Sullivan County Railroad v. Connecticut River Lumber Co.

57 A. 287, 76 Conn. 464
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 5, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 57 A. 287 (Sullivan County Railroad v. Connecticut River Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sullivan County Railroad v. Connecticut River Lumber Co., 57 A. 287, 76 Conn. 464 (Colo. 1904).

Opinion

Baldwin, J.

Any judgment which has been either fraudulently obtained, or so improvidently entered that it is against equity and good conscience to make claim under it, may be set aside at a subsequent term, upon the ap-

*470 plication of any person interested and aggrieved, and due notice to all parties to the record. The remedy is not confined to parties to the suit. It is open to any one whose legal or equitable rights were directly invaded by the judgment. Tyler v. Aspinwall, 78 Conn. 493,499.

General Statutes, § 3351, empowers the Superior Court, under certain conditions, to wind up and dissolve any business corporation, at the instance of shareholders owning not less than one tenth of its capital stock. In 1899 the Connecticut River Lumber Company, then owning more than one tenth of the capital stock of the Connecticut River Manufacturing Company, a corporation located in Hartford county, united with it in an application to the Superior Court in that county, under this statute. No others were made parties, and no order of notice was procured. Three days later, on an ex parte hearing, the allegations in the application were found by the court to be true, a receiver was appointed, and a time limited for the presentation to him of claims against it. He was directed to give notice of this limitation of time by an advertisement published for four weeks in a Hartford newspaper. The advertisement was properly given. No claims were presented, and the receiver found no assets of the company. His returns of all these facts, made on April 12th, 1900, a few days after the time limited had expired, having been accepted and found true by the court, final judgment, dissolving the corporation, was rendered on the same day.

If in fact the Connecticut Manufacturing Company had, on that date, any valuable property or rights of action, and was under a liability to any person who, by reason of any intentional act or omission of the plaintiffs in the action in which those proceedings were had, had no knowledge of its pendency, it is evident that such person was aggrieved by the judgment. He would not, indeed, be a party to the action, and aggrieved as such. His grievance would be that he was not made a party to the’ action, nor given any opportunity to protect, by becoming such, interests of his which it might directly affect.

*471 The proceedings, under our statutes, if the judgment stands, constitute a bar to any claim against the Connecticut Manufacturing Company, which the plaintiff may have. They also put that company out of existence, and so preclude it from enforcing any cause of action in its favor. The plaintiff alleges, and the trial court has found, that the manufacturing company had a valid cause of action against the lumber company to compel the payment of all legal claims existing against it, by that company. It is also found that the president of the lumber company and of the manufacturing company knew that the plaintiff had a claim for substantial damages against the manufacturing company at the time when the winding-up suit was instituted, and intentionally concealed its existence from the court and the receiver. By a vote of the directors of the manufacturing company he had been directed to cause that suit to be brought, for the expressed purpose of procuring its dissolution, and causing its debts to be paid and its remaining assets distributed among its shareholders. For what he did and said, while acting under this authority, in directing the course of the suit, each of the companies of which he was the president is justly responsible. The receiver naturally applied to the officers of the manufacturing company for information as to the existence of creditors. The concealment from him of the circumstances out of which the plaintiff’s claim had arisen, while not found to be fraudulent, was obviously inequitable and against good conscience. Had they been made known to the receiver, it would have been his duty to mail notice of the limitation of time for presenting claims, to the plaintiff, and presumably this would have been done. Not having been made known to him by those who should have made them known and who controlled the cause, the judgment in the cause was improvidently entered under a misapprehension of fact on the part of the court, wrongfully induced by their silence as to a matter concerning which it was incumbent on them to speak.

There are 189 assignments of error, and the printed record on appeal covers over 2,200 pages. Most of the ex *472 ceptions taken relate to questions pertaining to the finding that the plaintiff had, at the date of the judgment appealed from, a valid claim against the manufacturing company for substantial damages. This was made after a full hearing occupying several weeks, as to all the circumstances leading up to the injury to the bridge.

It was unnecessary for the plaintiff to do more than to satisfy the court that it had a claim for substantial damages, which was a proper subject for judicial investigation and determination in appropriate proceedings. If it had any valid claim at all, there could be no dispute that it was one for a considerable sum. It was enough to show that it had an interest in a bridge which had been partly destroyed by force of an unusual rush of water caused by an extraordinary jam of logs belonging to the manufacturing company, and that it asserted in good faith that the company was negligent in allowing such a jam to accumulate at sucb a place. Whether the bridge was a lawful structure, and whether that company was in fact responsible for the injury to it, were questions to be settled on another occasion. The hearing on the present application was simply for the purpose of ascertaining if an opportunity ought to be given to raise these questions where they could be so settled. It called for no further inquiry into the merits of the plaintiff’s claim than would have been requisite if, before the judgment of dissolution but after the time limited for the presentation of claims had expired, it had appeared and moved to have further time allowed for that purpose.

The finding, therefore, of the trial court, which is embodied in the judgment appealed from, that a valid claim for substantial damages to compensate the plaintiff for an injury done to its bridge by the manufacturing company on June 10th, 1897, was established and exists, legally imports nothing more than that sufficient proof of the existence of such a claim was made to support the application to open the judgment'in the winding-up suit, and the orders leading up to it, so far as they barred the presentation of the claim to the receiver. It concludes the parties to the present action to *473 that extent only, and leaves the receiver free to disallow the claim, if presented to him, should he, on full investigar tion, deem it unfounded.

It follows that most of the reasons of appeal are immaterial, and require no further consideration.

It is contended that there was error in the declaration in the judgment that the manufacturing company is “ in existence, the same as before said decree of dissolution was passed.”

The analogy between the death of a natural person and the dissolution of an artificial person is an imperfect one.

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Bluebook (online)
57 A. 287, 76 Conn. 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-county-railroad-v-connecticut-river-lumber-co-conn-1904.