Beaunisne v. Scholz

182 Ill. App. 238, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 419
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 13, 1913
DocketGen. No. 17,743
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 182 Ill. App. 238 (Beaunisne v. Scholz) 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
Beaunisne v. Scholz, 182 Ill. App. 238, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 419 (Ill. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Probate Court of Cook county on February 6, 1909, allowed a claim of Robert A Scholz against the estate of Albert C. Beaunisne for $1,177.75, based on the following statement:

“April 2,1908.
Estate of Albert G. Beaunisne, deceased,
To Robert A. Scholz, Dr.

To cash deposited with said deceased February 10, 1903, to be used in payment for stock to be subscribed for and issued to said Scholz in a corporation to be organized for the purpose of owning and operating a railroad from Port Yarbaros to Alamos in the State of Sonora, Mexico, and thence to San Bernado and Josefita Mineral in the same state under the concession granted for that purpqse by the Government of the Republic of Mexico. $1,000. Interest on same from July 17, 1905, at 5% per annum. ”

The administratrix of the estate appealed to the Circuit Court of Cook. county, where the cause was tried de novo without a jury. A judgment was again entered in favor of the claimant on May 10, 1911, for $1,292. From this judgment the administratrix appealed to this court, assigning as error that the finding and judgment of the Circuit Court are contrary to the law and the evidence and that the court erred in refusing to hold certain propositions of law tendered by the administratrix.

The canse was tried in the Circuit Court on a stipulation as to the facts, supplemented by the testimony of A. P. Ballou, a business associate of the decedent, introduced by the defendant estate, and by the testimony of the claimant Scholz in his own behalf. This testimony was confined to the only question of fact which was in controversy, how far the business enterprise and the proposed plan of procedure in relation to it by those having it especially in charge were explained to Scholz before he invested the money in it, for which he is now suing? This testimony we will comment on hereinafter.

The matter contained in the stipulation of facts is all material, hut the stipulation is too long for quotation in full, and a recitation of it in its entirety is unnecessary for our purpose.

The claimant paid Albert Gr. Beaunisne one thousand dollars on February 10, 1903, and received from him the following writing:

“Chicago 2-10, 1903.
$1000. Received from Robert A. Scholz One Thousand Dollars as payment in full for an amount of stock of the par value of $5,000.00 in the corporation to be organized at a capitalization of not less than $5,000,000 par value, for the purpose of owning and operating a railroad from Port Tarbaros to Alamos in the State of Sonora, Mexico, and thence to San Bernardo and Josefita Mineral in the same State under the concession granted for that purpose by the Q-overnment of the Republic of Mexico.
Albert Gr. Beaunisne.”

Scholz has never received the stock. July 10, 1905, he delivered to Beaunisne a written demand for the thousand dollars which he had paid, stating in the same that he withdrew his consent to subscribe for stock in the corporation described in the receipt of February 10, 1903, which he recited, and tendered to Beaunisne on payment of the thousand dollars.

To this demand Beaunisne replied that he would not return the thousand dollars and that he could not deliver to him the stock because the corporation had not been organized. August 1, 1906, Scholz made another written demand on Beaunisne, reciting as before the receipt of February 10, 1903, and concluding:

“Whereas said stock had never been delivered to me:
Now, therefore, I hereby demand that you deliver to me forthwith the said stock mentioned in the receipt or repay to me the said sum of One Thousand Dollars. ’ ’

August 1,1906, Beaunisne and associates filed in the office of the auditor of the territory of Arizona articles of incorporation of the Southern Sonora & Alamos Railroad Company with an authorized capital of $5,-000,000. August 23, 1906, Beaunisne and others who had obtained and held a concession from Mexico for the railroad conveyed to the corporation their rights under the concession and in certain real estate acquired for right-of-way purposes and in the deposit of $13,200 made with the Mexican Government to secure the performance of the concession contract. The railroad corporation then entered into a contract with the Continental Construction Company for the construction of the railroad and its equipment, the amount of the contract being payable in bonds and stock of the railroad company. On October 26, 1906, after these things were done Beaunisne tendered to Scholz shares of stock in said Southern Sonora and Alamos Railroad Company of the par value of five thousand dollars. Scholz refused to accept said shares. They were, at the trials in the courts below, brought into court for the purpose of making the tender good.

Justification of the refusal seems by appellee to be put on two grounds: First, that the tender was not made within a reasonable time either of the contract which it is contended was embodied in the original receipt, or even of the' second demand, which either the stock or the money would have satisfied. It is, however, also contended that the second demand (of August 1, 1906) did not as a matter of law waive or alter the rights accruing to Scholz to have his money returned to him which sprang from the original contract, the delay in fulfilling it, and his first demand of July 10,1905.

The second justifying reason asserted by Scholz for refusing the tender is that he holds himself to have been an investor simply and not a promoter, and that the corporate enterprise was abandoned before the corporation was formed. To substantiate the second branch of this proposition he cites the facts incorporated in the stipulation that an attempt to negotiate the underwriting and sale of bonds, the proceeds of which were to build the road, lasted through 1903, 1904 and a part of 1905, but was then abandoned; that all the money paid in to Beaunisne by' Scholz and other persons similarly subscribing, about $30,000 in all, was expended before July 13, 1904, in this attempt and in securing a concession from the Mexican Government, and in making preliminary field surveys of the proposed road and obtaining right-of-way, and that the concession was terminated by the Mexican Government May 21, 1907, on account of the failure of the concessionaires to construct the first twenty kilometers of the railroad within the time prescribed by the concession contract, which extended only to April 20,1907. Although an application for renewal of the concession was pending before the proper department of the Mexican Government for about six months, it was denied and the railroad described in the receipt was never constructed.

The defense of the estate to the claim is based on a different view of the facts above set forth as related to and connected with other circumstances.

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182 Ill. App. 238, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beaunisne-v-scholz-illappct-1913.