State Ex Rel. Kopke v. Mulloy

43 S.W.2d 806, 329 Mo. 1, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 482
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 20, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 43 S.W.2d 806 (State Ex Rel. Kopke v. Mulloy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Kopke v. Mulloy, 43 S.W.2d 806, 329 Mo. 1, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 482 (Mo. 1931).

Opinions

This is an original proceeding in this court by writ of prohibition against one of the circuit judges of St. Louis County and a receiver appointed by him, to restrain them from further action in a case there pending. It challenges the jurisdiction of that court in what has been done and invokes the power of this court to prevent any further act in excess of the jurisdiction of that court. The defendant Judge Mulloy appointed defendant Ralph temporary receiver of the Fulton Iron Works Company, a Delaware corporation having its chief office, place of business, manufacturing plant, and most of its property in St. Louis County, Missouri. This action was taken by the judge on the filing and presentation to him of a petition entitled Lena A. Wurdeman v. Fulton Iron Works Company et al., without any sort of service on or notice to the defendant company or the individual defendants, or any of them. The order appointing the receiver empowered and directed him to at once take possession and charge of defendant's business and property to the exclusion of its officers and agents then in possession, the principal officers being named as parties defendant. The other individual defendants, ten in number, are alleged to compose an advisory committee of defendant's creditors, alleged to have large control and direction of its business. When we speak of defendant in respect to the proceedings in the circuit court, without other designation, we mean the Fulton Iron Works Company, and by plaintiff we mean Lena A. Wurdeman.

It stands conceded that the petition of Lena A. Wurdeman was filed and presented to the defendant judge of the circuit court, and the order appointing the receiver made, and bond filed and approved on Saturday afternoon of November 22, 1930. The circuit court also made an order that defendant appear in that court on the next Saturday, November 29th, and show cause, if any, why the appointment of the receiver should not be made permanent. Thereupon the relator, who was president of defendant company and in charge and control of its business, applied to this court for this writ of prohibition to restrain said circuit judge from taking further cognizance of said cause and the receiver from taking possession of or interfering with the possession of the Fulton Iron Works Company of its property and business.

The petition or application for our writ is sworn to and contains certified copies of the petition of Lena A. Wurdeman filed in the circuit court and the order of that court appointing the receiver. This court granted its preliminary writ of prohibition and ordered the respondents here to show cause on a day named why the same *Page 5 should not be made permanent. The respondents have made return or answer in this court, to which the relator has filed his reply. In the answer the respondents deny many allegations of the petition for our writ and ask that on the facts stated therein the preliminary rule in prohibition be dissolved. In the reply the relator denies the affirmative matter set up in the respondents' answer and prays that on the pleadings, affidavits and exhibits herein filed that the alternative writ in prohibition be made permanent.

It will thus be seen that issues of fact are raised by the pleadings in this court which have no support except the verification of the pleadings, but the parties, by their submission of the case, treat such matters as non-essential to a proper disposition of the case here; and we find that the essential facts necessary for our decision are either expressly admitted or stand undisputed. Thus it stands conceded that the plaintiff in the case of Lena A. Wurdeman v. Fulton Iron Works Company and the individual defendants, filed her petition asking for the appointment of a receiver of that company, and that the same was at once and without any service on or notice to any of the defendants, and in their absence, acted on by the respondent judge, who, without any evidence other than the verification of the petition, made an order appointing Ralph temporary receiver with instructions and power to at once take possession of defendant's property, and fixing a future date for defendant to show cause why the receivership should not be made permanent. It is further conceded that, three days previous to this action, a suit of the same nature and for the same purpose, the petitions being practically alike and against the same defendant, had been filed in the same court by Swartwout Company and J. Harry Bedsar, and that Judge Lashly, one of the judges of the same court, before whom same was pending, had declined to act at once and without notice in appointing a receiver, but had fixed a day, November 25th, not yet reached, on which all parties would be heard; that such suit had been voluntarily dismissed on the same day the Lena A. Wurdeman suit was filed; that one of the attorneys for the Fulton Iron Works Company and the other defendants being proceeded against in both such suits, either by chance or from suspicion, appeared in court and learned of the dismissal of the old suit and the filing of the new one and of the order just made by Judge Mulloy appointing a receiver, and then stated that his client, the Fulton Iron Works Company, desired to offer evidence and be heard in such matter before the appointment of a receiver; that Judge Mulloy refused to hear any evidence or to further consider the appointment of a temporary receiver, as he had already made the order.

It is relator's contention here that not only did the respondent circuit judge act arbitrarily and in excess of his powers and jurisdiction *Page 6 in appointing a receiver without proof or hearing, but that the petition of Lena A. Wurdeman v. Fulton Iron Works Company et al., states no cause of action warranting the appointment of a receiver and certainly does not show any facts warranting such appointment without notice or hearing. We will, therefore, set out the facts stated in and the material allegations of such petition, omitting formal parts:

It is alleged that the defendant is a Delaware corporation with a capital stock of $1,000,000 preferred stock divided into 10,000 shares, and a capital of 88,500 shares of no-value common stock. The plaintiff owns 30 shares of the capital stock (preferred ?). The defendant is engaged in the business of manufacturing, selling and installing machinery, equipment and plans for refining and the manufacture of sugar, its plant and place of business being in St. Louis County, where its books and records are kept.

"Plaintiff further states that the defendant Fulton Iron Works Company now is and for some time has been insolvent; that the current and fixed liabilities of said defendant are in excess of $1,500,000, in addition to which there is a contingent liability against said defendant of over $600,000, on which said defendant in truth and fact will be held liable for not less than $500,000; that the actual reasonable value of the assets of said corporation does not exceed $1,200,000; that defendant now is and for many months has been operating at a great loss." Defendant Kopke is the president of defendant company and G.J. Kienzle is secretary.

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Bluebook (online)
43 S.W.2d 806, 329 Mo. 1, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-kopke-v-mulloy-mo-1931.