Whitley v. Bradley

110 P. 596, 13 Cal. App. 720, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 259
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 5, 1910
DocketCiv. No. 545.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 110 P. 596 (Whitley v. Bradley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitley v. Bradley, 110 P. 596, 13 Cal. App. 720, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 259 (Cal. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an appeal from an order appointing a receiver, pendente lite.

The complaint alleges that “on or about the fourth day of January, 1907, at the city of San Francisco, state of California, said plaintiffs and said defendant entered into an agreement wherein and whereby said parties agreed to form a copartnership for the purpose of carrying on the business of manufacturing and selling cement wash-trays and doing a general cement construction business—said business to be conducted under the firm name of 1 California Cement Tray Company, ’ and it was then and there agreed that each of said parties should furnish one-third of the necessary capital to *723 carry on said business and each of said parties should receive one-third of the profits of said business and be liable for one-third of the debts of the same”; that said parties ever since entering into said agreement have conducted said business in pursuance of the terms of said agreement; that said copartnership has acquired and “now owns” valuable property, consisting of a lease of land situated in the city of San Francisco and other property of different kinds of the approximate aggregate value of $18,850; that “said copartnership is largely indebted.” It is further alleged that “on or about the twenty-first day of May, 1907, said defendant denied the existence of said copartnership, denied that said plaintiffs had any interest in said business, and then excluded, and ever since has continued to exclude, said plaintiffs from any participation in said business, and ever since the last-mentioned date has taken sole charge of said business, and has retained the whole proceeds thereof and income therefrom”; that since said twenty-first day of May, 1907, said defendant has not kept up the manufacture of trays, so far as quantity is concerned, as theretofore, but has manufactured not more than one-fifth of the number of trays which had prior to that date been manufactured, and “has been, and is selling the trays on hand at prices unreasonably low, and turning the assets of said copartnership into cash and applying the proceeds thereof to his own use, and unless restrained by an order of this honorable court, will continue'to do so.” It is additionally ' averred that “it is necessary that a receiver be appointed to take possession of the assets of said copartnership and manage the said business for the benefit of the said partners and of the creditors of said copartnership.”

An accounting of the business and the affairs of the alleged copartnership and a dissolution thereof constitute the ultimate relief demanded, and that in the meantime a receiver be appointed to take charge of the business and the defendant enjoined from “selling, encumbering or otherwise disposing of said property or any part thereof until the further order of” the court.

The answer specifically denies each and every material allegation of the complaint, and, by way of an affirmative defense, alleges that the defendant had for many years prior to the fourth day of January, 1907, been engaged in the manu *724 facture of cement trays in the city of San Francisco; that on said date he made an agreement with the' M. Fisher Company, a corporation, by which the latter was to construct the buildings “now situate on the premises described in plaintiffs’ complaint herein”; that shortly thereafter, “the plaintiffs herein proposed the formation of a corporation to be known as 1 The California Cement Tray Company,’ to conduct said business, in which they should hold two-thirds of the capital stock thereof, and which should have the property described in plaintiffs’ said complaint and conduct the business mentioned therein”; that, accordingly, said corporation was subsequently organized and “went into the possession of all the property described in plaintiffs’ complaint, and has since remained in the possession of the same, and that the business mentioned in said plaintiffs’ complaint has since been in the possession of and conducted in the name of said corporation; that all said property and said business is now in the possession of and being conducted by and in the name of said corporation.” Defendant further alleges that plaintiff Fisher on the seventh day of May, 1907, “for a valuable consideration,” assigned, transferred and delivered to defendant all the capital stock held by him in said corporation, and after such transfer said plaintiff had no other stock or further interest whatever in said corporation; that plaintiff Whitley “has not contributed or paid any money whatever toward the capital stock of said corporation, and has not paid any money whatever for the construction of the said improvements on the premises described in plaintiffs’ complaint, and has not contributed or paid any money whatever in or about the manufacture pr purchase of the personal property described in said complaint”; that he has not paid or contributed any money whatever as capital of the alleged copartnership, and that said Whitley has no interest in or ownership of the said property described in the complaint “as a copartner therein' or otherwise.”

The application for the appointment of a receiver was heard on the twentieth day of June, 1907, at which time evidence, oral and documentary, was introduced both in support of and against the allowance of said application.

The power to appoint a receiver is one of sound judicial discretion, and unless we can say that there appears from the *725 record here a clear abuse of such discretion in the action of the court below in making the order appealed from, the same must stand.

Equitable relief by way of the appointment of a receiver will be invoked only where the exigencies of the case clearly appear to absolutely require it for the conservation of the rights of all the parties concerned in the litigation giving rise to the application for such relief. The appointment of a receiver is justly regarded as an extraordinary or harsh remedy, and a court of equity will never exercise its discretion favorably to a motion invoking the aid of this remedy except upon a satisfactory showing that such relief is necessary in order to preserve and fully protect the rights of all the parties. (Mead et al. v. Burk et al., 156 Ind. 577, [60 N. E. 338].) It must, of course, be made to appear that the person seeking such relief has at least a probable right or interest in the property or fund involved in the litigation, and that there is danger of its being lost or destroyed or misappropriated unless a receiver be appointed pendente lite; and where, upon conflicting testimony, such right or interest and danger of the destruction or misappropriation of the property or fund are found to exist, a reviewing court is, as a general rule, in no position to say that a nisi prius court has abused its discretion in the appointment of a receiver. (High on Receivers, 3d ed., sec. 11; Mead et al. v. Burk et al., 156 Ind. 577, [60 N. E. 338]; Copper Hill Min. Co. v. Spencer, 25 Cal. 16; Gillett v. Higgins, 142 Ala. 444, [38 South. 664]; Brown v. Vandermeulen, 41 Mich. 418, [49 N. W. 920]; Bank etc. v. Hardy (Miss.), 48 South. 731; Dawson v.

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Bluebook (online)
110 P. 596, 13 Cal. App. 720, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitley-v-bradley-calctapp-1910.