Hooker v. Midland Steel Co.

117 Ill. App. 441, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 249
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 16, 1904
DocketGen. No. 11,330
StatusPublished

This text of 117 Ill. App. 441 (Hooker v. Midland Steel 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
Hooker v. Midland Steel Co., 117 Ill. App. 441, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 249 (Ill. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Freeman

delivered the opinion of the court.

The abstracts and arguments of counsel in this case are voluminous, but in the view we take it will be unnecessary to set forth the averments of appellant’s bill in full, or to consider all the questions presented in the briefs.

This appeal presents for review the action of the Superior Court in sustaining the demurrer to appellant’s amended and supplemental bill. That bill first recites the contents of and the proceedings taken under the original bill, and states inter alia that appellant owned seventy-two shares, and that certain of the defendants owned nine-tenths of the stock of the Midland Steel Company; that in the fall o.f 1898 or spring of 1899 appellees Beatty and Battelle, two of such stockholders, became interested in a project to combine a number of sheet steel mills into a “trust” ; that their negotiations to this end culminated in the early part of May, 1899, in “an elaborate and formal written option” given to certain promoters by the officers of the Midland Steel Company, for the sale of the plant and property of the company, not including, however, the cash on hand, accounts and bills receivable and' possibly other items; that the price named in said option was $1,000,000 preferred and $1,000,000 common stock of the “trust” then proposed to be formed; and that in the course of appellee Beatty’s dealing with appellant, herein complained of, Beatty, then president of the Midland Company, estimated such preferred stock in the proposed trust as probably worth $90 per share and the common stock as worth $60 per share, which' was the quoted price of preferred and common stock of the national Steel Company on the Hew York Stock Exchange at that time, and that on this valuation the option price would be equivalent to $1,500,000 cash, and the value of the entire property $1,575,000. The bill further states that in March or April, 1900, a transfer of Midland Company property to the American Sheet Steel Company actually took place, said last named company being subsequently merged into the United States Steel Corporation, and that the possession of the 72 shares of stock sold to Beatty by appellant, as hereinafter stated, enabled appellees to obtain in exchange therefor 240 shares each of preferred and common stock in said, combinations, the value of which appellant claims he is entitled to recover, since, as he avers, he was induced to part with his 72 shares of Midland stock to Beatty through the latter’s fraud.

It is charged that appellee Beatty, either of his own motion or conspiring with other large stockholders, wrote complainant a letter which was untrue, in that it stated a sale of the Midland Company’s property to a trust had actually occurred, when only an option had been given; that the price paid was $600,000, when it was $2,000,000 in stock; that the sale included the whole property of the Midland Company, whereas the cash on hand, accounts and bills receivable, were excluded; that the letter was in form addressed to stockholders generally, whereas in fact it was sent only to appellant, with fraudulent intent to induce him to surrender his stock at a price below its real value. Appellant claims to have been misled to suppose that under the option as alleged to have been given, the stockholders in general would receive $200 a share in cash for their Midland stock, but that appellees Beatty and Battelle were to have the privilege personally of taking in exchange for half their Midland stock, shares in the proposed “trust,” which would enable them to realize an average of $250 a share for their Midland stock, a privilege which would be extended to appellant; and that this was the highest price to be paid any Midland stockholder. The charge is that thus appellant was induced to sell his 72 shares of Midland stock to Beatty for $250 in cash per share, a total of $18,000, although, as he claims, it was then wrorth more than twice that sum. He states, however, it was “ as an alternative to a suit by complainant” that “Beatty then offered to pay him $18,000 for his stock” ; in other words, appellant was induced to make the sale, because he compelled Beatty to buy as the alternative to a lawsuit. The transfer to Beatty occurred June 14, 1899. Prior to that time appellant was opposing a sale or transfer to a “trust” under any circumstances, but he says that finally after an investigation by his attorney he “ surrendered ” his Midland stock to Beatty, but that he did so nevertheless solely upon the faith of Beatty’s representations. He states that when he did this, however, he advised Beatty that in case the sale to the trust should not be consummated as then proposed under the option, he “ would reassert his right as owner of said stock,” and he avers that his right to do this was recognized by Beatty, when about JSTovember 5, 1899, nearly five months afterward, Beatty notified appellant that the proposed sale had fallen through, and théreupon offered the return of the 72 shares of Midland stock to appellant, upon his refunding the $18,000 paid him for it, with interest at six per cent. He says that Beatty demanded an immediate acceptance or rejection of this offer.

It appears from the bill that appellant after the sale of his stock to Beatty kept up a correspondence about it, keeping in touch as he says with the transaction, apparently not quite sure whether he had made a good bargain or not, and wa.s informed that the sale to the trust had been postponed from time to time, told that he had been paid a big price for his stock, and he states that it was in reply to a request to be shown the trust agreement of sale that he was notified the proposed sale had fallen through.

The prayer of the amended and supplemental bill under consideration is in the alternative, first, for specific performance, without prejudice to appellant’s rights in the Midland Steel Company’s property reserved from the sale, and that defendants, be required to pay complainant the alleged value of 240 shares of preferred at $90 and the same amount of common stock in the “trust” at $60 per share, together with appellant’s proportion of such property as was not included in the option and proposed sale, with interest from June 14, 1899; or, second, if specific performance be denied, that the sale of June 14, 1899, to Beatty may be cancelled and the parties placed as far as may be in statu quo as of that date.

The ground upon which the so-called specific performance is asked for appears to be that inasmuch as Beatty “ pretended,” it is said, to take appellant’s Midland stock at a price based on an estimated value of the stock in the proposed trust which appellant would receive in exchange for his Midland stock if the sale went through, and as this estimated valuation, based on the market quotations of National Steel Company’s stock, another and different corporation not then connected with the transaction in any way so far as appears, was $90 for preferred and $60 for common stock, therefore this must be regarded as having established a basis of valuation of the 240 shares each of preferred and common stock in the American Sheet Steel Company which appellant says would have been'his proportion in exchange for his Midland stock if he had kept it instead of selling it to Beatty.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 Ill. App. 441, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hooker-v-midland-steel-co-illappct-1904.