Green v. Hedenberg

42 N.E. 851, 159 Ill. 489
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 42 N.E. 851 (Green v. Hedenberg) 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
Green v. Hedenberg, 42 N.E. 851, 159 Ill. 489 (Ill. 1896).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilkin

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is a bill in chancery by appellee, as a stockholder, against the Nutting. Electric Manufacturing Company and its officers and directors, charging them with misappropriation of corporate funds to his prejudice, and praying relief. The decree of the circuit court was according to the prayer of the bill, and has been affirmed by the Appellate Court.

The material facts set up in the bill are, that the capital stock of the corporation, consisting of 1000 shares of $100 each, were on April 13, 1893, held by two rival factions,—complainant, his son, James W. Hedenberg, and his son-in-law, Jason R. Prindle, being the owners of 536 shares, and William H. Foulke, Samuel E. Nutting, Frank A. Smith, S. D. Brown and Nellie C. Bonner the owners of the remaining 464 shares. At that time the last named parties, with W. C. Green, A. S. Nutting, A. W. Bonner, P. L. Taylor and D. B. Switzer, through complainant, acting for himself and his son-in-law, purchased all the shares owned by the parties first named, agreeing to pay therefor $40,000,—$15,000 in cash and $25,000 in notes, secured by the stock so purchased and 214 additional shares delivered to him as collateral. Upon the consummation of this sale, complainant, who was then president, and his son-in-law, Prindle, who was then secretary of the company, resigned, and appellant, W. C. Green, was elected president and W. H. Foulke secretary. Two others of the purchasers were made directors. Frank A. Smith was then treasurer, and continued to be an officer of the company. At this time there was due the company certain insurance money, amounting to §15,200, a'nd it is alleged in the bill that that money was afterwards wrongfully applied by the president, Green, and the treasurer, Smith, with the consent and concurrence of the other directors, upon the purchase price of said 536 shares of stock. The bill alleges that the total cash assets of the company at that time were §21,648.43, other personal property §3000, and patents of great value, but does not state their value. It is further alleged that on November 3 following the purchase of the stock from complainant, §50,000 in bonds were issued by the officers and directors of the company, secured by a chattel mortgage, in which Eugene Clifford was named as trustee, for the purpose of raising funds to pay a debt of §6600 pretended to be due and owing by the company, and it is alleged that if the §15,200 had not been misappropriated as stated, no necessity whatever would have existed for the issue of the bonds, even though the indebtedness really existed. It charges certain fraudulent transactions in regard to those bonds by Clifford, William H. Pope and A. Emma Smith, wife of Frank A. Smith, and these parties were made defendants to the bill. They answered denying its allegations as to them.

The company, Samuel E. Nutting, W. HYFoulke, P. L. Taylor, W. C, Green, Frank A. Smith and A. W. Bonner filed a joint and several answer, in which they admit the ownership and purchase of the shares of stock on April 13, 1894, substantially as alleged, but aver that the said purchase was in fact by the company, and not by the individuals in whose names the transaction was had; “they admit the §15,200 paid to complainant for the stock purchased was taken from the funds of the company by said Green, acting as president, and William H. Foulke, acting as treasurer, * * * and admit that the money was taken with the concurrence and assent of the board of directors; aver that it was also taken with the consent and concurrence and at the request of every one of the stockholders, and with the full knowledge and consent of complainant, James W. Hedenberg, and Prindle; * * * they admit that if the $15,200 had been in the treasury there would have been no necessity to issue the bonds or make the assignment of patents, but deny that there was any misapplication or misappropriation of the funds of the company, and deny that the bonds, mortgage or assignment of patents were made pursuant to any fraudulent scheme or plan to depreciate the stock or wreck the company, or for any other fraudulent or unlawful purpose, and aver that the same were made to raise money for the legitimate use of the company and for no other purpose, and they admit that the officers and directors hypothecated all of said bonds referred to, with the Central Trust Bank, as security for a debt owing said bank of $6524.50, but deny that it was done pursuant to any unlawful or fraudulent scheme or conspiracy of any kind, and aver that it was necessary for the company to raise money to that extent for its use, and that they had no other security to offer; they admit that if the money had not been taken from the assets no occasion would have arisen to pledge the bonds, but aver that the money taken and paid to complainant and his associates was taken with their concurrence and consent and for their use and benefit, and not for the benefit of the other stockholders, and complainant ought to be estopped from in any,way questioning the validity Or rightfulness of the transaction;” they admit the assets of the company to be substantially as alleged in the bill, and say “that the value of the stock is mainly speculative, resting upon the value of certain patents owned by the company.” Other allegations appear in the bill, and the answer sets up many facts not here referred to, which, in our view of the case, are not of controlling importance.

The cause was referred to the master to take and report the testimony, with his conclusions, and he reported, among other things, his finding to be that the purchase of the 536 shares of stock was in fact made for the company, and he also found that the appropriation of the $15,200 to the cash payment therefor was with the consent of complainant and those for whom he acted. His report, which was very voluminous, was excepted to by the complainant, which exceptions the master overruled, but on their being renewed before the court were sustained, the court holding that the evidence showed that the purchase of stock was made by the individual stockholders purporting to buy the same, and not by the company,, and also overruling the master’s finding as to the consent of the sellers of that stock that the company’s money might be used in the payment of $15,200 on said purchase, and rendered a decree requiring the stockholders named to pay back into the treasury of the company the $15,200 according to the pro rata amount due for the shares of stock they received, and further providing that the treasurer report to the court, within thirty days thereafter, the amount received from those parties, and ordering that W. G. Green, Frank A. Smith, and other officers named, pay to the treasurer any deficit which might appear from his report, in the full repayment of said money, —that is to say, $15,200. It finds that the complainant is the owner of certain shares of stock in said company. From that decree William C. Green alone appeals.

The vital question in the case is admitted by all parties to be, whether or not the complainant consented to the appropriation of the insurance money to the cash payment made him. Other matters, however, are alluded to by appellant as grounds of reversal, though they are not pressed with much earnestness.

It is well settled in this State, that where the officers of a corporation wrongfully deal with its property to the injury of stockholders, the latter may maintain a bill against the company and its officers for relief against such misappropriation.

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Bluebook (online)
42 N.E. 851, 159 Ill. 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-hedenberg-ill-1896.