Harts v. Brown

77 Ill. 226
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 77 Ill. 226 (Harts v. Brown) 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
Harts v. Brown, 77 Ill. 226 (Ill. 1875).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The Lincoln Coal Company was first organized in the year 1867, under the general incorporation law of this State, but afterwards became incorporated under a special charter adopted at the session of the General Assembly of 1869. The stock was divided into five hundred shares of $100 each. Three hundred were sold and paid for in full, but the remaining two hundred were apportioned among the stockholders according to the number of shares each held, upon their paying $30 on each share. Three shares were subsequently forfeited, leaving four hundred and ninety-seven shares to represent the capital stock of the company.

The organization proceeded to sink a shaft, and to prepare for mining coal. The money received on the sale of shares of stock was expended, and debts to the amount of from $23,000 to $33,000 were contracted by the company. Bonds of the corporation were issued and sold to Musick to the amount of $9400, and a trust deed was executed to him on the property of the company to secure the payment of the same.

These bonds matured about the first of August, 1871, and the greater portion of them were held by Musick and Hall, who demanded payment, and refused to extend the time unless personal security was given. Prior to that time, the property had been sold under a decree for a mechanic’s lien for $2000, and there was other indebtedness, as it is claimed, over the amount of. assets to meet the same.

Thereupon the directors called a stockholders’ meeting, and the secretary gave each shareholder a notice thereof and of the object of the meeting. It was held on the first of September, when a portion of the stockholders attended, and the condition of the affairs of the company was laid before them, and a proposition was submitted that each shareholder contribute his proportion of the amount necessary to relieve the company from this indebtedness, and they were requested to severally pay such sums. The property was advertised and sold on the 23d of December, 1871, and Frorer became the purchaser, for the amount of the indebtedness of the company, for the use of all stockholders who should join in forming a new company, and contributing thereto in proportion to the stock held by them in the old company.

Before this sale was made, Musick and appellants entered into a written agreement that he should sell and transfer to them forty-three and one-third shares of stock, and assign to them fifty-two bonds of the company, of $100 each, with the interest thereon, and a promissory note executed by Frorer, Howser and Ezra Boren, to Musick, for $3000, with ten percent interest; and that he would sell the property of the company, under and in conformity to the terms of the trust deed, as soon as possible after the first of August, 1871, and to execute proper deeds therefor.

Appellants, on their part, agreed to execute to Musick four promissory notes—one for $2400 and three for $2500 each— and to execute a mortgage on their interest in the coal company’s property, to secure the payment of the money. They were to keep Musick harmless on account of an agreement in reference to the note he assigned to them, and free from liability to the coal company.

After the property was sold, and purchased by Frorer, appellants organized a new company, under the name of the Lincoln Coal Mining Company. They put in the property thus purchased at $80,000, and divided the stock among-themselves, and have been operating it, with good profits and dividends, ever since.

Appellees filed a bill against appellants and Musick, claiming that, the sale was fraudulent and void; that the company ha'd no power to make the trust deed to any one, and especially to a director of the company, and that appellants wrongfully combined to compel a .sale of the property, and to become the purchasers, and thus defraud the other stockholders out of their interest in the property.

Musiek filed a cross-bill, alleging that he was induced to sell his stock to appellants, by false and fraudulent representations. Appellants claim' that the company was hopelessly insolvent, and without means to pay their debts, and without credit, and that the property had been sold under a decree of court, and that the time for redemption would soon expire, and that, for the purpose of saving the means they liad already embarked in the enterprise, they determined to become the purchasers, not at the sum due Musiek, but at a price which would pay all the creditors of the company, and then organize a new company, giving to all the stockholders the opportunity to participate in the new organization, by contributing their-ratable proportion of the sum necessary to pay the purchase price they had paid for the property.

On a hearing, the court below dismissed Musick’s cross-bill, but granted the relief sought by complainants in the original bill. The court decreed a rescission of the sale, and-stated the principles upon which an account should be stated, and referred it to the master to state the account. From that decree defendants prosecute this appeal, and assign various errors.

Had the directors legal authority to borrow money, and to execute a trust deed for its security on the property, or a mortgage with a power of sale? Their charter authorizes them to contract and be contracted with; to sue and to be sued. And the eleventh section of their charter expressly confers the power to borrow money, and to issue notes or bonds for the same, secured by mortgage. See Private Laws 1869, vol. 2, p. 837. This, then, places the power beyond all question.

Did the directors have power to borrow money of one of their number, and execute to him a mortgage on the corporate property, with a power of sale ? .We have never known it questioned that a director or stockholder may trade with, borrow from or loan money to the company of which he is a member, on the same terms and in like manner as other persons. He, then, had power to loan money to the company, and they became liable to pay the same. But in doing so, he must act fairly, and be free from all fraud and oppression; and he, in so doing, must act for the interest of the company, and impose no unfair or unreasonable terms.

In this case, we perceive nothing unfair on the part of Musick. The company had expended all of their means, and had failed to realize their expectations, and had reached a point at which the enterprise must be abandoned unless means could be procured to further prosecute the work; and, so far as we can see, there was nothing reckless or unbusinesslike in effecting this loan for the time, at the rate of interest or on the security given. They all seem to be according to the usual course of business. - >

The loan, then, having been fairly made, for a proper purpose and on reasonable terms, we fail to perceive any reason why the debt could not be collected by a sale of a sufficient amount of the property to raise the necessary sum; but it is urged that the other directors had no legal right to purchase the indebtedness held by Musick, and to have the property' sold to meet the obligations of the company held by them. Angelí and Ames on Corporations, p.

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Bluebook (online)
77 Ill. 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harts-v-brown-ill-1875.