State Ex Rel. Burris v. Tower Management Corp.

401 P.2d 575, 145 Mont. 448, 1965 Mont. LEXIS 489
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 6, 1965
Docket10956
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 401 P.2d 575 (State Ex Rel. Burris v. Tower Management Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Burris v. Tower Management Corp., 401 P.2d 575, 145 Mont. 448, 1965 Mont. LEXIS 489 (Mo. 1965).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE JAMES T. HARRISON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

*449 This is an original proceeding. Relator on April 19, 1965, applied to this court for a writ of supervisory control, or other appropriate writ, alleging that he was the assignee of a judgment entered on September 2, 1964, in the district court of Cascade County in an action wherein First Westside Bank of Great Falls was plaintiff and Tower Management Corporation was defendant; that after entry of the judgment the individual respondents herein on September 9, 1964, filed a motion for leave to intervene and annexed thereto a proposed answer; that relator on January 15, 1965, filed his assignment of judgment and applied for issuance of a writ of execution and the respondent court ordered such writ to issue, and on this same date relator petitioned for appointment of a receiver pending the execution sale to protect the sole asset of the Tower Management Corporation; that an order to show cause was issued by the respondent court directed to the Tower Management Corporation and petitioning intervenors, requiring them to show cause on January 19, 1965, why a receiver should not be appointed. Further, that on January 18, 1965, the petitioning intervenors again moved for leave to intervene to (1) stay execution, and (2) participate in the proceedings looking towards the appointment of a receiver; that at the hearing on January 19th the respondent court indicated it would grant intervention and' stay execution; that thereafter and on February 5, 1965, the respondent court entered an order granting intervention, staying execution, appointing a receiver, fixing bond on the stay of execution, and fixing the bond of the receiver.

Further, that by reason of such order, alleged to be error within jurisdiction from which no appeal lies, relator is precluded from satisfying his judgment out of the assets of the corporation; that the bond staying execution was in the sum of $10,000 and inadequate to protect relator; and that the entry of the order granting intervention constitutes a gross *450 abuse of discretion and a gross injustice and inequity to the relator.

Upon the application, annexed exhibits, and following ex parte presentation by counsel for relator, this court issued its order to show cause, directing that the respondent district court appear and show cause, if any it had, why the order of February 5, 1965, should not be declared erroneous and void. .We further ordered that copies thereof be served upon counsel for the Tower Management Corporation and the petitioning intervenors, who were namd as respondents. At the hearing upon the order to show cause the respondent court and the intervening respondents appeared by brief and argument, contending that the action of the court was within its discretion and was proper in the circumstances existing.

It appears from the transcript of the proceedings before the district court on January 19, 1965, that the respondent court took judicial notice of the records, files and proceedings in two cases tried before it and now on appeal here, both having been briefed, argued and submitted for decision, being Cause No. 10809, Thisted v. Country Club Tower Corporation and Cause No. 10840, Thisted v. Tower Management Corporation.

The first of these actions, Cause No. 10809, was a declaratory judgment action involving the construction of certain instruments between the plaintiffs and Country Club Tower Corporation, et al. The second, referred to in this cause as No. 58, 355C of the Cascade County District Court, being Cause No. 10840 of this court, involved the corporate proceedings of Tower Management Corporation, is directors and stockholders, with respect to the loan made by Tower Management Corporation through its directors, being the loan upon which the judgment here in question was entered. In that cause a judgment was entered against the petitioning intervenors in the sum of $24,252.41, being at least in part for one-half of the $45,000 loan which resulted in the judgment assigned to relator. To partially explain the. situation here, it should be said that the *451 petitioning intervenors own one-half or ten shares of the stock of Tower Management Corporation.

This corporation was formed to operate the Country Club Tower Apartment building; there are twenty shares of stock, one share to go to the owner of each of the twenty apartments in the building. The President of Tower Management Corporation owns one share, Highwood Corporation, controlled by the aforementioned President, owns one share, and relatives of his own one share, and seven shares are owned by Country Club Tower Corporation, a corporation also controlled by the President of Tower Management Corporation. Thus, the petitioning intervenors own ten shares and the other ten shares are owned or controlled by the President of the corporation, by virtue of the matters before stated.

This court is also aware that there was another action involving two apartment owners, one being a petitioning intervenor, the other the President of Tower Management Corporation, Cause No. 10922 of this court, which was also tried in the district court of Cascade County, Montana, and in which the transcript on appeal to this court was filed on April 12, 1965.

That the respondent court has been deeply involved in attempting to solve the difficulties between the Country Club Towers, Tower Management Corporation, and the various owners of apartments in the Country Club Towers is crystal clear from the record.

Also it appears that the loan was made by the Tower Management Corporation and the note executed by such corporation and signed by its President, who it is claimed has a conflict of interest in these various matters, and that he also guaranteed the note personally; that the suit upon the note was instituted solely against the Tower Management Corporation as defendant'; that such action was instituted on August 17, 1964, summons was served upon the President on August 17, 1964, such summons providing a period of twenty days in which to appear in such action; that on August 20, 1964, the *452 President on behalf of the corporation filed a verified answer admitting all the allegations of the complaint bnt denied that the attorneys’ fee requested was reasonable; counsel for the parties stipulated that the hearing of the case would be had on ■September 2,1964, but interestingly neither counsel were counsel who had represented either the defendant corporation or petitioning intervenors in previous litigation and judgment was ■entered on September 2, 1964. The motion for leave to intervene was filed on September 9, 1964, thereafter taken under advisement by the court and still remains under advisement.

Relator here is a lawyer residing in Los Angeles, California. The date of his assignment was December 4, 1964, but such assignment was not filed until January 15, 1965, long after the petition for leave to intervene for the purpose of filing an answer and defending the suit was filed and taken under advisement by the court.

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Related

Schell v. Peters
410 P.2d 152 (Montana Supreme Court, 1966)
Thisted v. Tower Management Corporation
409 P.2d 813 (Montana Supreme Court, 1966)

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Bluebook (online)
401 P.2d 575, 145 Mont. 448, 1965 Mont. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-burris-v-tower-management-corp-mont-1965.