Dunbar v. American Telephone & Telegraph Co.

87 N.E. 521, 238 Ill. 456
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 87 N.E. 521 (Dunbar v. American Telephone & Telegraph Co.) 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
Dunbar v. American Telephone & Telegraph Co., 87 N.E. 521, 238 Ill. 456 (Ill. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Vickers

delivered the opinion of the court

Francis W. Dunbar and others, minority stockholders of the Kellogg Switchboard and Supply Company, (hereinafter called the Kellogg company,) filed a bill in equity in the circuit court of Cook county against the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, (hereinafter called the American company,) the Western Electric Company, (hereinafter called the Electric company,) the Kellogg Switchboard and Supply Company, Milo G. Kellogg, Wallace DeWolf, and others, for the purpose of having a sale of the majority of the stock of the Kellogg Switchboard and - Supply Company made by Milo G. Kellogg and others to the American company, set aside and held for naught and for an injunction and other relief. Milo G. Kellogg answered the bill, in which he substantially admitted all its averments, and filed a cross-bill, in which he repeated, with some variations and additions, the substantial averments of the original bill, and prayed that the pretended .sale of the capital stock held by him in the Kellogg company should be adjudged illegal and void and be canceled and set aside. Some of defendants below answered both the bill and the cross-bill, while others demurred to both. The demurrers were sustained and the bills both dismissed for want of equity. This decree was affirmed by the Appellate Court, but upon further appeal to this court the decree sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the original bill was reversed, while the decree dismissing the cross-bill on demurrer was affirmed. This court remanded the cause to the circuit court, with directions to proceed in conformity with the views of this court expressed in its opinion. Our former opinion is reported as Dunbar v. American Telephone and Telegraph Co. 224 Ill. 9. Upon the re-instatement of the cause in the circuit court most of the defendants who had not already filed answers, answered the bill. Those not answering were either mere formal parties, or parties whose interests were represented and protected by the answers . filed. After the issues were made up the cause was heard in the circuit court, the Hon. Thomas G. Windes presiding, upon oral evidence taken in open court, except certain portions of the testimony which was submitted in depositions. The findings of the circuit court were that the allegations of the bill were substantially true, and by its decree the purchase of the stock of the Kellogg company by the American company was declared void and of no effect and the relief granted was such as the court deemed equitable, proceeding upon the assumption that the title to the stock of the Kellogg company had never passed out of the persons who made the alleged sales to the American company. The scope of the decree of the circuit court, both in its findings and its equity-adjusting features, will be more specifically stated hereinafter. Upon a writ of error being sued out of the Appellate Court, that court, while agreeing in the main with the circuit court in its findings, disagreed with the relief granted, and accordingly reversed the decree and remanded the cause to the circuit court, with directions to enter a decree in accordance with the specific directions expressed in the opinion of the Appellate Court. The complainants in the original bill have appealed to this court, and here insist upon a reversal of the Appellate Court and an affirmance of the circuit court. Milo G. Kellogg has assigned cross-errors, as have also the American company and Enos M. Barton. The cross-errors assigned by Kellogg do not materially differ from the errors assigned by appellants, while the cross-errors assigned by the American company and Barton bring in question the decree of the circuit court.

Upon the former hearing of this cause in this court the substance of the bill filed by appellants was set out in the statement preceding the opinion. Since the American company and others question by cross-errors the sufficiency of •the evidence to support appellants’ bill, it will be necessary to re-state the essential features of the bill upon which the cause was finally heard.

Appellants allege in their amended and supplementary bills that the Kellogg company was an Illinois corporation, organized for the purpose of manufacturing, selling, hiring, leasing, or otherwise procuring, owning and disposing of, electric telephone and telegraph instruments of all kinds; that the capital stock consisted of 5000 shares, of $100 each; that Wallace L. DeWolf was the president, E. H. Brush the vice-president and Leroy D. Kellogg the secretary and treasurer of the company; that upon its organization Milo G. Kellogg became the principal stockholder, owning about two-thirds of the capital stock. It is further alleged that the American company was a corporation organized under the laws of New York, and was doing business in this State and most of the other States of the Union; that said last named company had become the owner of the business and stock of the American Bell Telephone Company- of Boston, and that F. P. Fish was its president; that the American company was the owner of a large amount of stock of numerous licensee ór subsidiary telephone companies and operated a large system of telephone and telegraph lines in the United States; that said American company owned a majority of the capital stock of the Electric company; that said corporation and the Electric company formed what is known as the “Bell Telephone Monopoly,” which for many years had exclusive control of the business in the United States as to the use of both telephone and telegraph apparatus, due to the numerous patents owned and controlled by said American company; that the president of the American company is also a director of the Electric company; that the Electric company is an Illinois corporation, engaged in the manufacturing, buying and selling of electric' apparatus used in the construction, operation and maintenance of telephone and telegraph systems; that E. M. Barton is president of said Electric company, and that he is dominated by Fish and the American company through the latter’s control of the board of directors of said Elect trie company. It is further alleged in the bill that telephones, switchboards and instruments and other apparatus of the independent telephone companies throughout the United States have been manufactured by a number of companies, the most important of which are the Kellogg company and the Stromberg-Carlson company, both of which are located in Chicago, and each of which exceeds in capacity the business of any other telephone manufacturing company in the United States except the Electric company; that the business of the Kellogg company exceeded that of the said Stromberg-Carlson company in- supplying switchboards and other apparatus for the larger independent exchanges throughout the country; that in consequence of the conditions and circumstances thus stated, it is charged in the bill that in order to stifle competition and create a monopoly in itself and its licensee companies and to enable them to exact unreasonable and excessive rates and charges, the American company conceived the illegal purpose of acquiring at least two-thirds of the stock of the Kellogg company, and through said ownership to elect and maintain a board of directors which should not act in the real interest of the Kellogg company but in the interest of and subservient to the interest of the American company, and thereby ' free that company and its licensees from the competition of the Kellogg company and independent exchanges. The bill charges, on information and belief, the method that said American company contemplated adopting to accomplish its unlawful purpose.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 N.E. 521, 238 Ill. 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunbar-v-american-telephone-telegraph-co-ill-1909.