Tulsa Torpedo Co. v. Kennedy

1928 OK 383, 268 P. 205, 131 Okla. 159, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 602
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 5, 1928
Docket18199
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1928 OK 383 (Tulsa Torpedo Co. v. Kennedy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tulsa Torpedo Co. v. Kennedy, 1928 OK 383, 268 P. 205, 131 Okla. 159, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 602 (Okla. 1928).

Opinion

RILEY, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment refusing to vacate the appointment of a receiver.

The trial court, without notice, upon the petition of Kennedy and Weister, minority stockholders, which petition was verified only upon information and belief, appointed a receiver for the Tulsa Torpedo Company, a corporation. The petition did not allege insolvency as a ground for the appointment, and there was no allegation of an emergency so great as to warrant procedure without notice. The defendants below, Tulsa Torpedo Company, W. J. Donnell, W. B. Blair, and Gertrude Donnell, moved to vacate the order appointing the receiver. The grounds for vacation were: (1) Insufficiency of facts alleged in the petition. (2) Verification on information and belief. (3) Lack of notice. (4) Interest of the individual appointed receiver. (5) Fraud of petitioners against third parties.

The third ground is waived by reason of the first and last, which go to the merits of the controversy, and a general appearance is thereby made. AS to the second ground, the petition was properly verified at the time of the hearing on the motion to vacate, so the same is eliminated. We shall consider the remaining grounds together with the evidence in support of them.

The last ground was the fraud against third parties. There was evidence that plaintiff’s stock was partly issued in consideration of promotion of business with other companies represented by plaintiffs, but the record is clear (C.-M. 50) that plaintiffs below were bona fide stockholders and owners at least of a portion of the stock assigned to them. The facts disclosed by the testimony of defendant W. J. Donnell were that he organized the corporation concerned in 1925. and issued to himself 744 shares of stock at par value of $10 per share. Thereafter 279 shares were assigned to plaintiff Weister and 184 shares to plaintiff Kennedy. Weister was taken into tne company, according to the witness, because he was an officer in the Tidal Oil Company and for the reason of thereby -securing me Tidal Oil Company’s business and patronage. Kennedy’s 'Situation was the same, and tne result was that the Tulsa Torpedo Company obtained the business -patronage of the Tidal Oil Company. A competitor, the Eastern Torpedo Company, in the same business offered to “shoot” oil wells on the basis of $1.50 per quart of explosive, and the witness Donnell,; together with ¡plaintiffs Weister and Kennedy, in order to continue with the lucrative patronage of the Tidal Oil Company at their existing rate of $2.50 per quart of explosive, agreed to talk “quality” of materials, consisting of gelatin used in their explosive, and to disparage the nitroglycerin and a substance known as “solidified” used by their competitor, and Donnell testifies further that there was no difference between the materials used by the different companies, but that Kennedy had the power for the Tidal Company to determine which torpedo company should be patronized. The usual and customary charge for torpedo services in the community at that time was $2.50 per quart. Kennedy testified he had nothing to do with fixing the price paid by the Tidal Company, but that the Tidal Company did require gelatin in preference to nitroglycerin and “solidified” because of the relative qualities, and that there was never any objection on the part of the Tidal Oil Company to the giving of its business to the Tulsa Torpedo Company. Such also was Weister’s testimony.

Appellants say that plaintiffs, by stifling competition for the benefit of the Tidal Company, a third party of which they were officers, defrauded the Tidal Company, consequently they come into this court of equity with unclean hands and should not be heard.

There is doubt as to the sufficiency of the proof to support ground 5 as alleged. We consider also that there is a limitation to the maxim. “He who comes into a court of equity, must come with clean hands.” We recognize “that equity has refused to aid either party where both are participants in a transaction in fraud of a third person, either to carry out their arrangement, to set it aside, or to relieve in any way with reference to it” (21 C. J. 185,) or to relieve “either party to an agreement tainted with illegality or fraud against a third person where bath *161 parties are in pari delicto” (Flesner v. Cooper, 62 Okla. 263, 162 P. 1112) ; but to apply the maxims relied upon to the facts in this case would be to pervert them and to say that a man who has done wrong ta another shall not be heard in any cause of equity. Such is extending incriminations to collateral stages. Langley v. Devlin (Wash.) 163 Pac. 395.

Pomeroy’s Eq. Jur., see. 399, says:

“It must be evil practice or wrong conduct in the particular matter or transaction in respect to which judicial protection or redress is sought.”

In Ansley v. Wilson, 50 Ga. 418, the chancellor said:

“All complainants in equity are human beings, full of faults and sin, and I doubt if there is one case in ten in which the complainant is not somewhat to blame.” American Association v. Innis (Ky.) 60 S. W. 388.

The federal court said in Bonsack Machine Co. v. Smith, 70 Fed. 383:

“The rule that one coming into equity must come with clean hands is confined to the conduct of the parties in the matter before the court, and not to matters aliunde. Courts of equity, as well as courts of law, will not refuse redress to the suitor because his conduct in other matters not then before the court may not be blameless.” Liverpool and London Globe Ins. Co. v. Clonie, 88 Fed. 160; Lyman v. Lyman (Conn.) 97 Atl. 312. L. R. A. 1916E, 643.

A personal injury is sometimes a prerequisite showing for the party defending under the maxim of “unclean hands.” Bentley v. Tibbals, 223 Fed. 247; First Nat. Bank v. Carter (Md.) 103 Atl. 463; Halladay v. Faurot, 8 Ohio Dec. Reprint, 633; Langdon v. Templeton, 66 Vt. 173, 28 Atl. 866; Galbraith v. Devlin, 85 Wash. 482, 148 Pac. 589.

No basic element of fraud was established in the relation with the third party, and the maxim cannot be successfully invoked as a defense.

We now consider the first ground, to wit, insufficiency of facts alleged in the beginning for the appointment of a receiver.

Section 518, C. O. S. 1921, provides for appointment of a receiver, under the first subdivision, upon application of any party whose interest is probable and where it is shown that the property is in danger of being lost, removed, or materially injured, and under the sixth subdivision, “In all other eases where receivers have heretofore been appointed by the usages of the courts of equity.” Thompson on Corps. (2nd Ed.) 1150; Moron v. Park, 93 Okla. 201, 220 Pac. 589; McDonald v. Bohling, 102 Okla. 243, 228 Pac. 783; Exchange Bank v. Bailey, 29 Okla. 246, 116 Pac. 812.

The appointment of a receiver under article 19, chapter 3, O. O. S. 1921, is a matter within the sound discretion of the trial court, and an order appointing or refusing to appoint such receiver will not be disturbed unless an abuse of discretion is shown.

In Hughes v. Garrelts, 35 Okla. 321, 129 Pac. 43, it was held:

“Nor is it necessary, in order that plaintiffs be entitled to the relief demanded, that it be shown that the defendants or the concerns receiving the oil are insolvent. Mead v. Burke, 156 Ind. 577, 60 N. E.

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Bluebook (online)
1928 OK 383, 268 P. 205, 131 Okla. 159, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tulsa-torpedo-co-v-kennedy-okla-1928.