Bawden v. Taylor

98 N.E. 941, 254 Ill. 464
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 98 N.E. 941 (Bawden v. Taylor) 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
Bawden v. Taylor, 98 N.E. 941, 254 Ill. 464 (Ill. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

On March 4, 1908, Frederick J. Bawden, the appellant, and William H. Taylor, one of the appellees, were stockholders of the Taylor Publishing Company, organized under the laws of this State, engaged in the publication in Chicago of a trade journal called The Engineer. There were twelve hundred shares of capital stock, of which Bawden owned four hundred, Taylor four hundred and fifty-one, two employees forty-nine, and three hundred were in the treasury. On that day Bawden and Taylor entered into a written contract by which Bawden gave Taylor an option for ten days to purchase his four hundred shares for $66,250, payable as follows: $10,250 cash, $15,000 on May i, 1908, $25,000 one year from the date of transfer of the stock and $16,000 in two years from that date, with interest at six per cent on the deferred payments, for which Taylor was to give notes, secured by bonds of the Hill Publishing Company of New York, of the face value of the respective payments. Taylor availed himself of the privilege given by the contract and the stock was transferred to him on March 9, 1908, in exchange for cash, notes and bonds, as provided by the contract. The notes were paid, with the exception of the last one for $16,000, and on January 18, 1909, Bawden filed his bill in this case in the superior court of Cook county against Taylor and the Taylor Publishing Company, praying the court to set aside the transfer of the stock, to require Taylor to surrender and deliver up the certificate, and to render a decree against Taylor for such amount as might appear to be due from a full accounting for Bawden’s proportion of four-ninths of the assets of the Taylor Publishing Company. The grounds alleged for relief were., that a confidential relation existed between Taylor and Bawden creat-. ing duties which were disregarded by Taylor in concealing the terms of a proposed sale of The Engineer to the Hill Publishing Company, and that Taylor was guilty of actual fraud in making false representations concerning the price that was to be received on such sale. The chancellor having heard the evidence of the parties, decided in favor of defendants and directed a decree to be drawn dismissing the bill for want of equity. Bawden then asked leave to amend his bill by alleging that the option given by him to Taylor was void under the Criminal Code, as a gambling contract. The chancellor refused leave to file the amendment and a decree was entered in accordance with his finding, dismissing the bill. An appeal was taken to the Appellate Court.for the First District, where the decree was affirmed, and that court granted a certificate of importance and an appeal to this court.

The chancellor did not err in refusing leave to amend tire bill as there was no element of a gambling transaction between the parties. Section 130 of division 1 of the Criminal Code, prohibiting gambling in grain or other commodity, stocks or gold, was not intended to and does not make it a crime for one who is engaged in an ordinary and legitimate business transaction to obtain a price on stocks as a part of such transaction or incident thereto and where there is no attempt to use the contract as a cover for a wager on the price of stocks. (Osgood v. Skinner, 211 Ill. 229; Kantzler v. Bensinger, 214 id. 589; Bates v. Woods, 225 id. 126.) Taylor was negotiating for a sale of The Engineer to the Hill Publishing Company, and would only be able to effect the sale if he secured Bawden’s stock, and, that being a perfectly legitimate business transaction, he did not offend against the Criminal Code by obtaining from Bawden an agreement that he could have the stock for a certain price within a limited time.

The facts out of which it is claimed that a confidential relation arose are, that Taylor was the president and general manager of the Taylor Publishing Company, which published The Engineer, and that Bawden was a stockholder in the corporation and a brother-in-law of Taylor. The fact thát Taylor was president and Bawden a stockholder did not create a confidential relation. The officers of a corporation are trustees for the stockholders as a body with respect to the business and property of the corporation, which is under their control and management for the benefit of stockholders generally, but an officer has no control over the shares of the individual stockholder and is not a trustee for such stockholder with respect to his stock. Officers of a corporation may purchase the stock of stockholders on the same terms and as freely as they might purchase of a stranger. (Hooker v. Midland Steel Co. 215 Ill. 444; Cook on Corporations,—5th ed.—sec. 320; 10 Cyc. p. 796.) There was no confidential relation arising out of the fact of relationship by marriage. Brothers-in-law do not uniformly trust and confide in each other in the management of their business affairs to such an extent as to establish the relation claimed, and in this case the evidence shows that Bawden distrusted Taylor, and had accused him of conduct at - a stockholders’ meeting held on January 7, 1907, which amounted to a flagrant breach of honor and showed a carefully planned scheme of malicious treachery. The correspondence between the parties shows quite conclusively that there was no relation of trust and confidence between the parties, but that Bawden was dealing for himself and looking out for his own interests.

The claim of Bawden for relief upon the ground of actual false representations and fraud rests upon allegations that Taylor represented to him that the sale to the Hill Publishing Company was to be for $150,000, when he knew, before the transaction was closed, that he would receive $225,000 in bonds of the Hill Publishing Company for the sale of The Bngineer. The record is filled with correspondence and other matter having only the most remote connection with the transactions, but, giving to each item of evidence its due weight, the material facts are substantially as follows: The Bngineer was a trade journal, and the Hill Publishing Company published a similar paper in New York, called Power. Bawden desired to sell his stock and made proposals to that, end. In January, 1908, a broker in New York engaged in the business of selling trade journals was endeavoring to effect a sale of The Bngineer, with its good will, subscription list, advertising contracts, etc., to the Hill Publishing Company. He was authorized to make, and did make, an offer to sell The Bngineer for $225,000, but the offer was rejected and the Hill Publishing Company made a counter-offer of $150,-000, which was also rejected. There was correspondence between Taylor and' Bawden about the offer of $150,000 as the amount that the Hill Publishing Company would pay, and out of that sum the broker was to have $6000 for commission. The offer of the Hill Publishing Company having been rejected, that corporation bought a trade journal called Engineer’s Review, of Cleveland, Ohio, changed Power from a monthly to a weekly and cut the advertising rates. Taylor was in New York the latter part of February, 1908, and in consultation with the broker. It was a material part of the negotiations that he should agree not to publish a similar trade journal, and by his authority the broker, on February 29, presented to the president of the Hill Publishing Company a draft of an agreement, not dated or signed, for the purchase of The Engineer at $225,000, payable^ in bonds of the Hill Publishing Company,—$50,000 in one year, $50,000 in two years, $50,000 in three years and $75,000 in four years.

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Bluebook (online)
98 N.E. 941, 254 Ill. 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bawden-v-taylor-ill-1912.