Twin City Milk Producers Assn. v. Oase

271 N.W. 253, 199 Minn. 124, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 632
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 5, 1937
DocketNo. 30,937.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 271 N.W. 253 (Twin City Milk Producers Assn. v. Oase) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Twin City Milk Producers Assn. v. Oase, 271 N.W. 253, 199 Minn. 124, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 632 (Mich. 1937).

Opinion

*125 Devanen, Chief Justice.

Appeal from order striking certain allegations of appellants’ complaint in intervention.

Plaintiff-respondent, the Twin City Milk Producers Association, is a cooperative association organized pursuant to L. 1921, c. 23. It will hereinafter be referred to as the association.

The association is capitalized at $3,000,000, divided into 60,000 shares of stock of the par value of $50 each, -which are held by some 8,000 members. No person can be a stockholder unless he is a dairyman engaged in business as such or an officer or director in a cooperative association engaged in the business of handling dairy products.

The business of the association consists of marketing fluid milk shipped in by its producer-members, each of whom is required to enter into a contract with the association whereby he subscribes for stock and agrees to consign to the association all milk and cream produced by his cows. The association markets as much of the milk and cream as is possible and manufactures the rest into other dairy products, which are also sold. It returns to its producer-members the price received for the milk and cream less the cost of operation and less deductions for certain reserves. In addition, these producer-members are paid annual dividends of not less than six per cent upon the capital stock they hold. The non-producer-members who are officers and directors in cooperative associations handling like products are also paid annual dividends on the stock they hold.

From January 1, 1920, to October 31, 1932, the association deducted from its gross sales one-half of one per cent for the purpose of establishing a so-called sinking fund. Since October 31, 1932, the association has deducted one-fourtli of one per cent for that purpose. On January 1, 1935, the amount of this sinking fund was $635,316.01.

The by-laws of the association provide:

“In the event that a stockholder ceases to be a dairyman engaged in business as such, or an officer or director in a cooperative cream *126 ery association, or an officer or director of a cooperative association engaged in the manufacture of butter or cheese, or shall cease to sell his dairy products through this association, his stock certificate or certificates may be cancelled and upon the payment to him by the corporation of the actual value of such certificate or certificates they shall be surrendered to the corporation.”

Since its organization the association has from time to time retired or purchased from ineligible members their shares, of stock, paying therefor its par value, $50, plus the dividend accrued.

During recent years question has arisen as to the amount which should be paid by the association for capital stock so retired and as to the status of the sinking fund and its relation to the amount which ought to be paid for such stock.

The defendant-respondent is a member of the association who is no longer a dairyman engaged in the business as such and does not qualify as a nonproducer-member. He has tendered his share to the association, and he has demanded that it pay him the book value therefor, including the sinking fund as an asset in determining such value.

In order to settle controversies which developed by reason of this demand, the association instituted this action under the declaratory judgments act, L. 1933, c. 286, 3 Mason Minn. St. 1931 Supp. §§ 9155-1 to 9155-16.

After defendant had interposed his answer, the appellants, H. W. Hildebrandt, who is a stockholder no longer engaged in farming, and E. T. Larkin, an active member of the association, obtained leave of the court to intervene. Thereafter the association moved to strike certain allegations of interveners’ complaint upon the ground that these allegations raised new issues independent and inconsistent with those raised by the original complaint and answer. The motion was granted. Interveners appealed.

Two questions are presented:

(1) Can an intervener raise new issues that are foreign to the issues raised by the original complaint and answer?

*127 (2) Did the interveners herein raise new and different issues other than those raised by the original parties to the action?

The Minnesota statute of intervention, 2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 9263, provides:

“Any person having such an interest in the matter in litigation between others that he may either gain or lose by the direct legal effect of the judgment therein may serve a complaint in the pending action, at any time before the trial begins, alleging the facts which show such interest, and demanding appropriate relief against either or both of the parties. Such intervener shall not be entitled to delay, and, if a continuance be occasioned by him, it may be granted at his expense. The ordinary rules of pleading shall govern, except that the court, in order to avoid delaying the trial, may shorten the time within which subsequent pleadings shall be served. All the issues shall be determined together, and if the intervener’s claim be not sustained he shall pay the costs resulting therefrom.”

Respondents concede that under this statute appellants have the right to intervene but contend that the right to intervene does not carry with it the right to introduce new and foreign issues. In our opinion the contention is well taken.

That an intervener has no right to change the issues between the original parties and introduce into the action new and foreign issues is the rule that obtains in the great.majority of jurisdictions. Ebersbach Const. Co. v. Charles Ringling Co. 100 Fla. 1270, 131 So. 148; Fountain v. Bryan, 176 Ga. 31, 166 S. E. 766; Steltzer v. Compton, 364 Iowa, 465, 145 N. W. 896, 897; Farmers & M. State Bank v. Goe, 110 Kan. 65, 202 P. 835; Hallett v. Moore, 282 Mass. 380, 385 N. E. 474, 91 A. L. R. 572; Monticello Bldg. Corp. v. Monticello Inv. Co. 330 Mo. 1128, 52 S. W. (2d) 545; Fleming v. Larkin, 197 App. Div. 624, 189 N. Y. S. 412.

We hold that the above stated rule is also the rule in this state.

Interveners, however, have laid great stress upon the case of Faricy v. St. Paul Inv. & Sav. Society, 110 Minn. 311, 125 N. W. 676, 679, claiming that under the rule of that case an intervener may introduce new issues into the main action so that multiplicity *128 of suits may be avoided. We do uot agree with interveners’ contention that this decision controls herein.

In that case no new issues were raised by the intervener nor did the complaint in intervention attempt any change of the issues between the original parties to the action. As stated by the court in its opinion [110 Minn. 319]:

“The intervention did not change the nature of the action, nor involve litigation also of an additional subject. * * ® The issue presented by the original pleadings embraced the real ownership of the bonds and their validity. The intervention enabled the proper and complete determination of both these issues, and of no other issue.”

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Bluebook (online)
271 N.W. 253, 199 Minn. 124, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/twin-city-milk-producers-assn-v-oase-minn-1937.