State Ex Rel. Priest v. Calhoun

226 S.W. 329, 207 Mo. App. 149, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 242
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 24, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 226 S.W. 329 (State Ex Rel. Priest v. Calhoun) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Priest v. Calhoun, 226 S.W. 329, 207 Mo. App. 149, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 242 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

BECKER, J.

This is an original proceeding in prohibition seeking to restrain and enjoin the defendant judge from proceeding further in the case of John H. Conrades, et al., v. Blue Bird Appliance Company pending in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, in which case the respondent judge has heretofore, at the relation of said Conrades, et al., appointed a receiver for the defendant, Blue Bird Appliance Company. A preliminary rule in prohibition has heretofore been issued in this case.

It appears that on May 25, 1920, John H. Conrades, Thomas Mellow and Ben J. Brinkmann were by the cir *151 cuit court of the city of St. Louis appointed receivers of a certain corporation known as the Blue Bird Manufacturing Company, and that said receivers took charge of all of the assets of the said company under their powers as receivers of said company, and that amongst said assets were fifty-one per cent of all of the capital stock of a corporation known as the Blue Bird Appliance Company, a Missouri corporation.

On June 19, 1920, said John H. Comrades, Thomas Mellow and Ben G-. Brinkmann, as receivers of the said Blue Bird Manufacturing Company, and as such owners of fifty-one per cent of- the capital stock of the Blue Bird Appliance Company, filed a suit in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis wherein said receivers asked for the appointment of a receiver for the said Blue Bird Appliance Company, and upon the same day a temporary receiver was duly appointed and qualified. Thereafter the court, on August 20, 1920, appointed a permanent receiver upon the giving of a bond in the sum of $25,000, which bond was on the same day filed, presented and approved by the court, since which time the judge of the circuit court, respondent here, has retained jurisdiction of the said case continuously, and the receiver, since the date of his appointment as permanent receiver and up to the time of the filing of the application for a writ of prohibition herein, has continued in charge of and in control of the property of the said Blue Bird Appliance Company.

The main allegations set out in the petition of the said Conrades, et al., receivers of the Blue Bird Manufacturing Company, and as such holders of fifty-one per cent of the capital stock of the Blue Bird Appliance Company, in which petition the' appointment of a receiver for the said Blue Bird Appliance Company is sought (as appears from the respondent’s return heroin) are:

“A. The plaintiffs in said cause were stockholders owning $5100, par value of the capital stock of the cle *152 fendant corporation whose total capital was $10,000, and were also creditors to the extent of approximately $450,000.

“B. That the assets of the defendant corporation located in various states were being subjected to attachments suits, levies and other forms of waste, and that all of said assets were in. danger of being utterly destroyed and dissipated.

“C. That all of the directors, officers, managers and executives of the defendant company had on the 17th day of June, 1920, resigned and abandoned the property and assets of the defendant corporation, and defendant corporation was without any officers, directors, managers or executives.

“D. That unless a receiver were appointed by the court, the value of plaintiffs’ stock in the defendant corporation would be utterly destroyed, and the value of plaintiffs’ claim would be utterly destroyed.

“E. The prayer was for the appointment of a temporary receiver, on inquiry by the court into all the facts alleged, the appointment of a permanent receiver and for all general and equitable relief that to the court under the circumstances might seem meet and proper.”

On October 19, 1920, a petition in bankruptcy was filed in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri by certain creditors against the Blue Bird Appliance Company. One of the grounds of alleged bankruptcy of the said Appliance Company set forth in the bankruptcy petition is the appointment of a receiver for the said Blue Bird Appliance Company in the cause vof Conrades, et al., v. Blue Bird Appliance Company, above mentioned.

The facts as outlined above appear from a reading’ of the relator’s application for a writ of prohibition herein. Such application contains the further averment that the relator is a creditor of the said Blue Bird Appliance Company in the principal sum of $7500; that by the exercise of due diligence he has attempted to perfect a lien by attachment proceedings in favor of the debt *153 owed him by the Blue Bird Appliance Company; that the proceedings instituted by the creditors of the Blue Bird Appliance Company in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri were designated by said creditors to defeat said lien of relator. Delator further avers that he is interested in defeating the proceedings in bankruptcy above referred to, but that he cannot, in said bankruptcy proceedings, attack the appointment of a receiver for the Blue Bird Appliance Company by the said circuit judge for such attack would be collateral and that the only course left open to him is to question the jurisdiction of said circuit judge in said cause in direct proceedings. Delator further avers that the said circuit judge was without authority and jurisdiction in the said suit of Conrades, et al., v. Blue Bird Appliance Company, to appoint a receiver for the Blue Bird Appliance Company, and that said want and lack of jurisdiction appears upon the face of the petition filed in said’cause of said Conrades, et al., and that by reason thereof the relator is entitled to a writ of prohibition directed to the said circuit judge, restraining and enjoining him, the said judge, from proceeding in said cause of Conrades, et al., v. Blue Bird Appliance Company.

Among the matters set up in respondent’s return to the preliminary rule heretofore issued herein to show cause why a permanent writ of prohibition should not be issued, is found an epitome of the material allegations in the petition filed by plaintiff in the case of Conrades, et al., v. Blue Bird Appliance Company, which epitome we have already hereinabove set out. The return further shows that the relator herein is not a party to the said suit of Conrades, et al., v. Blue Bird Appliance Company; that the relator had been an officer and director of the said Blue Bird Appliance Company up to the 18th day of June, 1920, on which date the said relator together with the other officers and directors of the company resigned as officers and directors; that the relator in addition to being an officer and director of *154 the Appliance Company had also acted as one of the counsel for Conrades, et al., as receivers for the Blue Bird Manufacturing

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Bluebook (online)
226 S.W. 329, 207 Mo. App. 149, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-priest-v-calhoun-moctapp-1920.