Cherry Inv. Corp. v. Folsom

Decision Date29 March 1962
Docket Number1 Div. 982
Citation273 Ala. 575,143 So.2d 181
PartiesCHERRY INVESTMENT CORPORATION, Lewis R. Donelson, III, L. S. Rainer, Jr., and George C. Wilkinson v. Malissa Carney FOLSOM et al. -985.
CourtAlabama Supreme Court

Lewey Stephens, Jr., Elba, and Oliver W. Brantley, Troy, for appellants.

Allan R. Cameron, Mobile, and Thos. E. Skinner, Birmingham, for appellees.

SIMPSON, Justice.

The appeal in this case proceeded from a decree of the lower court overruling the motions of the respective appellants to dissolve a temporary injunction theretofore issued against them.

The appellees are minority stockholders of Emergency Aid Insurance Company, a life insurance corporation qualified to do business in Alabama, with principal offices in Elba.

The appellants are Cherry Investment Corporation, a foreign corporation, with principal offices in Memphis, Tennessee; Lewis R. Donaldson, III, director and stockholder of Emergency Aid; L. S. Rainier, Jr., director and president of Emergency Aid; and George C. Wilkinson, owner of majority stock of Cherry Investment.

The bill, on the basis of which the writ of injunction was issued, was designed to protect the interest of the appellees as minority stockholders of Emergency Aid Insurance Company against threatened dissipation of the corporate assets by the appellants. The bill in substance alleges that Emergency Aid has many thousands of policy holders and many millions of dollars of assets being held in trust for its policy holders and stockholders; that respondent Wilkinson is the legal or equitable owner of the stock of Cherry Investment Corporation, a foreign corporation organized under the laws of Tennessee; that Cherry is a paper corporation, created for the manipulation of stock; that its financial status is unknown and it has no assets subject to the jurisdiction of the court; that respondent Wilkinson, through his ownership of Cherry's stock, controls directly or indirectly all the actions of Cherry and that Cherry owns a majority of Emergency Aid and that, therefore, Wilkinson, through his control of Cherry, can control and dominate and secure the election of the majority of the board of directors of Emergency Aid; that unless restrained, Wilkinson proposes to elect persons to the board of Emergency Aid whom he can dominate and who will serve as his 'puppets and stooges' for the purpose of plundering and dissipating the assets of Emergency Aid, all to the irreparable injury of appellees and other stockholders of Emergency Aid; that the said Wilkinson occupies a fiduciary relation to Emergency Aid, its policy holders, and the appellees by reason of his controlling interest and ownership of Cherry, which owns a majority of stock of Emergency Aid; that if the said Wilkinson is allowed to take over the control of Emergency Aid by the means alleged, the public's confidence in Emergency Aid will be destroyed, thereby resulting in the cancellation of many insurance policies which constitute the assets of Emergency Aid, thereby resulting in irreparable damage to appellees and the stockholders and policy holders of Emergency Aid. It is alleged that respondent Wilkinson is insolvent and unable to respond to damages for any injury which he might cause to be done to Emergency Aid and its stockholders. The bill also alleges, factually, two instances where the respondents, through the alleged manipulations, attempted to defraud the Emergency Aid of many thousands of dollars for the benefit of respondents.

On the basis of these allegations the bill prayed that a temporary writ of injunction be issued to the respondents enjoining and restraining them as individuals, agents, directors, and stockholders, from voting or attempting to vote, or attending or attempting to attend, or holding of a stockholders meeting of Emergency Aid, until further orders of the court, and further restraining the respondents from removing or replacing anyone on the board of directors of Emergency Aid. As we take it, the import of the bill and its prayer is to restrain the respondents from displacing the present board of directors and officers of Emergency Aid until the merits of the bill can be explored, and if found meritorious, that the injunction be made permanent. The trial court, as stated, issued the temporary writ.

Appellants Ranier, sometimes called Rainer in the proceedings, Donaldson, and Wilkinson filed separate motions to dissolve the writ of injunction on the ground that the bill was without equity. Wilkinson also demurred for want of equity, and Cherry also filed a plea in abatement. No answer was filed by any of the respondents.

It is noted that the court made no ruling on the plea in abatement of Cherry or the demurrer of Wilkinson, but overruled the motions to dissolve the writs of injunction, grounded on want of equity. It is this last ruling which is assigned here for error.

Concededly, the bill is no model of perspicuity, but in testing the general equity of the bill the court considers the substance of the allegations--the facts stated--not the form of the bill, the manner of stating the facts, nor the specific relief prayed for and all amendable defects are treated as amended. Holcomb v. Forsyth, 216 Ala. 486, 489, 113 So. 516; Union Central Life Insurance Company v. Thompson, 229 Ala. 433, 157 So. 852; Badham v. Johnston, 239 Ala. 48, 193 So. 420. The general demurrer is properly overruled if the bill contains any equity. Lauderdale County Board of Education v. Alexander, 269 Ala. 79, 110 So.2d 911.

Moreover, in considering the question of the dissolution of the injunction, the court is vested with a wide discretion and will weigh the relative degree of injury or benefits to the respective parties and especially where the discretion of the lower court has been exercised without apparent abuse. Holcomb, supra.

It is true, as argued by appellants, that as a general rule courts of equity will not interfere with the internal business management of corporate assets by the...

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7 cases
  • Johnston v. Bridges
    • United States
    • Alabama Supreme Court
    • February 24, 1972
    ...259 Ala. 482, 489, 67 So.2d 31. A general demurrer is properly overruled, if the bill contains any equity. Cherry Investment Corp. v. Folsom, 273 Ala. 575, 143 So.2d 181; Lauderdale County Board of Education v. Alexander, 269 Ala. 79, 110 So.2d In testing its sufficiency against a general d......
  • Ingram v. Omelet Shoppe, Inc.
    • United States
    • Alabama Supreme Court
    • September 12, 1980
    ...the more drastic remedy of receivership. Accordingly, the trial court had the power to issue the T.R.O. See Cherry Investment Corp. v. Folsom, 273 Ala. 575, 143 So.2d 181 (1962) (minority shareholders obtained injunction to prevent stockholders meeting of a failing Independent of plaintiff ......
  • D. B. Clayton and Associates v. McNaughton
    • United States
    • Alabama Supreme Court
    • January 6, 1966
    ...injunction, even in the absence of an answer or evidence and even though the bill for the temporary injunction contained equity. Cherry, supra, was an appeal from an order denying a motion to dissolve a temporary injunction. No answer was filed to the motion to dissolve. Concluding that the......
  • Bain v. Mazel
    • United States
    • Alabama Supreme Court
    • September 26, 1963
    ... ... Cherry Investment ... Corp. v. Folsom, 273 Ala. 575, 143 So.2d 181. That ... ...
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