Yore v. Superior Court

41 P. 477, 108 Cal. 431, 1895 Cal. LEXIS 870
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 5, 1895
DocketNo. 15690
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 41 P. 477 (Yore v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yore v. Superior Court, 41 P. 477, 108 Cal. 431, 1895 Cal. LEXIS 870 (Cal. 1895).

Opinion

McFarland, J.

In the superior court, in an action entitled The People upon the relation of W. H. H. Hart, Attorney General, v. Bankers and Merchants’ Mutual Life Association of the United States et. al., numbered on the register of said court 32100, the court made an order appointing one A. G-. Booth receiver; and this present proceeding is an original petition here for a writ of prohibition,. commanding the said superior court, substantially, to refrain from taking any further proceeding with respect to said receiver, upon the ground that the said court had no jurisdiction to appoint a receiver in said action. An answer was filed by the respondent here, and, upon a stipulation as to the facts, the case was submitted.

Prior to said action numbered 32100, another action, numbered 30718, had been commenced by the attorney general in the name of The People against said Bankers and Merchants’ Mutual Life Association, in the complaint in which, said action it was averred that said association was a corporation duly organized under the laws of the state of California, having for its objects, as set forth in its articles of incorporation, the following: To associate together for the purpose of equalizing the risk of death, and to pay to the nominee of such members as may die stipulated sums of money, to be collected of surviving members upon the assessment or co-operative plan, and to do any and every thing requisite, necessary, or convenient for accomplishing the said purposes.” It is then averred in said complaint that said corporation had usurped certain other privileges and franchises, to wit: Making contracts of insurance upon the lives of persons during life and for stated periods,” of being an incorporated and organized mutual life, health, and accident insurance company or association for profit,” “ of actually issuing contracts or policies of life insurance to ¡subsist both during life and for stated periods, as a reg[435]*435ular business for profit,” etc., “ of making and issuing written contracts in the form and after the manner of contracts of life insurance,” and certain other franchises in said complaint enumerated. The prayer of the complaint was for judgment that said corporation had intruded into the franchises thereinbefore enumerated, and that it be ousted from the franchises “ so usurped and abused.” Judgment was entered that the defendant was guilty of usurping and exercising certain franchises, rights, and privileges, as charged and alleged in the complaint in said action,” and that it be “ wholly excluded from such rights, privileges, and franchises.” It was further adjudged that said corporation pay a fine of three hundred dollars to the people of the state. After said judgment had been entered, and on the same day, the said action first above named, numbered 32100, was commenced, and it was averred in the complaint therein that by the judgment in said action numbered 30718 the said corporation had been dissolved and the said fine of three hundred dollars had been imposed ; that the assets of said corporation were in danger of being squandered, and that it was necessary to appoint a receiver in order to protect the same, and to provide for the satisfaction of the people’s said judgment of three hundred dollars, and also to preserve and distribute moneys due from said dissolved corporation to other persons. The complaint prayed for the appointment of a receiver, and thereupon the said Booth was appointed by the court.

Jurisdiction to appoint the said receiver is given, if at all, by section 565 of the Code of Civil Procedure; and respondent rests the jurisdiction mainly upon that section. Some thing is said in the briefs about section 564; but the appointment of a receiver under that section is merely auxiliary to an action which “is pending”; whereas the said action numbered 32100 is an independent action Brought for the very purpose of the appointment of a receiver. It is based upon section 565, upon the theory that the state, having a judgment for a [436]*436fine, is a creditor of the corporation. It is not necessary for us to determine whether the state on account of its judgment for a fine is a creditor within the meaning of that section, or whether it was definitely determined in Havemeyer v. Superior Court, 84 Cal. 327, 18 Am. St. Rep. 192, that in such a case the state is not such a creditor; because the proceeding authorized by section 565 can be commenced only “upon the dissolution of any corporation,” and the theory of the respondent that by said action numbered 30718 the said corporation was dissolved cannot be maintained.

In section 399 of the Civil Code it is declared that the involuntary dissolution of corporations is provided for in the Code of Civil Procedure, from section 802 to section 810, inclusive; but it is rather singular that in turning to those sections of the Code of Civil Procedure we find no express provision about the dissolution of a corporation, or any mention of a corporation at all. The mind of the legislature, as expressed in those sections, seems to have been occupied almost entirely with a consideration of the usurpation of a public office. However, it is provided that a person usurping any franchise may, in an action brought by the attorney general, be excluded from such franchise by the judgment of the court; and it has been held that under this provision a corporation may be dissolved; but evidently it could be dissolved only by a judgment excluding it from exercising the franchise of being a corporation; and, in order to reach that, result, there must be an averment of the usurpation of the franchise of being a corporation, and a judgment excluding the defendant from exercising said franchise, that is, from assuming to be a corporation. How, in said action numbered 30718 there was no such averment or judgment. The complaint does not allege that the defendant therein was usurping the franchise of being a corporation, and the judgment does not exclude the said defendant from exercising the franchise of being a corporation, and does not undertake in any way to dissolve the corporation. The complaint [437]*437merely avers that the corporation has been illegally exercising certain enumerated franchises; and the judgment merely declares that the defendant is guilty of usurping rights and franchises, “as charged and alleged in the complaint,” and adjudges that the defendant be excluded from “ such rights, privileges, and franchises.” The judgment, therefore, in that case does not dissolve the corporation, and does not undertake to do so. The said corporation, therefore, not having been dissolved, the court acquired no jurisdiction to appoint a receiver under said section 565 of the Code of Civil Procedure; and the appointment of said Booth as such receiver was without any authority, and void.

The only other question in the case is whether or not the petitioners herein, Yore et al., are by certain of their acts admitted by the stipulation to have been done, estopped from denying the jurisdiction of the court to appoint said receiver; or have been guilty of such laches as prevents them from maintaining this present application. The facts with respect to this part of the case are these: 1. Alexander Vensano and others commenced an action against said Booth, as receiver, to recover a claim against said corporation out of the funds in his hands; and in that action petitioners herein intervened and set up their prior claim to the fund. 2.

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Bluebook (online)
41 P. 477, 108 Cal. 431, 1895 Cal. LEXIS 870, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yore-v-superior-court-cal-1895.