Agatucci v. Corradi

63 N.E.2d 630, 327 Ill. App. 153, 1945 Ill. App. LEXIS 401
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 7, 1945
DocketGen. No. 43,136
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 63 N.E.2d 630 (Agatucci v. Corradi) 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
Agatucci v. Corradi, 63 N.E.2d 630, 327 Ill. App. 153, 1945 Ill. App. LEXIS 401 (Ill. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Kiley

delivered the opinion of the court.

This' is an equitable action founded on the alleged fraud and deceit of the individual defendants in the purchase of plaintiff’s stock in the Chicago Heights Transportation Company. The proceedings were begun in the Circuit Court of Peoria County and were transferred to Cook County on motion of the South Suburban Safeway Lines. The decree based on a master’s report awarded plaintiff $5,701.00, reimbursed him for the master’s fees and taxed the costs against the defendants. All defendants éxcept the South Suburban Safeway Lines have appealed.

The Individual defendants, Corradi and Petronio, were brothers-in-law. They and the plaintiff were each owners of one-third of the stock of the Chicago Heights Company from 1928 to March 12, 1940, when they became the owners of plaintiff’s stock. During most of that period the three men each took an active interest in the operation of the business, which was the motor transportation of passengers. They alternatively drove busses and worked in the garage. In 1938 plaintiff went to Peoria to engage in the grocery business with relatives. He returned to Chicago Heights and the business in the Spring of 1939. July 20th following he ag’ain went to Peoria and thereafter was not engaged in the business.

January 6, 1939, plaintiff, Corradi and Petronio made an agreement specifying their relations as stockholders. Among other thing's it provided that in the event of a sale ojf the interest of one, the others would have a ten day option to purchase. July 1, 1939, plaintiff gave notice to Corradi and Petronio of his intention to sell. Neither one exercised the option.

■ The agreement also provided that should any of the owners engage in outside business, he could place in his stead any able, competent worker approved by the other owners, to carry out his duties and to receive the same compensation as others performing like duties. Plaintiff, Corradi and Petronio drew the same salaries. July 20,1939, before leaving for Peoria, plaintiff executed an assignment of his stock certificates to his son-in-law Co stabile for a purported consideration of $9,000.

At the annual meeting of the Company in February 1940, plaintiff offered to sell his stock to Petronio for $7,000. The offer was refused. Early in March, however, Petronio importuned plaintiff to sell and finally agreed to buy at the $7,000 figure. Costabile reassigned the certificates to plaintiff who sold them to Corradi and Petronio under an escrow agreement wherein the stock was pledged to secure payment installments. Thereafter, plaintiff resigned as director of the Company in a transaction wherein he was paid in full for the stock.

March 21, 1940 the physical assets of the Chicago Heights Company were sold to South Suburban Safeway Lines, Inc. under a sale, and lease and sale, arrangement for $40,000. Under this agreement it transferred its rights under its certificates of convenience and necessity and its franchises, subject to their being restored to it should the South Suburban Company default in monthly payments of rent ’ \ Should there be no default in the 56 monthly payments of “rent”, the transfer of these rights was to become absolute. The agreement was made between the Companies and executed by the Chicago Heights Company through Corradi, as President, and Petronio, as Secretary. Plaintiff had no knowledge of this transaction until after its consummation.

The question is whether Corradi and Petronio as officers of the Company violated a duty to plaintiff, as stockholder, to disclose to him, before buying his stock, information of the pending sale. Plaintiff alleges and the master and trial court found that Corradi and Petronio owed plaintiff the duty and violated it by deliberately hiding information from him.

The award of $5,701 represents the difference between the $7,000 paid plaintiff by Corradi and Petronio and $13,333.33, being the value of the stock measured by the sale price, less certain deductions. The deductions were on account of liabilities of the Company shown in an affidavit executed pursuant to the Bulk Sales Act. There appears to be no dispute about the amount awarded.

Defendants, who are the appellants, moved to strike and dismiss the complaint as insufficient in equity. The order denying the motion is assigned as error. They say that though discovery and accounting were prayed, neither was needed under the circumstances; that plaintiff did not offer to do equity in that he did not tender back the $7,000 to Corradi and Petronio or ask to be restored to his position as stockholder; and that the action is merely a legal demand for money.

It is true that neither an accounting nor discovery were needed. An injunction was sought, but became unnecessary when an agreement between the parties effected the same result. These considerations, however, are not important in view of our conclusion on the question whether or not an equitable cause of action was set out in the complaint.

The substance of the allegations taken as true, to test the complaint, is that Corradi and Petronio contemplated the sale of the Chicago Heights Company business when they purchased his stock; that he knew nothing of the proposed sale; that they deliberately withheld the information; that he would not have sold for $7,000 had he known the facts; and that he should have the real value of his stock as determined by the sale price of the business.

Defendants rely upon the general rule that though they, as directors and officers of the Chicago Heights Company, were trustees for the stockholders as a body in respect to its business and property, they were not plaintiff’s trustee with respect to his stock and were free to purchase his stock, being liable only for actual fraud. Hooker v. Midland Steel Company, 215 Ill. 444, and Bawden v. Taylor, 254 Ill. 464. The actions in the cases cited were to set aside the sales of stock, and the facts are different from those in the instant case. In the Hooker case the court said that mere failure to disclose information affecting the value of stock in the absence of actual fraud would not avoid a purchase thereof by a director. In the Bawden case the court said plaintiff could sustain his claim only by showing that false representations were made. The general rule was applied by this court in Wood v. MacLean Drug Co., 266 Ill. App. 5, and in Anchor Realty & Invest. Co. v. Rafferty, 308 Ill. App. 484.

The rule followed in this State is called the majority rule in a division of authority on this question. Fletcher Cyc. Corp. Perm. Ed. Vol. 3, p. 606. Under the minority rule, adverted to in Wood v. MacLean Drug Co., by reference to a Georgia case, directors are considered trustees for individual stockholders with respect to their stock. Massachusetts and Michigan also follow the majority rule. In those states on authority of Strong v. Rapide, 213 U. S. 419 an exception to the rule is recognized. Buckley v. Buckley, 230 Mich. 504; Gammon v. Dain, 212 N. W. Rep. (Mich.) 957; and Goodwin v. Agassiz, 283 Mass. 358. “Special circumstances” such as an assured sale enhancing the value of the stock, known to the officers but not to the stockholder and not ascertainable from the books, modify the “mere failure to disclose” doctrine. Buckley v. Buckley.

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Bluebook (online)
63 N.E.2d 630, 327 Ill. App. 153, 1945 Ill. App. LEXIS 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/agatucci-v-corradi-illappct-1945.