Gunggoll v. Outer Drive Athletic Club

182 N.E. 409, 349 Ill. 406
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 1932
DocketNo. 20375. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 182 N.E. 409 (Gunggoll v. Outer Drive Athletic Club) 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
Gunggoll v. Outer Drive Athletic Club, 182 N.E. 409, 349 Ill. 406 (Ill. 1932).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal by the complainants from a decree of the circuit court of Cook county which dismissed for want of equity a bill in chancery which prayed for an injunction restraining the paying out, transfer or disposition of any funds of the Midway Athletic Club, and the transfer, incumbering, hypothecation or disposition of any of its assets and a certain consolidation of the Midway Athletic Club with the Cambridge Club, for an accounting of certain defendants and the Midway Athletic Club, the setting aside of a certain warranty deed of the Midway Athletic Club dated November 1, 1929, purporting to convey certain real estate to the Outer Drive Athletic Club, for the calling of a special meeting of the Midway Athletic Club for the purpose of electing directors, and for general relief. The complainants in the bill as originally filed were nine members of the Midway Athletic Club suing for themselves and for any other members of the club wishing to join them. They were later joined by 137 other members as complainants, and the name of one member was stricken as complainant, leaving 145 complainants. The defendants were the Outer Drive Athletic Club, the Cambridge Club and the Midway Athletic Club, all corporations not for pecuniary profit under the laws of the State of Illinois, and the persons who had been acting as directors and officers of the Midway Athletic Club.

The Midway Athletic Club was organized on January 25, 1924, having for its object “the benefit of business and professional men, their families and friends, also business and civic meetings, social activities and athletic resources,” and its management was vested in a board of five directors. On November 1, 1929, it had 1204 members, of whom 869 were life members, 230 charter members and 105 resident members. In addition 831 persons had applied for membership and each had paid with his application a part of the $400 membership fee and tax. His becoming a member was dependent on his election by the club and payment of the rest of the fee and tax. On November 1, 1929, the club owned three vacant lots on Stony Island avenue and the Midway, in Chicago, of the value of $450,060, which it had bought on July 28, 1924, on which to erect a building for its purposes, it had $143,369.31 on deposit in various banks in Chicago, and it had $232,685 of other assets, the whole amounting, after deducting its liabilities, ($454.88) to $871,256.96. These assets had been derived from the sale of memberships, of which there were three classes: life, charter and resident. The life membership certificates contained the following conditions: “This membership is transferable for a cash consideration or by heritage to an eligible candidate, and shall be forever free and exempt from any and all dues and assessments, and is issued as having been fully paid and non-assessable. This certificate is evidence of membership title and carries with it prorated undivided interest in the ownership of all assets of the Midway Athletic Club of Chicago, based upon the total number of life members authorized by the by-laws of the club in force and effect as of the date of the opening of the club house.” The club had no club building or rooms for the use of its members and had not sufficient funds to erect a suitable building. Its life members, who constituted a large part of its total membership, were not required to pay dues, and its prospective income was not sufficient to justify a loan to it of enough money to erect a suitable building.

The Cambridge Club was organized for a similar purpose to that of the Midway Club and in the summer off 1929 was occupying the Sisson Hotel, No. 1725 East Fifty-third street, having a contract of purchase of the hotel and vacant property adjoining for $2,100,000, upon which it had paid $260,000, and its total assets were $2,497,746.37. Its surplus of assets over liabilities was $498,150.60.

On August 4, 1929, committees severally appointed by the Cambridge Club and the Midway Athletic Club made a joint report to the two clubs, in part as follows: “The committee unanimously recommends the consolidation of the Midway Athletic Club and the Cambridge Club under the following conditions: (1) That the new club be incorporated under some appropriate name to be determined later; (2) that each member of the two clubs will receive a membership in the new club in the same class he now holds in the present clubs; (3) that the life memberships in the new club, at the discretion of the board of directors, will be subject to a service charge of $60 a year for a maximum period of ten years; the committee is convinced that if this is done a satisfactory budget will result, as shown in exhibit ‘A;’ (4) that the new club will acquire all of the assets of the present clubs in exchange for the memberships issued to the members of the present clubs as provided for in paragraph 2; ( 5 ) that the funds realized' from the present assets of the Midway Athletic Club be used solely for the purpose of acquiring land south of the present club house of the Cambridge Club and erecting athletic facilities thereon in accordance with the financial plan shown in exhibit ‘B.’ The committee further recommends that if this report be approved by the board of governors of each club a joint meeting of the two boards be held to consider certain questions before the consolidation is submitted to the members of the two clubs for approval. At this meeting committees can be appointed to deal with various matters which will need early consideration.”

In accordance with this report, G. G. Dowdall, who was president of the Midway Athletic Club, sent a notice to each member of the club of a meeting to be held on October 1, 1929, at eight o’clock P. M., at the Cambridge Club, 1725 East Fifty-third street, and a proxy to the officers of the club, with a request that it be signed and sent to the office of the club. These were inclosed in a letter of the president strongly urging the prompt return of the card and setting forth at some length the reasons for taking the action recommended by the committee. It was stated that the members of the Cambridge Club would meet on September 27 to vote on the consolidation of the two clubs and the meeting of the members of the Midway Club would be asked to vote in favor of the consolidation of the two clubs. The meeting was held on October 1, but as no quorum of the members was present it adjourned without taking any action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 N.E. 409, 349 Ill. 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gunggoll-v-outer-drive-athletic-club-ill-1932.