Crown Coal & Tow Co. v. Thomas

52 N.E. 1042, 177 Ill. 534
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 52 N.E. 1042 (Crown Coal & Tow Co. v. Thomas) 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
Crown Coal & Tow Co. v. Thomas, 52 N.E. 1042, 177 Ill. 534 (Ill. 1898).

Opinions

Per Curiam:

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Appellate Court affirming a decree of the circuit court of St. Clair county. We have carefully examined the record and the argument of counsel, and are satisfied the Appellate Court reached a correct conclusion. The judgment of the Appellate Court will therefore be affirmed, and as that court in its opinion has fully considered the questions involved, its opinion will be adopted. That opinion, by Creighton, J., is as follows:

“This was a suit in chancery, commenced and prosecuted in the circuit court of St. Clair county by Edward L. Thomas against the Crown Coal and Tow Company, Bart S. Adams and John T. Taylor, and resulted in a decree for $0309.89 in favor of Thomas. The Crown Coal and Tow Company brings the cause to this court by appeal.

“In the year 1887 there was organized under the laws of the State of Illinois a corporation styled ‘The Crown Coal Company,’ and in the month of March, 1893, appellee, Thomas, and the said Adams and Taylor, owned all of the stock of the said corporation, and the said corporation owned and was operating a coal mine, and had due it a large amount in book accounts for coal sold in course of business, and owed the expenses incurred in operating the mine the previous month. Thomas, Adams and Taylor also owed, jointly, $4500 to one Meisenberger, a former stockholder in said corporation, for his stock jointly purchased by them. Taylor and Adams owned a coal mine known as the ‘Harmony Mine, ’ and certain coal leases. Adams owned an interest in the Western Coal and Tow Company, and one Samuel H. Leathe owned certain coal lands and a line of tugs.

“The above named parties co-operated together, with others, in a re-organization of the Crown Coal Company, increasing its capital stock from $30,000 to $200,000 and changing its "name to the Crown Coal and Tow Company, and all the above mentioned properties were by their respective owners contributed and turned over to the reorganized concern, and its business thereafter carried on with this property. The re-organization was completed at a meeting of all the parties interested, held March 25, 1893, and all the $200,000 of stock was distributed among the contributors and certain other parties who had contributed nothing, without any reference to the amounts contributed by each or to the fact that a number had contributed nothing. At this same meeting, and as a part of the re-organization scheme, it was orally agreed and understood that all who had contributed should be reimbursed by the corporation to the extent of the value of their respective contributions, but the minutes of that meeting contain no mention of such an agreement. The original plan for reimbursement was found to be impracticable, and thereupon, at a stockholders’ meeting held March 1, 1894, the following resolution, as shown by the minutes of that meeting, was presented and adopted:

“ ‘Whereas, the capital stock of this company has been contributed by various stockholders in unequal proportion, the distribution of the stock having been made without reference to the amounts contributed; and whereas, this company was originally projected and organized by the parties interested in a certain railroad then known as the Belleville and St. Louis railroad and now known as the Belleville City railway, as an adjunct to said railroad; and whereas, it was originally contemplated, understood and agreed by the parties interested in the formation and organization of this company, that all the amounts advanced by any of the stockholders to this company should be re-paid out of the proceeds of bonds to be issued by the said railroad company and guaranteed in part by this company, and that the stock of this company should be subject to the indebtedness created by said bonds; and whereas, various of the stockholders of this company, on the faith of the said agreement and understanding, have advanced large sums of money to this company and have conveyed to it property of great value; and whereas, a doubt has arisen as to the legality of such proposed indorsement or guaranty by this company of the bonds of the said railroad company or the application of the bonds of the said railroad company to the purpose of this company, and said plan has been in consequence abandoned; and whereas, it is the desire of this company that the true intent and meaning of said agreement and understanding be carried out and that the persons conveying their money and property to this company on the. faith thereof be protected; therefore it is
" ‘Resolved, That the president of the company deliver to each stockholder who has. contributed either money or property to the capital of this company, at par, bonds of this company to an amount equal to such contribution, with interest from the date thereof to this date. ’

“There having arisen a dispute as to the amount at which the Crown Coal Company property and good will was taken, that dispute was at that meeting settled, as appears from the minutes: ‘The dispute as to the amount at which the Crown Coal Company’s property and good will was taken by this company was this day settled by agreement of all the stockholders present, and said figure was fixed at $18,000 of March 1, 1893, the same not to include the book accounts belonging to the Crown Coal Company.’

“In pursuance of the action taken by the stockholders at their meeting of March 1, the directors met March 10, and, as shown by the records of that meeting, unanimously passed the following:

“ ‘Resolved, That the Union Trust Company of St. Louis, trustee in the mortgage given by this company to secure its bonds, be authorized and requested to make delivery of said bonds, as follows, to-wit: To Samuel H. Leathe, $118,500; to Bart S. Adams, $10,000; to John Taylor, $4000; to Edward L. Thomas, $5000; all the balance of said bonds to Samuel H. Leathe, treasurer, $02,500.’

“Said trustees thereupon delivered bonds, as directed in said resolution, to all the contributors except the appellee, and stood ready to deliver to him, but those intended for him were, for some reason not explained, so far as we find in this record, attached by Leathe, who was president of the corporation. Pending this attachment the following agreement was entered into by the Crown Coal and Tow Company, the appellant, and Edward L. Thomas, appellee:

“ ‘Whereas, Edward L. Thomas has certain claims against the Crown Coal and Tow Company, based upon what he claims to be his portion’of the purchase price of certain coal pits which were turned over to said company by him and his associates; and whereas, a partial settlement of the said claims has heretofore been made, and certain bonds of said company were set aside to said Edward L. Thomas as in satisfaction or settlement of a portion of said claims, in consideration of the surrender of whatever interest in said bonds the said Edward L. Thomas may have: It is agreed by the said company that any former arrangement or settlement made between the parties, namely, said Thomas and said company, growing out of the said transactions, shall be considered abrogated and annulled and as though it had never been made, and the said Edward L.

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Bluebook (online)
52 N.E. 1042, 177 Ill. 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crown-coal-tow-co-v-thomas-ill-1898.