Goodall v. Cook

203 Ill. App. 69, 1916 Ill. App. LEXIS 1039
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 13, 1916
StatusPublished

This text of 203 Ill. App. 69 (Goodall v. Cook) 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
Goodall v. Cook, 203 Ill. App. 69, 1916 Ill. App. LEXIS 1039 (Ill. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court.

At the January Term, 1916, of the City Court of East St. Louis, appellants, for themselves as members of the Bankers Accident Insurance Company, and for the benefit of all other members who might join, filed their bill of complaint asking for an injunction against appellees, setting up said company is a mutual association organized under the statutes of Illinois for insuring its members against disability due to accident and sickness; that it has members numbering about 3,700, and has assets of $20,000; that it is managed by a board of seven directors, consisting of appellees and Albert Diehm, Edmund Goedde and appellant W. C. Goodall; that the appellant W. C. Goodall was president and had the active management of the affairs of said association until the acts of appellees hereinafter complained of; that appellees conspired to reinsure the members of the said c'ompany in another company with a secret commission to themselves; that appellees, in pursuance of the plan to reinsure, found it necessary to eliminate appellant W. C. Goodall from the management of the association; that appellees through said Albert Diehm represented to said W. C. Goodall that certain changes were desired in the by-laws which at that time required unanimous consent, and that because of the strained relations between appellee J. A. Goodall and appellant W. C. Goodall one or the other would object and prevent the desired changes in said by-laws; that upon this representation of appellees, the resignation of appellant W. O. Goodall as president was given on August 25, 1915; that the by-laws were amended as desired in October without objection from appellant and that he continued the management thereafter with the consent of appellees, hut that the resignation was not returned; that thereafter, on the 26th day of November, at a regular meeting of the board, appellees, being a majority of the board of directors, voted to accept the said resignation of appellant W. C. Goodall; that following the action of the board, appellees locked appellant out of the office of the association and notified the agents and others that said W. C. Goodall was no longer in charge of the business of said company; that an illegal meeting of the board of directors was held on November 29th, entirely without notice to the said W. C. Goodall, and that a pretended election was had of appellee Silas Cook as president; that said directors refused to rescind their pretended election of Cook or permit said Goodall to perform his customary duties of president.

The bill further charges that appellee J. A. Goodall negotiated with the Washington Life and Accident Company and the Clover Leaf Casualty Company for reinsuring the members of the Bankers, and that the interests of the members would be jeopardized by the reinsurance of the Bankers and by the elimination of appellant W. C. Goodall from the management of the association.

The bill concluded with a general prayer for summons and an injunction.

The chancellor ordered the issuance of a temporary writ of injunction as follows: “Therefore, by these presents, we command you and each of you to desist and you are hereby enjoined and restrained from making any contract for the reinsurance of the members of the Bankers Accident Insurance Company, providing for a commission or gratuity for themselves, or either of them, either directly or indirectly, and from interfering with W. O. Goodall in the discharge of his duties as president of the Bankers Accident Insuranee Company, and that Silas Cook is hereby restrained and enjoined from presiding at members’ or directors’ meetings of said Bankers Accident Insurance Company until further order of the court in the premises.”

Appellees filed an answer denying all of the material allegations of the bill and averred that about June, 1915, dissensions arose between the president, W. C. Goodall, and the secretary, J. A. Goodall, that threatened the destruction of the company’s business; that the board on November 26th, accepted the resignation of W. C. Goodall theretofore tendered; that the resignation of said W. C. Goodall was not obtained by any misrepresentation, misstatement, promise or inducement, but that the resignation was obtained and demanded for the sole and only reason that the dis-' sensions of the president and secretary threatened to destroy the business of the company, and that the interests of the company required such action. Formal replication was filed to the answer, and said cause was heard upon the -merits.

At the conclusion of complainants’ evidence, appellees moved to dissolve the injunction and dismiss the bill for want of equity. Thereupon the chancellor made the following findings: “That the resignation of W. C. Goodall as president was tendered and accepted by the board of directors on the 26th of November, 1915, and that thereafter he ceased to be president; that J. A. Goodall had not negotiated with the Washington Life and Accident Company for the reinsurance of the members of the Bankers without the knowledge and consent of the other defendants; that the resignation of W. C. Goodall was voluntarily given; that there was no equity in the bill and that the complainants wholly failed to establish the averments of the bill and that the injunction was improvidently issued without any grounds therefor, and entered an order dissolving the injunction and dismissing the hill for want of equity.”

Thereupon appellees filed a motion for an order of restitution of the effects and property of the Bankers Accident Insurance Company. Over the objection of appellants the chancellor heard testimony as to the property said to be in the possession of the appellants under the writ of injunction. After a hearing on said motion, the chancellor found that at the time of the service of the writ upon him that Silas Cook was in possession of the effects of the Bankers as president and that in obedience to the command of the writ he surrendered possession to W. C. Goodall, and it was ordered that said W. C. Goodall restore the possession of the effects of said company to Cook as president; that in event of his refusal to so turn over the effects that a writ of restitution issue to the sheriff to put said Cook in possession thereof, and that the bill be dismissed for want of equity.

It is first contended by appellants that the court erred in dissolving the temporary .injunction issued in this case and in failing to make the same perpetual.

The theory of appellants being that J. A. Goodall, the secretary, and who was also one of the directors, and certain other of the directors were attempting to reinsure and transfer the risks held by the Bankers Accident Insurance Company in order to enable them to convert the assets of said association controlled by them as its officers to their own use. The evidence in the record in our judgment does not bear out this contention, and even if it did, under the statutes of this State governing the transfer of risks of the character held by the above named association, the officers of the association do not possess the power necessary to make said transfer. The transfer can only be made under the provisions of the statute by a two-thirds vote of the members holding certificates in said association. Section 245 of chapter 73, Hurd’s Revised Statutes 1913 (J. & A.

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Bolles v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Ass'n
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
203 Ill. App. 69, 1916 Ill. App. LEXIS 1039, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodall-v-cook-illappct-1916.