Fidelity Investment Ass'n v. Emmerson

235 Ill. App. 9, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 111
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 5, 1924
DocketGen. No. 7,764
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 235 Ill. App. 9 (Fidelity Investment Ass'n v. Emmerson) 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
Fidelity Investment Ass'n v. Emmerson, 235 Ill. App. 9, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 111 (Ill. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Niehaus

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this case the Fidelity Investment Association, a West Virginia corporation, doing business in this State, in the negotiation and the sale of what is known and herein referred to as “Special Income Contracts” for investment of money, filed a bill in equity in the circuit court of Sangamon county for an injunction to restrain the Secretary of State, Louis L. Emmerson, from interfering with the transaction of its business in the State. The bill contains the following allegations:

That complainant, Fidelity Investment Association, is a corporation organized under the laws of West Virginia, April 13, 1911, having among other powers the following:

“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 ; to loan money on real estate security; to loan money on personal and other security; * * * to transact any other business incident to any of the above named enterprises which a person, firm or partnership might engage in and do;
“To carry on by purchasing existing business, or otherwise, the business of soliciting or receiving deposits or payments on any annuity contracts, certificates or annuity bonds, in fixed and stipulated instalments, or otherwise; 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 or 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, instalment, 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.”

Sets forth also that under charter provisions the corporation has power to establish branch offices in other States.

Sets forth laws of West Virginia regulating business in which said company is engaged, authorizing soliciting or receiving deposits or payments on annuity contracts, certificates or bonds in fixed and stipulated instalments without first having obtained from the Insurance Commissioner a permit to do business in that State, provided, that before such permission to transact business in that State shall be issued, the corporation shall deposit for the benefit of its contract holders bonds and securities approved by the Insurance Commissioner to the amount of $100,000, and shall maintain at all times that a deposit to an amount equal to 100 per cent of the liability on all outstanding contracts.

Alleges compliance with aforesaid provisions and all other provisions of the laws of West Virginia regarding the business of appellee. That said company was authorized and admitted to do business in the State of Illinois under the G-eneral Corporation Law of said State relating to foreign corporations on March 8,1915, as shown by copy of charter marked Exhibit “B,” which said charter (license) empowers said company, among other things, to transact the following business in the State of Illinois:

“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; * * * to underwrite, in whole or in part, any issue of stocks, bonds or other securities; to do a general brokerage and commission business; to' buy, sell and otherwise deal in bonds and other corporate securities and obligations of any and all kinds, including public obligations payable out of the proceeds of taxation, and the securities and obligations of any government, state, municipality, or other governing or tax body, and of any corporation, quasi-public, private, domestic or foreign; * * * 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, not to include the business of real estate, brokerage, or the buying and dealing in commercial paper in the exercise of the function of bank discount, and all the transactions in corporate stocks to be by this corporation as agent, and not as principal.”

That it has been continuously engaged in the transaction of its corporate business in the State of West Virginia and in sundry other States and the District of Columbia since the said date of its organization.

Sets forth that the corporation made application to the Secretary of State of Illinois under the Illinois Securities Law, approved June 10, 1919 [Cahill’s Ill. St. ch. 32, [¶] 254 et seg.], during the month of July of said year, and procured a permit in accordance with said law, as amended, to continue the sale of its contracts as a class “0” security; that it has paid its annual franchise taxes to the Secretary of State who has accepted and retained the same.

That no change has been made in said contract issued by said company since January, 1921; that all changes theretofore made were in favor of the holder of said contract, which changes received the approval of the Secretary of State; that said company is solvent and able to meet all of its obligations and that there have been no changes in its conditions whereby the further sale, issue and delivery of sums due on its special income contract will work or tend to work a fraud upon the people or any holder or prospective holder thereof.

That business of appellee does not come within spirit or letter of the Securities Law of Illinois.

That on March 6, 1924, Secretary of State signed a “pretended” order of cancellation of said company’s authority to sell its contracts within the State of Illinois, a copy of which order is attached to bill of complaint, as Exhibit “C.”

That copy of special income contract, approved by Secretary of State, is thereto attached as Exhibit “D.”

That the Secretary of State threatens to prevent said company from further sale and negotiation of its said contracts within the State of Illinois prior to the review of said order of cancellation as provided by law, and that said Secretary of State will carry his said threat into execution unless restrained by order and injunction of the court below, until said “alleged” order of cancellation can be reviewed by the court as provided by law and the rights of said company determined.

That said company has developed a large and eEcient sales force in Chicago, Illinois, and that if the threats of appellant are carried into execution, the holders of said contracts within the State of Illinois and in other parts of the United States “will be caused anxiety and unrest, and that said company’s business will be disorganized, disrupted and destroyed,” to the irreparable injury and damage of it.

The specific prayer of the bill is for an injunction to restrain the appellant, Louis L.

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Related

Fidelity Investment Ass'n v. Emmerson
235 Ill. App. 518 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
235 Ill. App. 9, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-investment-assn-v-emmerson-illappct-1924.