. Kitchen has converted the properties and profits of the corporation to his individual use to the injury and loss of all the other stockholders, and finds that if he is permitted to continue in the control and possession of the assets and affairs of the corporation great and irreparable injury to the rights of the other stockholders will ensue.

The appellants have not pointed out specifically wherein [714]*714the findings of the district court are not supported by the facts in evidence. They say that the evidence fails to establish the allegations of the petition in regard to misconduct of the defendant Kitchen. They further contend that since the only complaints are that an excessive salary was paid to the president, that too much was paid for the property leased or purchased by the corporation, and that Kitchen has possession of funds belonging to the company, there is no necessity for the appointment of a receiver.

On the other hand, appellee’s contention is that since there has been a continuous course of fraud and mismanagement as respects the stockholders carried on by the defendant for a long period of years, and since he has concealed or destroyed the books of the corporation and covered up the assets, he will continue in this wrongful course of action if permitted to retain the management and control of the property, and that hence it should be taken from him and put into a receiver’s hands.

While the enormous growth and extension of corporate affairs within the last quarter of a century has largely augmented the volume of actions in which the appointment of a receiver is prayed as regarding corporate property and corporate affairs, and while some courts have in the past been inclined to go to an extreme length in asserting the power of a court of chancery over the direction and management, of the affairs of corporations, still the tendency of the more modern decisions is to return to the safe and settled principles established in the past, and to refuse to interfere by such appointment unless absolutely necessary to do complete justice. “A receiver will not readily be appointed in a suit by a stockholder to remedy the frauds or ultra vires acts of the directors or of the corporation itself. The court will not injure the whole enterprise in order to correct a wrong done to the enterprise. Other. remedies will be applied.” 3 Oook, Corporations (5th ed.), sec. 863. The officers of a corporation are trustees for the benefit of its stockholders. To them has been committed the direction of the corporate affairs. Where [715]*715fraud or mismanagement by them is charged, it is only’ where the ordinary remedies are inadequate, or where the assets of the corporation are liable to be squandered or dissipated, or the business of the corporation injured or destroyed, or for the purpose of winding up the affairs of the corporation that a court will be justified in taking from the owners thereof the management and direction of the corporate affairs, and assuming such management and direction itself through the hands of its receiver. Beach, Receivers (Alderson’s ed.), sec. 424.

It appears from the evidence that the Kitchen Brothers Hotel Company is the owner and is engaged in the management of the Paxton Hotel in the city of Omaha, which is a large and valuable property; that this business has been successfully and profitably conducted ever since the death of Richard Kitchen and that it is at this time a profitable and going concern. No complaint is made but that the highest skill and most profitable management have been exercised so far as the hotel business itself is concerned. The property has been kept in good repair, the business has been profitable, and there is no complaint that the good will is suffering or that property of the corporation used in the business itself is being lost or destroyed. No contention is made but that the defendant Kitchen is amply able to respond financially to any judgment or decree which may be rendered against him in this action, and no claim is made in the petition that either the corporation itself or the defendant Kitchen are insolvent. The question then presented for our consideration is whether, in order to afford the plaintiff complete relief from the wrongs Avliich he charges that he, in common with other stockholders, has suffered, it is necessary to take the management and control of the business away from the corporation itself and vest it in the hands of a receiver.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 N.W. 297, 73 Neb. 711, 1905 Neb. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-kitchen-neb-1905.