Gillett v. Chicago Title & Trust Co.

82 N.E. 891, 230 Ill. 373
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 82 N.E. 891 (Gillett v. Chicago Title & Trust 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
Gillett v. Chicago Title & Trust Co., 82 N.E. 891, 230 Ill. 373 (Ill. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the court:

First—It is contended by appellants that in accepting certain property'in payment of MacICaye’s subscription to ■the capital stock of the Columbian Celebration Company to the amount of $1,999,600, the directors fixed that value up-1 on the property offered in the fair and honest exercise of their judgment as to its worth, and that the stock must therefore be regarded as fully paid and non-assessable, even •if the directors erred in their judgment as to its value.

When the board of directors met on May 16, 1892, the principal asset of the corporation was MacKaye’s subscription for stock to .the amount above mentioned. The law required the directors, in collecting that subscription, to obtain from MacKaye “money or money’s worth” to the full amount of the subscription. (Coleman v. Howe, 154 Ill. 458; Garden City Sand Co. v. Crematory Co. 205 id. 42.) “Money or money’s worth” means cash or its equivalent. If the directors saw fit to accept property in lieu of cash they could only take it at its fair cash market value,- if it was property which had an ascertainable market value. If it had no ascertainable market value, then the only price at which the directors could purchase it was such price as could be realized by selling it to others for cash. ■

On the date last .mentioned the directors of the corporation entered into a contract with MacKaye, by which, in satisfaction of his liability on his subscription, MacKaye transferred to the corporation the .sole and exclusive right to use eleven alleged new, useful and valuable improvements in scenic art; also the right to use and produce a “spectators” or play entitled “The Great Discovery,” of which it is said MacKaye ivas the author, in the-States of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Iowa and Missouri for a period of fifteen years, burdened with a ten per cent royalty reserved to MacKaye. At the time the' contract was made no application had been made for a patent on any of the inventions. The description of the inventions contained in the contract is very general in character. With one or two exceptions the descriptions are not such as would enable the reader to identify the invention. They consist usually of the name given by MacKaye to the invention, followed by a statement of the object of the invention. The play, “The Great Discovery,” had not been written. / At the time Mac-Kaye’s subscription was so satisfied the directors were Mac-Kaye, Butterworth, Crosley, White and Edmonds. Crosley did not attend the meeting of May 16, 1892, and MacKaye did not vote upon the proposition in reference to the payment of his subscription by the transfer of the rights above enumerated. Those who voted in favor of accepting the proposition were Butterworth, White and Edmonds. Butterworth was a co-promoter with MacKaye, and a few. days later, in accordance with an arrangement effected prior to May 16, 1892, received from MacKaye a considerable portion of the stock subscribed for by the latter. Edmonds was an assistant to Butterworth, as secretary of the World's Columbian Exposition. White was a clerk in the employ of MacKaye and Butterworth, doing clerical work in connection with the promotion of MacKaye’s scheme. So far as the transaction of business affecting the corporation was concerned, White and Edmonds were wholly dominated by MacKaye and Butterworth. Edmonds testified that he “never formed any intelligent conclusion as to the value of the patents/’ referring to the inventions the right to use which was transferred by the contract; and further: “I did not consider it [the MacKaye proposition which was accepted] in the sense that I was going to put a lot of money in it myself, but I honestly believed on May 16," 1892, that the resolution was for the best interests of the company and was a good proposition for it.” White says: “I don’t remember making any inquiry, as a member of the board of directors or an officer, into the merits of these inventions.”

It will no doubt be agreed that the rights transferred to the corporation by the contract were without" market value. It was then the duty of the directors, before accepting the rights transferred by this contract in payment of this large subscription, to ascertain whether those rights had value, and if so, what the value was. The natural and reasonable method to be pursued in determining that question would have been to have applied to men not interested in the promotion of MacKaye’s scheme, who were of wide experience in the production of great spectacular plays, for their views in reference to the worth of the rights which- MacKaye proposed to transfer. No such investigation was made. No other steps were taken to ascertain the value of the rights MacKaye proposed to transfer, such as would have been taken by directors seeking to deal honestly and fairly with the assets of the corporation. It was the duty of these directors to ascertain the value of these rights precisely as they would have done had they intended to invest money in such rights themselves, and that they did not do. It is no doubt true that if the directors, in the fair, honest and intelligent exercise of their judgment, make a mistake and accept property at a price greater than its real value, such can not be regarded as a fraudulent over-valuation of the property ; but that rule only applies where the transaction constitutes a valid contract of bargain and sale, made in good faith on the part of the directors and in the intelligent ex- ' ercise of fair and honest judgment on their part. There was no such transaction here. The transfer to the corporation was a mere sham. It was, in fact, a sale by MacKaye to MacKaye, and was, in law, a fraud. It was a transfer of the right to use for a period of years, in a limited territory, an unwritten play and inventions not perfected and not accurately described. The writing of the play and the perfecting of the inventions depended upon MacKaye moving in the matter in the future, and he is conceded to have been practically without property other than these inventions and this play. The play, in fact, never was written. Successful applications were made, after the execution of the contract, for patents upon all the inventions except one. As to that one the application was denied. The evidence leads irresistibly to the conclusion that had the directors on May 16, 1892, after the signing of this contract, sought to have disposed of the rights thereby transferred, they could not, in the world of the drama or elsewhere, have obtained for the rights transferred to the company by that contract anything of value whatever. It follows that MacKaye’s stock subscription remained wholly unpaid.

Second—The certificates for MacKaye’s stock recited that the shares were “fully paid and non-assessable,” and the law is, that where stock is so issued and the holder thereafter sells or assigns the same, and the assignee acquires it in good faith and without notice that it has not been fully paid, he cannot be made liable if, -in fact, the stock is not fully paid. (Coleman v. Howe, supra; Sprague v. National Bank of America, 172 Ill. 149.) Appellants insist that, even if this stock was wholly unpaid, they acquired it in good faith without notice of that fact, and are therefore not liable. “Notice,” in this connection, must be given the ordinary signification of that term, and means knowledge that the stock was unpaid, or knowledge of such facts as would have put an ordinarily prudent man upon inquiry, when the inquiry might reasonably be expected to have led him to knowledge that the stock was unpaid. (Russell v. Ranson, 76 Ill.

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

Related

In Re Estate of Zimmerman
2001 ND 155 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 2001)
Rudolph v. Gersten
241 N.E.2d 600 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1968)
Flanagan v. Madison Square State Bank
24 N.E.2d 202 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1939)
Comstock v. Morgan Park Trust & Savings Bank
11 N.E.2d 394 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1937)
People ex rel. Nelson v. Kaspar American State Bank
282 Ill. App. 434 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1935)
Gahagan v. Whitney
194 N.E. 581 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1935)
Central Iron & Steel Co. v. United States
4 F. Supp. 113 (Court of Claims, 1933)
Gray Construction Co. v. Hyde
244 N.W. 320 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1932)
Dixmoor Golf Club, Inc. v. Evans
252 Ill. App. 468 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1929)
Thomsen v. Cullen
219 N.W. 439 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1928)
Automatic Screw Machine Products Co. v. Benedict Manufacturing Co.
248 Ill. App. 565 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1928)
Knights of Ku Klux Klan, Inc. v. First National Bank
254 Ill. App. 264 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1928)
Powers v. Elliott
290 S.W. 828 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1927)
Grimsmoe v. Kendrick
247 P. 746 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1926)
Ewing v. Swenson
208 N.W. 645 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1926)
West & Co. v. Montgomery National Bank
7 Pa. D. & C. 371 (Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas, 1925)
Nickey Bros. v. Lonsdale Mfg. Co.
149 Tenn. 391 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1923)
Linden Bros. v. Practical Electricity & Engineering Publishing Co.
227 Ill. App. 307 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1923)
Ludlum v. Pinckard
221 Ill. App. 135 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1921)
Kirkup v. Anaconda Amusement Co.
197 P. 1005 (Montana Supreme Court, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 N.E. 891, 230 Ill. 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gillett-v-chicago-title-trust-co-ill-1907.