Buda Foundry & Manufacturing Co. v. Columbian Celebration Co.

1 Ill. Cir. Ct. 398
CourtIllinois Circuit Court
DecidedAugust 6, 1903
DocketGen. No. 116,462
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ill. Cir. Ct. 398 (Buda Foundry & Manufacturing Co. v. Columbian Celebration Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buda Foundry & Manufacturing Co. v. Columbian Celebration Co., 1 Ill. Cir. Ct. 398 (Ill. Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

Tuley, J.:

The statement of this case by Master Learning is, in substance, that the complainant, the Buda Foundry and Manufacturing Company, an Illinois corporation, a simple contract creditor (in the sum of $9,378) of the Columbian Celebration Company, also an Illinois corporation, on June 10, 1893, filed its bill of complaint under section 25, chapter 32, of the Revised Statutes, on behalf of itself, and all other creditors against the latter company and numerous parties alleged to be stockholders of said defendant corporation; alleging that said Columbian Celebration Company had ceased to do business, leaving unsecured debts unpaid, amounting to more than $300,000; that its assets did not amount to more than $50,000, and that it carried an incumbrance, a trust deed, purporting to secure $800,000 of bonded indebtedness of said corporation, and also alleging that the stock of said corporation had not been paid. The said bill pf complaint, commonly called a “winding-up” bill was subsequently amended.

The master then refers to the filing under said section 25, of a prior bill, by Steele Mackaye, against the Columbian Celebration Company, on the 30th of May, 1893, which bill is alleged to have been fraudulent and collusive. The master sets out the proceedings and pleadings on such prior bill, which are' unnecessary to specify in this opinion, as the same was subsequently dismissed out of this court.

The defendants herein, (over one hundred in number), having been brought into court, issues were joined, and the cause referred to Master Learning in November, 1895. Before the reference numerous parties had been made co-complainants.

The master’s report was filed in this court in June, 1902, and now comes up on exceptions. It appears from the evi-. dence reported by the master, that Steele Mackaye, one of the defendants herein and the chief ¡¡promoter of the Columbian Celebration Company, had, prior to the formation of said company, formed a scheme in connection with one Crosley and others, for the organization of a spectacular show of a somewhat similar nature to that contemplated by the Columbian Celebration Company’s charter, in which were to be used all or nearly all of the inventions that were subsequently transferred to the Celebration Company, and to that end as early as the 16th of December, 1891, said Mackaye caused an application to be made and filed with the secretary of the 'state of Illinois, for the incorporation of the “Spectatorio Company,” the object of which was stated to be, “the ownership, sale and licensing and presentation of'spectacles, dramas, operas, pantomimes and other forms of theatrical and dramatic character, and the ownership, sale, licensing and use of every form of invention and improvement, in the art of producing effects of whatever character upon the stage.”

Authority to take subscriptions of capital stock to the amount of $100,000 in $100 shares, -was duly issued, and the capital stock was subscribed for as follows: Steele Mackaye, 998 shares; Powell Crosley, 1 share; Louis B. Uttz, 1 share;- and the three were elected directors on the 11th day of January, 1892. A charter was issued to the company on the 13th of January, 1892.

It appears, however, that Mackaye, Crosley and others interested in promoting the Spectatorio Company (which was intended to be used in connection with the World’s fair of 1893), concluded to broaden their project, and in place of a show with a capital of $100,000, to project a much more extensive one with a capital of $2,000,000. This resulted in the organization of the defendant, the Columbian Celebration Company.

The master finds as to the organization of the Columbian Celebration Company, “that, in the latter part of 1891, Steele Mackaye conceived a scheme to build an enormous building for the purpose of introducing and exhibiting spectacular plays and pantomimes at Chicago, Illinois, with particular reference to the World’s Columbian Exposition there projected, so that the large attendance upon said exposition then anticipated could at least, in part, be attracted and induced to contribute to the financial benefit of the scheme of Mackaye. Mackaye "was a man of considerable experience in theatrical matters, of an inventive mind, daring, forceful and magnetic. At this time he had small financial resources, but had conceived some novel and brilliant plans for stage effects by mechanical and electrical means. Mackaye was joined in the .scheme by Benjamin Butterworth, an ex-commissioner of patents and a patent lawyer, and Powell Crosley, residing at Cincinnati, Ohio, as promoters of the enterprise; W. L. B. Jenney, an architect of Chicago, was applied to by Mackaye to assist him in drafting and formulating the ideas of Mack-aye into practical form and expression; that on or about the 16th of May, 1892, articles of incorporation were certified to by the secretary o| the state of Illinois, for the incorporation of the Columbian Celebration Company, with capital stock of two million dollars] 20,000 shares, par value $100 each, of which Steele Mackaye had subscribed for 19,996 shares; Benjamin Butterworth, 1 share; Powell Crosley, 1 share; -Stephen C. White, one share; and Howard O. Edmonds, one share; all of whom were made and constituted the board of directors. That the above Stephen C. White was the clerk of Mackaye, and Howard O. Edmonds was the clerk of Butter-worth.”

On the 16th of May, 1892, was held the first meeting of the board of directors, at which all the above named were present, excepting Crosley. Butterworth. was made president; Crosley, vice-president, and White, secretary. At that meeting a resolution was adopted to the effect that: “The officers of the company are hereby authorized and directed to close the contract with Steele Mackaye for certain inventions, rights, privileges and property, according to the terms embodied in the contract this day submitted to the board, a duplicate copy of which is on file in the office of the secretary of this company, and that the president and secretary be directed, on delivery to the company by Mackaye of a good and sufficient assignment of the rights, inventions, property and interest, etc., mentioned and referred to in the contract, to issue to him as full and final payment for said inventions, etc., 19,996 shares of the capital stock of the company; he to accept the stock and the royalty provided for in the contract and assignment, in full satisfaction and discharge of the consideration for said inventions, etc. The said inventions, etc., being accepted by the company in full payment of the par value of the stock so issued, making the same full paid and non-assessable. ”

On said 16th day of May, 1892, at said meeting of the directors of the Celebration Company, an agreement in writing was -entered into between the corporation and Steele Mackaye. This contract recited, in substance, that Mackaye had invented a large number of new, useful and valuable improvements in scenic art for the advancement and development of realism and nature in that art; the inventions named in the agreement and the object and purpose of the same, respectively being set forth, are numbered from 1 to 11, viz.:

1. Sliding stages; 2. Floating stages; 3. Telescopic stages; 4. Apparatus for producing scenic effects, (a) Illumiscope, or a combination of reflectors, (b) Colorators, or drums of colored paper, glass, etc.; 5. Wave maker; 6. Automatic proscenium adjuster; 7. Luxauleator, or curtain of light; 8. Automatic interpreter; 9.

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1 Ill. Cir. Ct. 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buda-foundry-manufacturing-co-v-columbian-celebration-co-illcirct-1903.