Morrill v. Little Falls Manuf'G Co.

Citation46 Minn. 260
CourtMinnesota Supreme Court
Decision Date08 June 1891
PartiesASHLEY C. MORRILL <I>vs.</I> LITTLE FALLS MANUFACTURING COMPANY and others.

F. W. Lyon, James E. Markham, and W. F. Bailey, for appellants.

Taylor, Calhoun & Rhodes, for respondent.

COLLINS, J.

This action was brought to determine an adverse claim to real property in Morrison county, plaintiff in his complaint alleging himself to be the owner and in actual possession thereof. He caused personal service of the summons to be made upon himself as president of the defendant corporation, and also upon one Townsend as its secretary, on November 19, 1888. More than 60 days thereafter (January 30, 1889) personal service of the summons was had upon defendants Roach, Thompson, and Laura B. Herrick, and on the same day service was duly made on defendant Nathan Herrick, by leaving a copy of the summons at the house of his usual abode. The remaining defendants, said to have been non-residents, were served by publication of the summons, which publication commenced February 1st, and terminated March 15, 1889. No answer was interposed by either of the defendants Roach, Thompson, or the Herricks; nor was an answer made in behalf of the corporation, except as hereinafter stated, and long after it was in default, if properly served, — that is, if the service upon it, before mentioned, was upon the proper persons as its officers. For the purposes of this appeal we must assume Morrill to have been the president and Townsend its secretary, as claimed by the plaintiff, and hence that the period of time within which it was required to answer expired long before service was made, personally or by publication, upon the remaining defendants. A few days before the time expired within which such defendants as had been served by publication could answer, — the exact date not appearing, — an answer was filed in behalf of the corporation and defendants Bullen and Mayhew. Such answer simply put in issue the plaintiff's alleged title to the property, denying that he had any rights or interest therein. The answering defendants failed to assert title in themselves, or a claim to the property of any description, and therefore the answer merely amounted to a disclaimer, the plaintiff being entitled to judgment on the pleadings. Perkins v. Morse, 30 Minn. 11, (13 N. W. Rep. 911, and 14 N. W. Rep. 879;) Donohue v. Ladd, 31 Minn. 244, (17 N. W. Rep. 381.) In the month of August, 1889, an application to amend this answer, based upon certain affidavits and the proposed amended answer, was denied as to the defendant corporation, but allowed as to the defendants Bullen and Mayhew, the proposed amendment to stand as their answer. From this order no appeal was taken. A reply was duly served, and thereafter, upon plaintiff's motion, judgment on the pleadings was ordered in his favor as against the defendants last named. The appeal, taken by the defendant corporation and by Bullen and Mayhew, is from a judgment entered in accordance with the demand for relief found in the complaint against all of the defendants.

As we view the cause now before us, the rights of defendants Bullen and Mayhew only are proper subjects for consideration, the entire controversy being made to depend upon the regularity of the order granting plaintiff's motion for judgment on the pleadings, which then, so far as involved by the motion, consisted of the complaint, the amended answer of these two defendants, and plaintiff's reply. This brings us to a brief statement of the allegations in the answer. The answering defendants admitted the incorporation of defendant company in the year 1856, setting forth that they then became and had ever since remained shareholders, Bullen owning 42 and Mayhew 38 shares of its stock, of the par value of $100 per share. Defendants Roach and Nathan Herrick were also shareholders, and from the year 1883 said Bullen, Mayhew, Roach, Nathan Herrick, and one Babbitt had constituted the board of directors; and that Bullen was the president, and Mayhew the secretary, of the corporation, both of whom had resided in the state of Wisconsin for more than 20 years last past. The answer set forth a series of transactions, including the making and recording of a number of quitclaim deeds by persons who pretended to be the president and secretary of the corporation, pretending to convey in its behalf and to one Eustis the property in controversy, and by the latter to Thayer, the pretended president, and from Thayer to this plaintiff, through and by means of which Thayer and plaintiff had conspired and attempted to cheat and defraud the corporation out of all its property except its franchise. All of these deeds it averred were made without consideration, and in furtherance of the plan mentioned. There were other allegations in the answer in respect to the time when the answering defendants first learned of the manner and fraudulent nature of these various conveyances, putting it as within five days prior to the date of the amended answer; and it was also alleged that plaintiff, without claim of right, had been and was pretending to act and to be the president of said corporation, and that persons selected by him were pretending to be and to act as a board of directors thereof, equally without right; that any defence made by them would but aid and further the plaintiff's alleged fraudulent scheme, the defendants, as stockholders, having no redress, and being without opportunity for relief, unless permitted to interpose the proposed amended answer. The relief prayed for was, in substance, that the deeds before mentioned, and each of the same, be declared null and void, and that the title to said real property be adjudged and decreed to be in the defendant corporation. It will be observed that neither of these defendants Bullen and Mayhew asserts any right, title, or interest in this property, except such as they may have as the owners and holders of 80 shares in the aggregate of the capital stock of the corporation. They expressly allege the corporation to be the owner in fee, and it is apparent that their answer, to be available for any purpose, must be made available in behalf of the corporation. Nor do they claim more than this, as is clearly indicated by their demand for relief, which, if obtained, would be wholly in the interest of the corporation. To be brief, the answer, if of value or service to anybody when amended, inured to the benefit of the corporation, and not to the benefit of those who interposed it, save as stockholders.

As the motion for judgment on the pleadings admitted all of the allegations found in the answer, one question necessarily presented here is the right of a stockholder to defend an action against a corporation when it has neglected to do so, or when those who have been recognized by a plaintiff as its officers when serving the summons omit to do so, or when they are in a position where it would be useless and absurd to ask them to defend. Another question is as to the nature and character of the defence, which in this case have been very fully stated when setting out the contents of the answer. We have presented to us, therefore, a case wherein the plaintiff has made a corporation one of the defendants, of which corporation he has, according to the answer, wrongfully assumed to act as president, and has caused the summons to be served upon it by service upon himself as its principal officer, and also upon the person whom he recognizes as its secretary, but who was not such officer, if the answer be true. No answer was made by or in behalf of the corporation, and after its default the plaintiff caused personal service of the summons to be made upon other defendants, two of whom the answer...

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