Bilhuber v. Bilhuber-Wawak Co.

245 Ill. App. 552, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 233
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 4, 1927
DocketGen. No. 31,325
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 245 Ill. App. 552 (Bilhuber v. Bilhuber-Wawak Co.) 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
Bilhuber v. Bilhuber-Wawak Co., 245 Ill. App. 552, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 233 (Ill. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wells

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a bill filed October 18, 1922, by the appellees Otto Bilhuber and Emilie Bilhuber in which it is charged that in the year 1907 the complainant, Frank Wawak, Sr., and one Bose, organized the BilhuberBose Company, with a capital stock of $25,000, and that Frank Wawak, Sr., was made president and the complainant Otto Bilhuber, secretary; that during the year 1917 the said Wawaks, Senior and Junior, had acquired control of the stock of said corporation, and that for the purpose of minimizing the income payable to the United States Government and for the purpose of creating a fictitious deduction from said income tax, proposed to the said complainant Otto Bilhuber that they, as directors of said corporation, should vote larger salaries to the officers thereof, viz, the salary of the president to be fixed at $3,000 and the salaries of the secretary and treasurer at $8,000 each for said year, and that Otto Bilhuber, secretary, and the defendant Frank Wawak, Jr., would each accept the sum of $3,000 in cash as salaries for said year, and that the balance of their salaries so fixed, as well as the salary voted to the said Wawak, Sr., as president, should be paid in stock of the corporation, and that all of said stock so to be issued in payment or part payment of such salaries should be added together, and from the result thereof the said Wawak, Sr., should receive about one-half of the total, and your orator, Otto Bilhuber, .and the said Wawak, Jr., should receive about one-fourth each thereof, so that of the total so paid as salaries for the year 1917, the said Wawak, Sr., received and there was issued to him about $4,500 worth of stock, .and that, said Otto Bilhuber and Frank Wawak, Jr., did receive about $2,250 worth each thereof as salaries, as aforesaid; that the payment of said salary in stock unto the said Wawak, Sr., was entirely fraudulent and void as to said corporation, the stockholders and creditors., and the United States Government.

That during- the years 1918, 1919, .1920 and 1921 a procedure similar to that .practiced in 1917 was indulged in for various sums, allotted for salaries of the respective officers, Wawak, Sr., as president, never, however, receiving any cash payments as .for salaries, and Bilhuber, as secretary, and Wawak, Jr., as treasurer, receiving $3,000 in cash and the balance of their respective salaries in stock, the proportion of stock so issued being always maintained at 50 per cent for Wawak, Sr., and 25 per cent each as to Bilhuber and Wawak, Jr. .

That in the year 1918 the capital stock of said corporation was, by resolution of the board of directors and by proper proceedings, increased from $25,000 to $125,000, and stock dividends from said increase of capital stock were voted by the board of directors to be paid to the said Wawaks, Senior and Junior, and to said complainant Otto in proportion to their stock holdings in said corporation prior to said increase of capital stock and that stock dividends were so apportioned ; that during the year 1920, by vote .of the board of directors, and by proper proceedings, the capital stock of said corporation was again increased from $125,000.to $500,000, the shares of said stock remaining at $100 each at par; that on May 29,1920, by resolution of the board of directors, a stock dividend of $75,000 was declared, the same to be apportioned between the said Wawaks, Senior and Junior, and said complainant Otto in proportion to their then respective holdings of the capital stock of said corporation, and that the said stock dividend was so divided among said parties, and stock of said corporation issued in accordance therewith.

That for the purpose of reducing the income tax payable to the United States Government during the years 1917 to 1921, inclusive, rebates paid to the said corporation from firms and corporations from which the defendant corporation purchased goods, notably from the Hockanum Mills Company, amounting to $4,418.91, were never entered upon the records of said defendant corporation as a rebate, and the amount was never reported to the United States Government in income tax returns, but that said amount was taken by the said Wawak, Jr., and placed in his private bank account, and your orator alleges that he is informed and believes, and therefore states the fact to be, that other and further rebates were so paid to said defendant corporation, were concealed from the United States Government and were so received by the said Frank Wawalc, Jr., and placed in his private banking account, and your orator states that he, as an officer of the said defendant corporation, during said years, in his individual capacity, does not know what disposition the said Frank Wawak, Jr., made of said funds, but your orator alleges that he is informed and believes, and therefore states the fact to be, that certain of said funds never found their way into the treasury of said defendant corporation but were diverted to the uses of said Wawaks, Junior and Senior.

That at the date of the filing of this bill of complaint (October 18,1922) the following named persons and individuals are all of the owners and holders of the capital stock of said defendant corporation and that they own and hold the number of shares set opposite their respective names, viz, of the shares of common stock, Frank Wawak, Sr., 1035 shares; Frank Wawak, Jr., 941% shares; Otto Bilhuber, 549 shares; Mrs. Frank Wawak, Sr., 637% shares; Emilie Bilhuber, 337 shares; and of the preferred stock,. Oscar EL Solum, 50 shares, and Mrs. Frank Wawak, Sr., 75 shares; that the shares of common stock standing in the name of Mrs. Frank Wawak, Sr., and of Emilie Bilhuber, your oratrix, were shares deducted from stock purchased by or allotted to said Wawak, Sr., and to your orator; that the shares of preferred stock standing in the name of Mrs. Frank Wawak, Sr., were acquired by means unknown to your orator by the said Frank Wawak, Sr., but caused to be placed in the name of Mrs. Frank Wawak, Sr., who is the wife of the defendant, Frank Wawak, Sr.

That in the year 1918 the said Wawak, Sr., without authorization of the board of directors purchased an automobile at a cost of $2,715, and caused the same to be paid for out of the funds of the said corporation, and that said automobile was not purchased for said corporation, and that it was never used in the conduct of the business of said corporation, but that the said Wawaks, Senior and Junior, caused the same to be turned over to the possession o’f the said Wawak, Sr., and that from the time of the purchase of the same down to the present date, the said automobile has been in the possession of and used solely by said Wawak, Sr., for his own personal use and for the benefit of his own private business as a tailor, and not in any respect for the use of the said defendant corporation, and that the said defendant corporation has never had any benefit therefrom but that the cost of said machine was charged upon the books of said corporation as an expense of the said corporation.

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245 Ill. App. 552, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bilhuber-v-bilhuber-wawak-co-illappct-1927.