Santa Fé, S. J. &. N. R. R. v. Helmick

9 P.2d 695, 36 N.M. 157
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 1932
DocketNo. 3764.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 P.2d 695 (Santa Fé, S. J. &. N. R. R. v. Helmick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Santa Fé, S. J. &. N. R. R. v. Helmick, 9 P.2d 695, 36 N.M. 157 (N.M. 1932).

Opinion

SADDER, J.

This is an original application in this court for prohibition against the district court of the Second judicial district sitting within and for Sandoval county, and Milton J. Helmick, as judge thereof. Petitioner is a New Mexico corporation heretofore operating a short line of railway between the towns of San Xsidro and Tilden in Sandoval county. On October 14, 1931, pursuant to a complaint filed by one J. G. Cleary, the district court aforesaid appointed a temporary receiver of said line of railway to take charge of and operate the same for the purpose of determining whether it could be operated without an ultimate loss. Later, and upon notice to petitioner, the receivership was by court order continued and made permanent for the purposes thereof.

Cleary, the applicant for appointment of said receiver, alleged himself to be a stockholder of San Juan Coal & Coke Company, operating a coal mine on said line of railway, the continued operation of which was essential, as alleged, to afford an outlet for its coal. He further alleged petitioner was a common carrier lying wholly within this state, functioning under a franchise or charter granted by the state to operate said railroad ; that it had never surrendered its charter, nor made application to the State Corporation Commission for consent to discontinue operations, but had wholly abandoned and discontinued the operation of said railroad.

Petitioner herein did not appear to the complaint, and the temporary receiver was appointed without proper notice to it as appears from the undenied allegations of the petition for prohibition. However, the order continuing and perpetuating the receivership, entered November 17, 1931, recites proper notice and nonappearance of petitioner. In fact, it is admitted that petitioner has never appeared in the receivership proceedings, at least up to the time of filing its petition herein.

In addition to appointing a receiver upon said complaint as aforesaid, the court also in the same order enjoined the petitioner from exercising any of its corporate privileges or franchises and from collecting or receiving any debts, or paying out, selling, assigning, or interfering with any of its estate, moneys, funds, lands, tenements, or effects, until the court should otherwise order.

On December 28, 1931, upon an ex parte application filed in said cause by the receiver aforesaid, alleging that none of the books and records of petitioner had been delivered to him, the court ordered one T. P. Gallagher, charged as being in possession of same, to deliver the books, records, papers, minutes of the board of directors, stock books, or other books and records of petitioner, into the receiver’s hands, or within three days after service of said order to show cause before the court why he had not done so. On the same day, whether by reason of a disclaimer of possession by Gallagher of said records or otherwise does not appear, the receiver filed a separate application averring the nondelivery of said records to him, and that he was unable to ascertain who had the physical possession of the same, and praying an order directed to the sheriff commanding him to take possession of such records wherever found and deliver them to the receiver. This application was not acted upon, and the return day of the order to show cause issued against Gallagher had not expired, when the petition herein was filed.

The court also on the same day, December 28, 1931, upon the written application of the receiver filed in said cause, and ex parte, authorized the issuance of receiver’s certificates in an amount not to exceed $10,000 to constitute a lien on the property of petitioner coming into the receiver’s hands, for the purpose of obtaining revenue to operate said railroad and to pay claims properly and legally incurred in the operation and maintenance thereof.

At this point in the history of said cause, our alternative writ of prohibition, issued upon petitioner’s application, staying further proceedings in the trial court looking to the enforcement of the injunction against petitioner exercising its corporate privileges and franchises, restraining the enforcement against Gallagher or any other officer or agent of petitioner, of the order to produce and deliver said books and records, and also staying any further steps looking to the issuance or authorization of said receiver’s certificates.

' It requires but a casual reading of the complaint in the receivership proceeding to disclose that the plaintiff therein invoked the remedy provided by section 116-406, Comp. 1929, being section 6, eh. 200, Laws 1921. The respondents concede this. It is quite as apparent that the injunctive portion of the order appointing a receiver, in which petitioner among other things is enjoined from exercising any of its corporate privileges and franchises, is at least referable to section 32-174, Comp. 1929, being a portion of the relief permissible upon proceeding against a corporation under the Corporation Insolvency Act. Petitioner takes the position that, since the complaint in receivership discloses that the plaintiff therein was proceeding under said section 116-406, the receivership is a limited one instituted for the single purpose of ascertaining whether the railroad may be operated without ultimate loss, and subject to the specific statutory injunction that such receiver may not sell or dispose of the property; that since ¡receiver’s certificates are to create a lien on the property in satisfaction of which it could ultimately be sold, to permit their issuance might result in the indirect accomplishment of something which the receiver is prohibited directly from doing. It further contends that the court was without power to compel the production and delivery to the receiver of the books and records of petitioner, and that the injunctive portion of the order appointing receiver represents an attempted exercise by the court of an excess of jurisdiction, not fairly within the scope of the facts set up in the complaint, or the relief sought as disclosed by its prayer.

The decision in one aspect, therefore, turns upon a proper construction of section 116-406, Comp. 1929, authorizing a district court upon the conditions therein named to appoint a receiver of a railroad property for the purpose of determining whether it may be operated without ultimate loss. May such a receiver under any circumstances incumber the property for the purpose of conducting the experiment authorized? In another aspect the decision will involve a determination of whether the court’s orders enjoining the exercise by petitioner of corporate functions, and directing the delivery to the receiver of the corporate books and records relating to the railroad, represent an attempt,ed exercise by the court of an excess of jurisdiction. We shall decide these points in the order of their statement just made.

It would go without saying that, in so far as petitioner questions the order authorizing receiver’s certificates for want of notice thereon to interested parties, a serious question is presented. 1 Elliott on Railroads (3d Ed.) § 6S0. Counsel for respondents does not seek to sustain the court’s power to make such order against this defect, and announces that nó sale of receiver’s certificates will be had or attempted, except as based on proper application and due notice thereon.

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Related

Atchison, T. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. State Corp. Commission
95 P.2d 676 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
9 P.2d 695, 36 N.M. 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/santa-fe-s-j-n-r-r-v-helmick-nm-1932.