Baker v. Administrator of Backus

32 Ill. 79
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 32 Ill. 79 (Baker v. Administrator of Backus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Administrator of Backus, 32 Ill. 79 (Ill. 1863).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Breese

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The questions presented by the record render a full statement of the case necessary. It was as follows:

On the first day of July, 1857, one William Backus filed a bill in chancery, in the Cook Circuit Court, against certain persons named therein as defendants, alleging that they had, on the 15th of December, 1855, associated themselves together and purported to form a corporation for manufacturing, cutting, working, vending and dealing in ice, under the name of “ the Crystal Lake Ice Company,” and for that purpose they had filed in the office of the clerk of the county of Cook, the required certificate of incorporation, duly acknowledged by them before a notary public, under his notarial seal; that complainant was the owner of twenty-five shares, and that 485 shares had been taken, leaving only fifteen shares undisposed of, upon which assessments had been levied, of sixty dollars on each share, amounting in all to twenty-nine thousand one hundred dollars", upon which twenty-three thousand and fifty-five dollars had been paid.

The names of the holders of the stock were set forth in a schedule attached to the bill; and it was alleged that assessments had been levied on the stock, and each and all of the stockholders were in default, and that transfers of stock had been made by different stockholders to other persons without the knowledge or consent of the complainant; that since filing the certificate, the associates who signed it purported to organize the company by the election of one of their number, Amos Page, as president,' and another of them, George P. Clark, as treasurer and secretary, who having subsequently resigned, Alexander C. Coventry, not a stockholder, was appointed treasurer and secretary; that in consequence of removals and changes of residence, on the 30th of March, 1857, the company had no trustee who was a citizen of the State; that, by the by-laws of the company, the stated meeting of the stockholders was to be held at its office, in Chicago, on the first Monday of November, annually, and the trustees were to be elected annually at each meeting; that no annual meeting was held on the first Monday of November, 1856, and the secretary did not give thirty days’ notice of a meeting as required by the by-laws, and the trustees pretended to hold over without an election; that at a meeting of the stockholders on the 15th of June, 1857, four of the trustees were removed from office, and one of them resigned, and three residents of this State were elected trustees in their place.

The bill stated that the company had not complied with the act of February, 1849, in this, that they had not kept an alphabetical list of their stockholders, showing their residence, number of shares, and amount of stock paid in, in their office; that they had never published, in any newspaper, a report showing the amount of capital, the proportion paid in, and amount of existing debts; and that one-half of the capital stock was not paid in within one year of its organization, and has not yet been paid in; that the company had never engaged in any manufacturing, agricultural, mining or mechanical business; but had been engaged in cutting and vending ice, and that there was no such business known as manufacturing ice; that the company had never been legally organized as a corporation, and had never existed as a corporation; but as a matter of fact, it had been, since its organization, a general copartnership, and that the property of the company was then held as general partnership property; that if it was ever legally organized, and ever existed as a corporation, it ceased to exist as such on the 15th day of December, 1856, because one-half of the stock of the company had not been paid in on that day; the hill charged that the property was then held as partnership property, and the members of the company were severally liable for the debts of the company as copartners.

The bill stated, that soon after the formation of the company it commenced cutting ice and erecting ice houses at Crystal Lake, for storing ice, and purchased some small pieces of land to place them on, and also for a roadway for a railroad track from the ice house to the Chicago, St. Paul and Fond du Lac Railroad, the title to all which was taken to Amos Page and held by him as trustee for the company; that they graded and laid a track about fifteen furlongs in length, at great expense, and without regard to the true interests of the stockholders ; that the company did business diming the year 1856 at a loss of more than six thousand dollars, and that during the past winter the, company cut and stored ice at a great expense, and in the spring of 1857 purchased horses, wagons, harness and other articles, to deliver ice in Chicago, and proceeded to erect houses and fences, which were nearly completed, for stabling horses and storing wagons; that the company was continuing the business at a monthly loss of five hundred dollars ; that it was greatly in debt, owing seven thousand dollars, and the stockholders refused to help the company or advance the money to relieve it from its embarrassments.

The bill stated, that in April, 1857, judgment was obtained by Wilcox, Lyon & Co. against the company for four hundred and twelve dollars and costs, upon which execution had issued and was in the hands of the sheriff, and the personal property of the company liable to be seized and sold under it.

The bill stated, that the creditors of the company had been long delayed and were threatening to commence suits, and that notes and acceptances of the. company were maturing and no provision made to meet them; that the laborers employed, whose wages were not paid, were, some of them, “ on a strike” and refused to permit others to work, and the company had no means to pay them; that the property, except the real estate, was of a perishable nature, and if sold at forced sale would not pay the demands against the company, but would then, at a fair sale, realize more than sufficient to satisfy all demands, hut if held until the season was past, could only be held at an expense to the company and depreciation upon its amount and value, as it could not then be sold for as much as it could be at that time; that a large portion of the property consisted of ten thousand tons of ice, which, if carried over, or into the warm weather, would deteriorate in value and lessen in amount. The horses were an expense and the company were hopelessly insolvent, and if the property was not sold by a receiver to pay the debts, then it would be sacrificed at sheriff’s sale, to satisfy judgments against it; that the real estate was of little value except for the ice business, and it would be greatly for the interest of all parties concerned it shoidd be sold with the other property; that of the 485 shares of stock, 312 of them are held by non-residents, and the remaining 1Y3 shares are held by twelve persons, except complainant, who reside in this State, two of whom live in the county of Cook; that all the shareholders of the company had been advised of its condition and failed to aid it.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Ill. 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-administrator-of-backus-ill-1863.