Haines v. Mid-West Wholesale Grocery Co.

273 Ill. App. 595, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 48
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 26, 1933
StatusPublished

This text of 273 Ill. App. 595 (Haines v. Mid-West Wholesale Grocery Co.) 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
Haines v. Mid-West Wholesale Grocery Co., 273 Ill. App. 595, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 48 (Ill. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court.

Complainants, appellees here, minority stockholders of Mid-West Wholesale Grocery Company, Inc., filed their bill in chancery in the circuit court of Perry county against the defendants, Mid-West Wholesale Grocery Company, Inc., C. W. Sheehan, Lottie Sheehan, Georgp Rountree, Louis Kern McCollum and Walter J. Forester, officers and directors of said Mid-West Wholesale Grocery Company, Inc., alleging that on or about August 27, 1927, and prior to the incorporation of said appellant, Mid-West Wholesale Grocery Company, Inc., a certain agreement was entered into by and between T. S. Cousins, J. T. Stephens, George Thomas, C. W. Sheehan and J. D. Byrne on the one part and the said C. W. Sheehan on the other part wherein it was agreed by and between said parties that' said T. S. Cousins, J. T. Stephens, George Thomas, C. W. Sheehan and J. D. Byrne were to be the directors and C. W. Sheehan was to be the president and general manager of the Mid-West Wholesale Grocery Company, Inc., which was then in process of organization as a corporation; that C. W. Sheehan was to be retained as such president and general manager for a period of 10 years from the date of the incorporation of said company at a salary of $250 per month; said agreement further providing that should said Sheehan die or become incompetent to manage the affairs of said company, then said compensation provided to be paid to him was to be paid to his wife, and that she was to assume the presidency and management of said company during the term of said agreement; that said agreement further provided that it would not be necessary for Sheehan to remain in the City of DuQuoin where the company had its offices and to have active supervision of the affairs of said company, but that he might direct the management thereof in such a manner as he should deem proper; that the Sheehan Cash Grocery Stores mentioned in said agreement was not incorporated, but that the defendant Mid-West Wholesale Grocery Company, Inc., was organized as a corporation as aforesaid; that said written agreement was never ratified at any meeting of the stockholders or any meeting of the board of directors of the company prior to the filing of this bill; that ever since the incorporation of said company, it had paid to C. W. Sheehan the sum of $250 each month as provided in said written agreement, the first payment being for the last half of November, 1927. The payment as aforesaid was admitted by appellants on the trial; that the aggregate amount paid to the said Sheehan by reason of said contract, was $13,125 up to March 28, 1932, the date of the filing of the bill of complaint.

Said bill further alleges that said C. W. Sheehan and Lottie Sheehan, his wife, resided at El Paso, Texas; that said C. W. Sheehan admitted residing outside of the State of Illinois since said company was incorporated; that said C. W. Sheehan had rendered and performed practically no services whatever in behalf of said company since its incorporation; that no compensation was authorized to be paid said C. W. Sheehan by any by-laws or by any resolution of the company prior to the filing of the bill; that ever since the incorporation of said company its business and affairs had been actually managed by certain other parties and that the company had been compelled to pay and had paid large sums of money to other persons for services rendered and performed in the actual management of the stores and business of the company and that during all that time, the said C. W. Sheehan had been far removed from the stores and business of the company, and had rendered practically no services whatever for the company; that said written agreement was not signed by all the stockholders of the company; that appellees did not obtain their respective share of stock in the company from the said T. S. Cousins, J. T. Stephens, C. W. Sheehan or J. D. Byrne or from either of them, but that they obtained their said stock direct from said company and paid said company for the same.; that said T. S. Cousins, J. T. Stephens, George Thomas and J. D. Byrne did not have issued to them and did not obtain from said company all the shares of stock for which they originally subscribed; that appellees at the time they became stockholders in said company did not know of the existence of said agreement and did not learn of the same until a few months prior to the time they filed their bill of complaint; that said written agreement was contrary to public policy and is otherwise void as to appellees; that said payments of $250 to said C. W. Sheehan were improper and were not authorized and were wrongfully made to him and said C. W. Sheehan wrongfully and improperly received from said company, prior to the filing of said bill of complaint, the aggregate sum of $13,125 on account of said monthly payments; that C. W. Sheehan should account to said company for the same; that said C. W. Sheehan had also wrongfully and improperly received from said company the sum of $1,722.31 in payment of hospital bills, railroad fare, hotel bills and divers other personal and private bills and expenses of the said C. W. Sheehan; that the said C. W. Sheehan did not pay cash for his shares of stock in said company, but paid for the same in property; that the property turned over to the company by C. W. Sheehan was estimated to be worth $43,000 and that said Sheehan was given in payment of same 430 shares of common stock in the company of the par value of $100; that appellees, at the time they became such stockholders, did not have any knowledge or any information as to what said Sheehan paid for his stock in the company; that said written agreement is injurious and oppressive to said company and is void and should be canceled ; that C. W. Sheehan has wrongfully and improperly received from the company, on account of the improper, wrongful and unauthorized payments aforesaid, the aggregate sum of $14,847.31, and that he should pay that amount back to the company; that said Sheehan owns the majority of the stock in said company, and that a majority of the directors and officers of said company are controlled by the said Sheehan; that the said Sheehan, Lottie Sheehan, George Rountree and Louis Kern McCollum who constitute more than a majority of the board of directors of said company and who are the officers of said company are controlled by the said Sheehan.

The bill then prays for a cancellation of the said contract and a decree requiring appellee Sheehan to pay back the said sum of $14,847.31. It further prays that an injunction be issued restraining said company and its officers from paying any further sums to the said Sheehan on account of the aforesaid contract.

Appellants answered the bill defying all of the material allegations in toto except as aforesaid; they admitted the making of the contract and the payments of the money as alleged in the bill. The court entered its decree finding substantially all the facts as pet out in the bill to be true and ordered and decreed that said contract be canceled; that appellees be enjoined from paying any further sums of money to the said Sheehan as prayed and that appellee Sheehan pay back to said company the said sum of money so found to be due and owing by him. Appellant Sheehan has appealed to this court assigning as errors that the decree is contrary to the law; is against the manifest weight of the evidence; that the court erred in not dismissing the bill for want of equity, and in finding the equities with appellees; that the court erred in finding that it was useless to request the directors to take action against said C. W.

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Bluebook (online)
273 Ill. App. 595, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haines-v-mid-west-wholesale-grocery-co-illappct-1933.