Cowles v. Morris & Co.

242 Ill. App. 548, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 133
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 21, 1926
DocketGen. No. 30,420
StatusPublished

This text of 242 Ill. App. 548 (Cowles v. Morris & 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
Cowles v. Morris & Co., 242 Ill. App. 548, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 133 (Ill. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Barnes

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree dismissing a bill for want of equity.

It is a class suit brought by pensioners under “The Morris & Company Pension Fund,” devised and established by that company for the benefit of certain of its employees to be operated and administered under certain rules and regulations by which the employees becoming contributors to the fund agreed to be bound. The gist of the controversy is as to the nature and extent of the contractual relations thus established between the company and said employees.

Under the averments of the bill the defendants are naturally divided into four groups: (1) The Morris & Company group, consisting of that company by that name and the name it took after the sale of its business and physical assets in 1923, and two of its officers; (2) the Armour & Company group consisting of the Illinois corporation of that name, two of its officers, two affiliated foreign corporations of the same name, and The North American Provision Company, to which said sale was made; (3) the members of the committee administering the fund, and (4) certain defendants either dismissed out of the case or not served, whose interests are not before us.

The hearing was before the chancellor upon the issues raised by the answers of the several groups to the bill as amended, and replications to the answers. The bill is so voluminous, repetitious and argumentative that it is impracticable and unnecessary to state more than its theories and the essential admitted and evidentiary facts on which they are predicated.

On January 1, 1909, Morris & Company, then engaged in meat packing and kindred industries, inaugurated and put into effect a pension fund, denominated “The Morris & Company Pension Fund,” for the officers and certain employees of said company and affiliated companies. The plan was embodied in certain rules and regulations for raising, managing and paying out the fund, drawn up at the instance of Edward Morris, the president of the company, and submitted to each of the company’s employees then eligible to membership under the terms of the document. Such of them as wished to avail themselves of its provisions signed the form of application prescribed therein, and agreeing to- be bound thereby became contributors to and participants in the fund. By its terms the company was to contribute $25,000 annually until the fund equalled $500,000, and its agreement in this respect was carried out. It subsequently made donations to- the fund, the entire contributions of said company, its subsidiaries and Edward Morris, aggregating $1,249,966. Said employees, except those receiving a salary of $10 or less per week, were to contribute three per cent of their salaries. At the time of the sale, those members of the fund who had not been placed on pension had contributed $916,352.27, and the pensioners, including those whose pension had terminated, $131,968.79, and the fund had earned from investments nearly a half-million dollars. The rules prescribed to whom the fund was applicable, the ratio of their contributions thereto from their weekly or monthly pay, the conditions of eligibility to a pension allowance, and the rate thereof. They vested full and complete administration of the fund in a committee composed of two members named by the company and three members elected by the employees contributing to the fund. A majority of them were to govern and were given power to annul, alter, add to or amend any of the rules. The rules did not contemplate any control or direction by the company or other contributors over the committee or the fund.

After the sale of the physical assets and business of Morris & Company to the Armour interests, many of its employees, including some who were entitled to a pension, drew out their contributions to the fund, with interest thereon, as provided for by the rules, and accepted an offer of Armour & Company to enter its employ on condition that they contribute to a like fund for the employees of that company under requirements for back payments to put them on an equality with other members of the latter fund. Their withdrawals from the fund depleted it to about $320,000, an amount sufficient to continue monthly disbursements to those on pension at the then rate for only about 14 months, after which time the payments would have to be discontinued owing to the lack of funds. There were about 400 pensioners, 20 of whom filed this bill. By order of court the others were also made parties complainant.

The bill sets forth said rules and regulations in full as originally in force and as subsequently amended, the facts above stated in substance and certain evidentiary facts that need not be repeated.

Upon the facts alleged are predicated the following theories: (1) That Morris & Company “breached its contract of employment and implied contracts” between it and the contributors to the fund and pensioners thereof; (2) that it owed them a duty and obligation “to continue to operate or so to operate its said business as to insure the continuation and operation of said pension fund and payment in full for the full time promised * * * or in lieu thereof the duty and obligation of otherwise providing for the payment in full and for the full time promised of said pensions, benefits and annuities”; (3) that complainants have vested rights and interests in said fund as against mere members thereof and are entitled to have moneys so paid out to the latter returned to the fund; (4) that Armour & Company and its allied corporations and officers, and also the pension committee, “maliciously interfered in and intruded upon the rights of the complainants,” thereby inducing said Morris & Company to breach its contracts with them, and that the property of Morris & Company purchased by Armour & Company was subject to pensioners’ claims; (5) that the several defendants entered into a scheme and conspiracy whereby the business and physical assets of Morris & Company, so subject to pensioners’ claims, should be taken over by the Armour interests free from any lien or charge of any claim or right of said pensioners, so the Morris & Company Pension Fund should cease to function; (6) that the pensioners are creditors, and as to them the sale was void under the Bulk Sales Law [Cahill’s St. ch. 121a, [[[[1-3]. The bill seeks relief in line with these theories,- discovery relating to the terms, of the contract of sale, an accounting by the several defendants of the disposition of the pension fund and alleged dissipation thereof, an injunction to prevent stopping or delaying monthly payments to pensioners, and such other relief, etc.

Much of complainants’ evidence was offered to sustain its theory and contention that the rules and regulations did not embody the sole contract between Morris & Company and its employees, but that there were supplementary agreements amendatory thereof. They were permitted to introduce evidence of casual conversations or remarks, expressions in letters and speeches by agents and officers of Morris & Company that might induce confidence or belief of the employees that their pensions were assured for life and that Morris & Company with its “millions” stood back of said assurances. These statements were received in evidence upon the understanding that they would subsequently be connected with proof of their authorization.

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Bluebook (online)
242 Ill. App. 548, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cowles-v-morris-co-illappct-1926.