Chicago Macaroni Manufacturing Co. v. Boggiano

67 N.E. 17, 202 Ill. 312
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 67 N.E. 17 (Chicago Macaroni Manufacturing Co. v. Boggiano) 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
Chicago Macaroni Manufacturing Co. v. Boggiano, 67 N.E. 17, 202 Ill. 312 (Ill. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

At a regular meeting of the stockholders of the plaintiff in error corporation held on the 4th day of January, 1897, an election was held for three directors of the company. The defendant in error, Agostino G. Boggiano, owned 501 shares of the stock, Anthony G. Boggiano, his son, 10 shares and the plaintiff in error Frederick P. Read 488 shares. The capital stock of the corporation consisted of 1000 shares of the value of §10 each, but it seems that one share had never been subscribed for. All the stockholders were present. Defendant in error served as chairman and plaintiff in error Read as secretary. The result of the vote was as follows: Read 1286 votes, G. Ucello 689 votes, Agostino Bogg'iano and Anthony'G. Boggiano each 511 votes. The votes of all the stockholders were cast upon the cumulative plan. Read so divided his votes that it gave to himself and Ucello a majority for two of the directors. The defendant in error thereupon, against the protest of Read and Ucello, declared the stockholders’ meeting to be adjourned summarily, subject to be re-convened upon the call of himself, as president. A few days later he called the meeting of the stockholders. Read and Ucello attended and sought to obstruct action by the Boggianos, father and son, but the records of the meeting were made to show that the defendant in error, Boggiano, Anthony G. Boggiano and the plaintiff in error Read were declared to be elected directors, and that the defendant in error was elected president and the said Anthony G. Bog'giano secretary. Read arid Ucello caused a record to be made showing" that they and the defendant in error were elected directors, and that Read was elected president and Ucello secretary. This was a bill in chancery filed by plaintiff in error Read, in behalf of the Macaroni Manufacturing Company and himself, against the defendant in error, for a decree declaring that Read and Ucello be declared directors and president and secretary of the company, and_ that the Boggianos be declared usurpers of the offices of director and president; that all acts done by Boggiano as president since'February 1,1897, be declared void, and he be restrained from acting as director and president or from interfering with the management of the business of the company, ordered to turn over to Read the books, accounts and all property of the company, and for such other or further relief as equity may require. The bill also alleged that the corporation was organized on the 3d day of February, 1893; that the defendant in error was then elected president and treasurer of the company, and continued to act as such president and treasurer until the alleged election of said Read as president and said Ucello as secretary occurred; that no salary was ever provided by the board of .directors to be paid to the defendant in error as president; that said defendant in error had, however, improperly appropriated funds of the company to himself in a large sum as and for his compensation as such president; had received large sums from property of the company by him sold, and $4000 or more as insurance loss to the property of the company; had mingled the funds of the company with his own private funds; had not kept books of account of his transactions with and for the company; had never accounted for moneys received by him for the company and was indebted to the company in a sum exceeding $7000. The bill further prayed that the defendant in error be required to make account with the .company as president and treasurer or other capacity, and may be ordered and decreed to pay to said company any balance that may be found due upon such accounting from him to said company, and that all notes held by Boggiano without authority be canceled.

Answer was filed to the bill, replication to the answer, and the cause was referred to the master for proofs and for his findings. The master’s report of his proof and findings was filed, together with numerous objections and exceptions thereto, which were heard and determined by the court, and a final decree was entered finding the defendant in error, the plaintiff in error Read and said Ucello were the legally elected directors of the corporation; that the defendant in error was indebted to the corporation in the sum of $754.61; that plaintiff in error Read, as owner of 488 shares of the capital stock of said corporation, is equitably entitled to -f!~§ part of said balance of $754.61 so wrongfully appropriated by defendant Boggiano, to-wit, $368.61, and that defendant, Agostino Gr. Boggiano, should pay the costs of this suit, including the master’s and stenographer’s fees. Payment was decreed accordingly by the said defendant" in error to the said plaintiff in error Read of the said sum of $368.61 within ten days. The defendant in error prosecuted an appeal to the Appellate Court for the First District, where the decree was affirmed, except so far as it ordered the defendant in error to pay the amount charged by the master for the services of a stenographer in taking the depositions. The plaintiffs in error filed cross-errors in the Appellate Court and have sued out this writ of error to reverse the judgment of the Appellate Court.

We think the chancellor properly exercised jurisdiction to determine the validity of the election of the said plaintiff in error Read, said Ucello, and the defendant in error, to the office of directors of the company. The jurisdiction to determine such controversies is at law by quo warranto proceeding, but where the right and title to an office in a private corporation is, as here, necessarily involved in a case properly before a court of equity, the court will determine it, together with all of the other issues or questions in the case, in order to give perfect relief. (21 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law,- — 2d ed. — 843.) Those participating in the stockholders’ meeting in question were bona fide owners of the shares of stock. Section 3 of chapter 32, entitled “Corporations,” (1 Starr & Cur. Stat. 1896, p. 990,) empowered each of said stockholders to cast as many votes as he held numbers of shares of stock for each of as many persons as were to be elected as directors, or to distribute such votes for such persons for directors on the cumulative plan. The motives which actuated any stockholder in distributing his votes is not a subject of inquiry or control. (3 Thompson on Corporations, 3870.) The stockholders’ meeting was regularly convened, and it could not have been legally adjourned except by the act of the meeting itself. (1 Thompson on Corporations, 720.) The arbitrary course pursued by the defendant in error did not operate to vitiate the election of the-persons as directors who had received the requisite number of votes of the stockholders. There was no error in the finding and decree that the defendant in error, said plaintiff in error Read and said Ucello were legally elected directors of the corporation at said meeting.

In the adjustment of the accounts in the circuit court the defendant in error was allowed compensation in the sum of $885 for services rendered to the company in and about the business and affairs of the corporation entirely disconnected from the duties which devolved upon him as president, treasurer or director of the corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
67 N.E. 17, 202 Ill. 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-macaroni-manufacturing-co-v-boggiano-ill-1903.