Fidelity Investment Ass'n v. Emmerson

149 N.E. 530, 318 Ill. 548
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1925
DocketNo. 16691. Judgment reversed.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 149 N.E. 530 (Fidelity Investment Ass'n v. Emmerson) 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
Fidelity Investment Ass'n v. Emmerson, 149 N.E. 530, 318 Ill. 548 (Ill. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Chibs Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

By a writ of certiorari the plaintiff in error, the Fidelity Investment Association, has brought before us for review the record of the Appellate Court for the Third District, which affirmed a judgment of the circuit court of Sangamon county affirming an order entered by the Secretary of State terminating and canceling the right to make further sales under the authority which had been previously granted to the Fidelity Investment Association. The Secretary of State assumed to act under paragraph 2 of section 24 of the Illinois Securities law, which provides that “the Secretary of State shall also have the power at any time, after five days’ notice to the seller of securities, when insolvency exists or when in the opinion of the Secretary of State the further sale of such securities would work or tend to work a fraud upon purchasers thereof, to suspend or cancel permission to sell such securities in this State,” and the order set forth the reasons upon which it was founded. The circuit court finds that the order of the Secretary of State is sustained by the evidence and it is therefore affirmed. The Appellate Court entered a general judgment of affirmance, which its opinion shows to have been based upon the view that the plaintiff in error was engaged in the banking business without authority of law and was violating the provisions of the general Incorporation act, that its business was therefore unlawful and its contracts void and for this reason worked a fraud upon purchasers, which justified the order canceling the authority of the plaintiff in error.

The Fidelity Investment Association is a corporation which was organized under the laws of the State of West Virginia in 1912 for the purpose of purchasing, acquiring, buying, selling, owning, holding, disposing of and dealing in stocks, bonds, mortgages, debentures, obligations and other securities of corporations and persons for its own account and for others on commission, or loaning money on real estate or personal security, acquiring, owning, dealing in and selling real estate, and, among other things, “to acquire and sell and offer for sale or delivery any contract, certificate or bond, of any person, association or corporation, now or hereafter engaged in this State in the business of soliciting, or receiving deposits or payments of any kind of annuity contracts, certificates of annuity bonds; and further to engage in the business of placing or selling certificates, bonds, debentures, certificates of interest or investment securities of any kind on the partial payment, installment, or any other plan of payment, and providing for the sale, redemption or retiring of the same or any part thereof; and generally to carry on all lawful business necessary or incidental to all or any of the above mentioned objects.” On March 8, 1915, the plaintiff in error was granted a license under the general Incorporation law to do business in the State of Illinois, which authorized it “to purchase, acquire, buy, sell, own, hold, dispose of and deal in stocks, bonds, mortgages, debentures, obligations and other securities of corporations and persons, for its own account and for others on commission, * * * and to make, sell and deliver the negotiable coupon-bearing or registered promises of the corporation to pay specific sums of money, on specific dates and to pledge its property and assets in payment thereof.” Since it was licensed to do business in the State the plaintiff in error has been engaged in selling annuities. After the passage of the Illinois Securities law in 1918 the Secretary of State authorized the sale of stocks, bonds and other securities within the State of Illinois by the plaintiff in error. The only business which has been transacted in this State by the plaintiff in error has been the sale of its contracts for annuities, and incidental thereto the collection of the required payments from the purchasers and the advancement to its contract-holders, from time to time, of a portion of the reserve maintained to enable plaintiff in error to make the ultimate payments required of it by such contracts.

During its operation in this State the plaintiff in error has used five forms of contract. No two of them have been used during the same time, but from time to time the form previously in use has been discarded and a new form substituted, which was, after such substitution, the only form used until it was in turn discarded for a later form. The forms in use during the several periods of time were designated as No. A, B, C and D, and Special Income Contract, which was submitted to the Secretary of State for his approval in December, 1920, and no objection being made to it, in January, 1921, the plaintiff in error ceased to issue the D-contract and began to solicit applications for and to issue its Special Income Contract, which was the only form thereafter sold. The following is a specimen of this contract:

“$2000.
$2000.
Special Income Contract Fidelity Investment Association Wheeling — West Virginia
“Covenants and guarantees to pay to the registered owner of this contract an annual income of two hundred dollars for a period of ten years, as evidenced by the income coupons for that amount attached hereto and subject to the terms thereof, being in all the sum of two thousand dollars, or in lieu thereof, if .the aforementioned income coupons be surrendered for cancellation, there shall be paid the several amounts as provided by the terms of the interest coupons forming part of this agreement together with the sum of fifteen hundred dollars, payable in ten annual installments of one hundred and fifty dollars each, as evidenced by the income coupons for that amount attached hereto and subject to the terms thereof, or in lieu of either income there will be paid in cash its commuted value as provided in section 12 of the Privileges and Conditions.
bur plus
“In addition on the first day of August, 1935, provided all payments have been made hereon as stipulated, the registered owner will be paid from the surplus defined in section 2 of the Privileges and Conditions such an amount as shall be apportioned to this contract by the board of directors.
“The consideration for this contract is the application which is made a part and the further consideration of the payment of sixty dollars, to he known as the initial payment, and in addition thereto, beginning with the month of January, 1925, the payment of ten dollars on the fifteenth day of each month for one hundred twenty-six consecutive months, to be known as monthly payments.
“It is expressly provided and agreed that this contract is issued and accepted subject to the terms and requirements of the interest and income coupons attached hereto, which, together with the Privileges and Conditions printed on the last page of this agreement, are made a part of this contract as if printed on the face hereof.
“Issued at the home office, Wheeling, West Virginia, this the ........day of................19____
W. B. Irvine, President.
........................, Secretary.”

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Bluebook (online)
149 N.E. 530, 318 Ill. 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-investment-assn-v-emmerson-ill-1925.