Forest Glen Brick & Tile Co. v. Gade

55 Ill. App. 181, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 373
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 6, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 55 Ill. App. 181 (Forest Glen Brick & Tile Co. v. Gade) 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
Forest Glen Brick & Tile Co. v. Gade, 55 Ill. App. 181, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 373 (Ill. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shepard

delivebed the opinion op the Coubt.

This was a proceeding to wind up an insolvent corporation and collect its assets, including certain unpaid stock subscriptions alleged to be owing from subscribers to the capital stock of the corporation, who were made defendants, and pay its debts.

As originally subscribed, the capital stock of the corporation was $100,000.

All needful preliminary steps having been taken, a certificate of the complete organization of the corporation was issued by the secretary of state, on June 26, 1884. Such final certificate was not, however, filed in the office of the recorder of deeds of Cook county, the county where the principal office of the corporation was located, until April 28, 1885.

In the meantime, and in December, 1884, steps were taken under the provisions of sections 50 and 54 of chapter 32, entitled “ Corporations,” to reduce the capital stock of the corporation from $100,000 to $30,000, and under date of December 24, 1884, a properly verified and, in form, due certificate of compliance with the various requirements of the statute in cases of a reduction being made in the capital stock of corporations, was made.

Such certificate was subsequently filed in the office of the recorder of deeds, in Cook county, on April 28,1885, and in the office of the secretary of state on April 30, 1885.

The principal contest arises on the question of whether or not the capital stock was, by the proceedings that were had, lawfully reduced from $100,000 to $30,000. The master reported in the negative, and the court sustained the master and entered a decree accordingly.

Counsel for the original complainant, Cade, and for the cross-complainant, Harms, with characteristic fairness to the court, says, in his brief:

“ It was conceded there (before the master and in the Circuit Court) by the defendants in error that if the stock was legally reduced to $30,000, the creditors who became such afterward could only look to such reduced capitalization for satisfaction out of stock subscriptions.
It was likewise conceded that all these claims arose after the attempted reduction. And it is likewise here conceded that if the reduction was legally accomplished, this decree should be reversed, at least for further directions; for as it establishes stock liability on a $100,000 basis, a $30,000 basis would require a re-adjustment, of course.”

The main inquiry is, therefore, limited to the single question of whether what was done by way of attempted reduction of the capital stock of the corporation, lawfully accomplished that end.

The chief objections urged against the validity of the proceedings are:

. (1.) At the time the proceedings were taken the corporation had not been completely organized.

(2.) Written or printed notices'of the stockholders’ meeting to consider the question of the proposed reduction of capital were not sent to each stockholder.

• (3.) The requisite votes of stockholders representing two-thirds of all the stock of the corporation were not given in favor of the proposed reduction.

- (4.) The surplus stock above $30,000 was not called in and canceled pro rata, and a new. basis of holdings established.

It will have been observed that the final certificate by the secretary of state, of the complete organization of the corporation, was not filed in the recorder’s office of Cook County until April 28, 1885, which was the same day that the certificate of a reduction of the capital stock was there filed.

We have held that the filing for record of such final certificate in the office of the recorder of the county where the principal office of the corporation is located, is necessary to á complete organization of a corporation, and that directors of a corporation who should assume to exercise corporate powers and use the name of a corporation or pretended corporation without such a filing for record having been had, rendered themselves liable under section 18 of the act entitled “ Corporations,” for debts and liabilities contracted by them in the name of such corporation. Loverin v. McLaughlin, 46 Ill. App. 373.

That case is, however, clearly distinguishable from the one under consideration.

It was not there held that no corporation de facto had been created because of the omission to file the final certificate, but that, under the statute, directors who should exercise the corporate powers and incur debts in the name of a corporation, without the precedent performance of an act requisite to the formation of a de jure corporation rendered themselves liable personally for such debts.

We are not aware of any statutory provision limiting the time to less than two years from the date of the license to open books for subscriptions to the capital stock, within which the final certificate of organization shall be filed for record; and the filing of it ten months after it was issued can not be availed of to the disadvantage of the corporation or its officers by any one whose dealings with the corporation were subsequent to that time.

As soon as the certificate of complete organization was issued by the secretary of state, the corporation de facto came into existence, and all its acts thereafter were binding upon it, even though in addition to its own obligations arising in the course of its business there were superadded the obligations of its- directors, who should assume its powers and use its name in the absence of its de jure existence.

There was, therefore, in December, 1884, when the proposition was submitted to the stockholders to reduce the capital stock from $100,000 to $30,000, such a corporation in fact in existence, as most clearly authorized such a proceeding between the corporation and its stockholders.

Everything had at that time been done that could have been done, except the recording of the final certificate, to confer upon the corporation all of its powers, and to afford to it all the immunities accorded to a corporation and its stockholders and officers.

That its directors might thereafter, and until the recording of the final certificate, have been liable for indebtedness incurred by them in the name of the company, did not detract from the powers of the corporation, and did not lessen the obligations of its stockholders to pay for the stock subscribed for by them, and neither the corporation itself nor its officers or stockholders would then, nor thereafter, have been heard to deny the existence of the corporation, where its liability on contracts entered into by it were involved.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kleinsasser v. McNamara
18 P.2d 423 (California Court of Appeal, 1933)
Todd v. Temple Hospital Assn., Inc.
273 P. 595 (California Court of Appeal, 1928)
Hoyt v. McCallum
102 Ill. App. 287 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1902)
Gade v. Forest Glen Brick & Tile Co.
46 N.E. 286 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1896)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 Ill. App. 181, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forest-glen-brick-tile-co-v-gade-illappct-1894.