Abrams v. Love

254 Ill. App. 428, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 18
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 1, 1929
DocketGen. No. 7,979
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 254 Ill. App. 428 (Abrams v. Love) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abrams v. Love, 254 Ill. App. 428, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 18 (Ill. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Jett

delivered the opinion of the court.

In 1925, Samuel Abrams, appellee, filed a bill in the circuit court of Winnebago county, against M. A. Love, Frank 0. Howe, Henry P. Lewis, M. F. Ambrosious, N. E. Simonsen, John E. Stephens and C. F. Buman, alleging that one M. F. Ambrosious sold to him twenty-five shares of the capital stock of the Winnebago Production Company, or corporation, for $250; that thereafter he sold to appellee fifteen shares of the capital stock of the Bock Biver Development Corporation for $150; that said corporations were organized for the purpose of producing oil and that the stock of said corporations came within class “D” of Illinois Securities Law, Cahill’s St. ch. 32, tf 254 et seq.; that said corporations did not comply with said law, that M. A. Love and N. E. Simonsen, the appellants herein, were officers and directors of the American Engineering and Development Company, a corporation organized for the purpose of selling stock and drilling for oil and the producing and selling of oil and that said corporation and its officers caused and assisted in the organization of the said Winnebago Production Company and said Rock River Development Corporation and that said last mentioned corporations were organized in behalf of the officers of said American Engineering and Development Company and as subsidiary corporations, with the knowledge and consent of Love and Simonsen, appellants, and with the consent of others who did not join in the appeal of this cause for the - purpose of selling the stock of said Winnebago Production Company and óf the Rock. River Development Corporation and turning over the money received from such sales to said American Engineering and Development Company; that a large proportion of the money received from the sales of the stock of said Winnebago Production Company and the said Rock River Development Corporations was turned over to the said American Engineering and Development Company; that appellants, Love and Simonsen, and others who did not enter into this appeal, assisted in selling the stock of said corporations to appellee and that the same was sold to appellee with their knowledge and consent and for the benefit of said American Engineering and Development Company.

. Separate answers were filed by M. A. Love and N. ,E. Simonsen, appellants, in which they neither admitted nor denied the allegations to the effect that the shares of stock sold to appellee came within class “D” of the Illinois Securities Law, Cahill’s St. ch. 32, 254 et seq. Said appellants each denied that they had anything to do with the selling of said above mentioned stock to appellee or that the American Engineering and Development Company received the proceeds of the sale of shares of stock of the Winnebago Production Company and the Rock River Development Corporation, but charged, whatever funds they received from said last mentioned corporations they received the same in payment for services rendered by the American Engineering and Development Company for said Winnebago and Bock Biver Corporations and for oil leases sold by said American Engineering and Development Company to said Winnebago Production Company and of the'Bock Biver Development Corporations.

A trial was had with the finding and decree in favor of appellee in which decree the court found among other things, that appellants, Love and Simonsen, with others, knew of the organization of the Winnebago Production Company and Bock Biver Development Corporation and that said corporations were organized to further the business of the American Engineering and Development Company, and that each of said appellants are jointly and severally liable for the amount paid by appellee- on said stock and for the amount of solicitor’s fees.

The record discloses, it was agreed that if appellee was entitled to solicitor’s fees that $200 was a reasonable fee.

The court also found from the evidence that the American Engineering and Development Company was a corporation organized for the purpose of developing and promoting oil lands and leases in the State of Kentucky and that appellants, Love and Simonsen were each directors of said corporation and became such prior to the first purchase of stock by appellee and remained such directors during all the time that he was purchasing and paying for said stock; that appellant Love was president of said corporation at the time of the purchasing of said stock and remained so during all the time appellee was paying for the samé; and that appellant Simonsen was vice president of said corporation at the time appellee purchased his stock and so remained during all the time appellee was paying for the same; that Winnebago Production Company was a corporation organized for, and on behalf of, and used by American Engineering and Development Company as a subsidiary company; that Rock River Development Corporation was also organized and used "by American Engineering and Development Company as a subsidiary corporation; that there was an understanding between such corporations that Winnebago Production Company and Rock River Development Corporation would cause their stock to be sold and send the money therefor to the American Engineering and Development Company and in the sales of the stock, appellants knew that sales were being made of stock and that the same were being made for,- and on behalf of, American Engineering and Development Company.

It is urged by appellants that the stock in question did not come under class “D” of the Illinois Securities Law, Cahill’s St. ch. 32, 254 et seq. Appellants further contend that the burden was on appellee to prove the facts which would bring said'stock under class “D.”

Section 3 of the' Securities Act, Cahill’s St. ch. 32, If 256, classifies securities into four general divisions, and are as follows:

“(1) Securities, the inherent quality of which assure their sale and disposition without the perpetration of fraud, which shall be known as securities in Class ‘A’;
“(2) Securities, the inherent qualities of which, or in the nature of one or both parties to the sale thereof, assure their sale and disposition without the perpetration of fraud, which shall be known as securities in Class ‘B ’;
“ (3) Securities based on established income, which shall be known as securities in Class ‘O’;
‘ ‘ (4) Securities based on prospective income, which shall be known as securities in Class ‘D’.”
All securities other than those falling within classes “A,” “B” and “C” respectively, shall be known as securities in class “D.” The only way therefore, to determine that a stock is in class “D” is to eliminate classes “A,” “B” and “C.”

The charter of the Rock River Development Corporation was offered in evidence. It bears date November 8,1920. It shows that the corporation had been organized for less than a year at the time of the sale of the stock in question; it was fraudulently organized in that the incorporators swore in their statement that they had paid in large sums of money in cash, when in fact, according to the evidence in the case, they had not paid anything.

The corporation pretended to execute a contract with American Engineering and Development Company at a time when appellants, Love and Simonsen, were stockholders and took an active part.

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Bluebook (online)
254 Ill. App. 428, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abrams-v-love-illappct-1929.