Edwards v. Schillinger

91 N.E. 1048, 245 Ill. 231
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 91 N.E. 1048 (Edwards v. Schillinger) 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
Edwards v. Schillinger, 91 N.E. 1048, 245 Ill. 231 (Ill. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

The defendant in error, John B. Edwards, trustee in bankruptcy of Schillinger Bros. Asphalt Company, a corporation, filed his bill in the superior court of Cook county against the plaintiffs in error, Gustav A. Schillinger and A. C. Gumbing-er, stockholders of the corporation, to set aside a dividend declared by the directors in fraud of creditors and applied by the stockholders in payment of unpaid balances of their subscriptions to the capital stock, and to compel plaintiffs in error to pay the amount of their subscriptions represented by the fraudulent dividend certificates. The defendants to the bill filed a general demurrer thereto, which was overruled by the court, and they were ruled to answer the bill within ten days. They failed to answer but elected to stand by their demurrer and were defaulted, and a decree was entered in accordance with the prayer of the bill, requiring the defendant Gustav A. Schillinger to pay to the complainant $3000 and the defendant A. C. Gumbinger to pay $2000, being the portions of their unpaid subscriptions which they had attempted to cancel by means of the fraud. The Appellate Court affirmed the decree on appeal, and a writ of error was sued out of this court to review the judgment of the Appellate Court'.

The following are the material facts alleged in the bill and admitted by the demurrer: Schillinger Bros. Asphalt Company is a corporation organized on October 3, 1900, under the laws of the State of Missouri, with a capital stock of $20,000, divided into shares of $100 each. The original subscribers, with the amounts of their subscriptions, were as follows: ÍS. J. Calking one hundred shares, Charles Mueller, Jr., ninety-nine shares, and Henry Jacobson one share. Money or property turned over to the corporation was accepted as half payment and certificates were issued showing that the stock was only half paid for. The defendant Gustav A. Schillinger became the owner of sixty shares of the capital stock and received a certificate showing upon its face that it was but half paid, and he assumed and agreed to pay to the corporation the balance of the subscription price when demanded. The defendant A. C. Gumbinger became the owner of forty shares and received a certificate therefor showing on its face that said stock was but half paid, and he assumed and agreed to pay the corporatipn the balance of the subscription price when demanded. At a meeting of the board of directors held in the city of St Louis, Missouri, on April 28, 1902, when the corporation was wholly insolvent and unable to pay any dividend whatever upon its stock, the directors, for the purpose of relieving the stockholders from liability for the unpaid portion of the stock held by them, pretended to\ declare a dividend of $8920.65, and authorized the secre- ' tary to issue dividend certificates to Schillinger upon sixty shares, to Charles Mueller, Jr., upon fifty shares, to A. C. Gumbinger upon forty shares, to Henry Jacobson upon one share and to A. Maritzan upon ten shares, and to receive said dividend certificates and the stock certificates held by each of said parties, and to issue to them, in lieu thereof, certificates of fully paid stock in the corporation. Dividend certificates were given to the above named stockholders, who were the only holders of stock in the corporation, and said certificates, with the half paid certificates, were exchanged for certificates of fully paid stock. On November 8, 1902, the corporation was adjudged a bankrupt by the district court of the United States in Missouri, and the complainant was elected trustee of the estate and qualified as such. The trustee reduced to cash all of the assets except the liability of the stockholders and a claim that was in litigation, and has $725/95, proceeds of such assets. Claims to the amount of $7194.10 were proved and allowed, payable out of the assets. The bankrupt corporation ceased doing business, and all the stockholders but the defendants are residents of the State of Missouri and are insolvent, and a judgment against them, or either of them, would be uncollectible. By the laws of Missouri a transferee of stock is liable for any unpaid balance thereon.

The substantial ground upon which it is contended that the judgment of the Appellate Court was wrong is, that the superior court had no jurisdiction to set aside the fraudulent dividend or to order a call upon stockholders to pay unpaid subscriptions, because the dividend was declared by a corporation which was a resident of the State of Missouri, and the courts of that State, alone, had jurisdiction over it or its affairs. Counsel for plaintiffs in error regard the bankrupt corporation as a necessary party to the suit, and any interference with the action of its directors, by setting aside the fraud, as beyond the jurisdiction of the courts of this State. The arguments touching that subject have taken a very wide range, and cover nearly all questions relating to the powers of courts over foreign corporations or in any litigation where their affairs are in any manner involved.

The courts have never entertained any doubt of the right of a corporation to bring suits in other jurisdictions than that where it was created. When that question first arose in England, the argument that a foreign corporation was but an emanation of the foreign sovereignty, of which the laws of England would not take notice and the courts might not sufficiently understand the foreign laws, did not prevail, and it was held that such a corporation might sue in the English courts. (Henriques v. Dutch West India Co. 2 Ld. Raym. 1532; Dutch West India Co. v. Henriques & Moses, 1 Strangle, 613.) The law in this State on that subject was declared in the early case of Bank of Washtenaw v. Montgomery, 2 Scam. 422, where the court said: “It is supposed that nothing is better settled than that corporations may institute suits in the courts of other States and countries than those under whose laws they may have been established.” The only rule consistent with that doctrine would be that a corporation permitted to enforce rights in this State should also' be subject to have its liabilities enforced here, but as a matter of fact there was considerable conflict in the decisions in this country as to whether a foreign corporation could be sued outside of the State of its creation except upon a voluntary appearance, and perhaps more numerous decisions were that it could not. The view of many courts was that a corporation could not migrate beyond the boundaries of the State of its creation so as to be there served with process. Peckhan v. Haverhill North Parish, 16 Pick. 274; McQueen v. Middletown Manf. Co. 16 Johns. 5; Middlebrooks v. Springfield Ins. Co. 14 Conn. 301.

The theoiy that a corporation can only have its existence in the State of its creation has long since been dispelled by the migratory corporations which have transacted the business of the country, and there have always been courts which held that they could be sued wherever they could be served with process in accordance with the local law. Quite convincing reasons that they could be SO' sued were given in Libby v. Hogdon, 9 N. H. 394, where the court said: “If we admit and vindicate their rights, evenhanded justice requires that we also enforce their liabilities and not send our citizens to a foreign jurisdiction in quest of redress for injuries committed here.” The Supreme Court of the United States, in Barrows Steamship Co. v. Kane, 170 U. S. 100

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91 N.E. 1048, 245 Ill. 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-schillinger-ill-1910.