Grant v. Allied Developers, Inc.
Decision Date | 11 January 1980 |
Docket Number | No. 514,514 |
Citation | 44 Md.App. 560,409 A.2d 1123 |
Parties | Donald A. GRANT et al. v. ALLIED DEVELOPERS, INC., et al. |
Court | Court of Special Appeals of Maryland |
Ronald S. Goldberg, Silver Spring, with whom were Everngam, Goldstein, Blitz, Rosenberg & Shapiro, P. A., Silver Spring, on brief, for appellants.
Donald Cefaratti, Jr., Washington, D. C., with whom were James Robert Miller and Miller, Miller & Steinberg, Rockville, on brief, for appellees.
Argued before GILBERT, C. J., and MOYLAN and WILNER, JJ.
We are here presented with a question of the power of the Pursuant to Md. Rule 605 a the trial court determined that there was no just reason for delaying the entry of final judgment on his denial of the receivership. Judgment was entered, and the appellant noted this appeal.
equity court to appoint a receiver, upon the application of a dissident shareholder, for an ostensibly solvent corporation. Donald A. Grant, the appellant and a stockholder 1 in Allied Developers, Inc. (Allied), is of the mind that Jesse Bloodsworth and Carl A. Phillipps, 2 the appellees, along with Allied, have endeavored to defraud him. Grant sought relief in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, sitting as a court of equity. He requested that a receiver be appointed for Allied and an accounting be undertaken. That tribunal treated a motion to dismiss, made by the appellees, as a motion for summary judgment. It denied Grant's prayer that a receiver Pendente lite be appointed, but, inasmuch as the appellees conceded that the accounting was appropriate, the chancellor ordered an auditor to review the corporate records.
Grant raises three questions for our consideration, Scilicet:
"I. Should the Circuit Court have granted defendants' motion for Summary Judgment and denied appellant the appointment of a receiver, in light of circumstances indicating illegality, fraud, oppression, mismanagement, misapplication of assets, and the existence of a deadlock?
II. Does the Circuit Court have the jurisdiction and authority to appoint a receiver of a Maryland corporation owning real property in North Carolina?
III. Was the granting of a Summary Judgment in this case proper where genuine disputes about material facts existed and defendants were not entitled to judgment as a matter of law?"
The posture of the matter requires that we discuss only the second issue. Our recitation of the factual predicate will, thus, be limited.
On November 18, 1971, Grant, Bloodsworth, and Phillipps organized Allied for the purpose of dealing in real estate. At that time each individual contributed $500 in capital and received 500 shares of stock. Phillipps, who was to oversee the day-to-day operations of the venture, became the president, and Grant and Bloodsworth held the other corporate offices. Each stockholder sat as a director on a three-man board.
Allied almost immediately borrowed additional funds from Phillipps' wife and from one Helen Brown, a client of Phillipps. Those funds, along with others, were used to purchase the assets of the corporation, which consist of two motels and two checking accounts, all located in the State of North Carolina.
Apparently disenchanted as the result of what he perceived to be a number of improprieties, Grant filed a bill of complaint against the appellees on August 15, 1978. 3 The bill sought four specific and one general form of relief, namely: (1) an injunction to restrain the corporation from holding an annual meeting on August 17, 1978; (2) the appointment of the receiver; (3) an accounting; (4) costs and attorney's fees; and (5) general relief. Five weeks later Grant filed an amended bill containing essentially the same allegations and requesting the identical relief. The appellees, on January 9, 1979, moved to dismiss the bill. As we have already stated, the circuit court treated the motion to dismiss as a motion for summary judgment. 4 By order dated April 4, 1979, the motion for summary judgment in favor of Allied was granted as to the appointment of a receiver.
We said, in DiGrazia v. County Executive, 43 Md.App. 580, 406 A.2d 660, 662-63 (1979), that:
It is elementary, under DiGrazia and the cases cited therein, that we may affirm the ruling of the circuit court only if the appointment of a receiver was precluded as a matter of law.
The circuit court concluded that the material facts of the alleged improprieties were in dispute, and that he "would not on that element conclude that a summary judgment should be granted. . . ." The court opined:
(Emphasis supplied.)
We have a different view.
As early as Blondheim v. Moore, 11 Md. 365 (1857), it was recognized as a well-settled proposition in this State that a court of equity possesses the inherent power to appoint a receiver to take charge of and protect the property of a defendant pending an adjudication of the rights of the parties before the chancellor. 5 See also, Brown v. Brown, 204 Md. 197, 211, 103 A.2d 856, 863 (1954); Williams v. Salisbury Ice Co., 176 Md. 13, 27, 3 A.2d 507, 514 (1939); Hagerstown Furniture Co. v. Baker, 155 Md. 549, 558, 142 A. 885, 889 (1928); Shannon v. Wright, 60 Md. 520, 523 (1883); Voshell v. Hynson, 26 Md. 83, 92-93 (1866). The appointment of a receiver is "to be exercised with great circumspection," Blondheim v. Moore, supra, 11 Md. at 374, and unless the necessity for such an appointment "be of the most stringent character, the court will not appoint until the defendant is first heard in response" to the complaint. Id.
Upon proper application and proof, equity may exercise the appointment power so as to preserve the assets of a solvent corporation, where the actions of directors, officers, or other shareholders are Ultra vires, fraudulent, or otherwise illegal. Williams v. Salisbury Ice Co., supra; Hagerstown Furniture Co. v. Baker, supra.
A chancery receiver 6 " 'has no extra territorial power of official action: none which the court appointing him can confer, with authority * * * to take possession of the debtor's property; none which can give him, upon the principle of comity, a privilege to sue in a foreign court or another jurisdiction.' " Holbrook v. Industrial Tractor and Equipment Co., 168 Md. 468, 471, 178 A. 236, 237 (1935), Quoting Booth v. Clark, 58 U.S. (17 How.) 322, 338, 15 L.Ed. 164, 170-71 (1855). See also Day v. Postal Telegraph Co., 66 Md. 354, 360, 7 A. 608, 610 (1887); Lycoming Fire Insurance Co. v. Langley, 62 Md. 196, 202 (1884); High, A Treatise on the Law of Receivers, § 47 (4th ed. 1910).
Notwithstanding the lack of extra territorial power of the...
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