Hough v. Cook County Land Co.

73 Ill. 23
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 73 Ill. 23 (Hough v. Cook County Land Co.) 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
Hough v. Cook County Land Co., 73 Ill. 23 (Ill. 1874).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

• This was a bill in equity, filed by the appellant against the appellee, in the court below, to set aside a conveyance of certain lands, to cancel the stock of appellee, issued to him in payment for the same, and to restrain appellee, in the meantime, from selling such stock, which had been pledged to it as collateral security for a loan made to appellant.

A demurrer was interposed to the bill, which the court below sustained, and dismissed the bill.

So far as the allegations of the bill are material to the questions requiring our consideration, they are as follows: Appellee claimed to be a corporation under the laws of this State, with power to borrow and lend money; to take lands and mortgages as security; to purchase lands and make improve-merits thereon by erecting buildings for the purpose of renting the same; to hold buildings and lots for the purpose of improving and renting the same, and to do a general loan business, and take lands, mortgages and notes to secure the loans. Appellant, believing that appellee was possessed of the powers it claimed, and that it was authorized by its charter to buy land and issue its stock in payment therefor, and to loan money, etc., on the 24th day of May, 1873, contracted with it to sell and convey to it certain lands in Cook county, which are particularly described in the bill, in consideration that appellee w-ould issue to him 365 shares of its stock, and would also loan him 80 per cent in money of the stock, and hold the stock as ' collateral security on the loan—the loan to be for one year from that date, with interest at 10 per cent per annum till due, and 12 per cent per month after maturity, with power, on failure to pay, to sell, etc. The land was conveyed, the money loaned, and the stock issued, and pledged as collateral security, in conformity with the terms of the agreement.

Since the transaction occurred, appellant has been advised by counsel that appellee had no authority to take the land and issue the stock; that it professes to act under authority of “An act to incorporate the Land Improvement and Irrigation Company,” approved March 1, 1867, and the change of name to the Cook County Land Company, by vote of its stockholders, on the 20th of July, 1872, at which time its capital stock was increased, in accordance with an act of the legislature in regard to changing names and increasing stock of corporations, approved March 26, 1872; that the change of name and increase of stock was unauthorized and void, and all the authority appellee had by its charter was to purchase lands for the purpose of irrigation and improvement, for the raising of crops thereon, and the sale and disposal thereof, when so improved.'

It is alleged that the power vested in appellee by its charter, which is made part of the bill, as an exhibit, was to examine, survey and purchase lands and interests therein, watercourses or interests therein, for the purpose of irrigating the lands that might be so purchased, and facilitating crops in dry seasons, and to improve and cultivate such crops chiefly as require irrigation to produce the largest returns, and that appellee had no power to purchase and hold lands for any other purpose; that appellee has not purchased any lands for the purpose of irrigation, or for any object contemplated by its charter, but that appellee has purchased a large quantity of land, worth above §600,000, holds improved and unimproved city real estate, announces its intention to erect buildings on part of its vacant city property, and that it has been, since its organization, and now is, engaged in purchasing lands, city lots, the improvement of said lots for the purpose of sale and rental, and in the purchase of tax certificates, and in loaning money on bonds and mortgages, etc.

Appellant insists that the purchase of the land and the loaning of the money and taking notes therefor, were contrary to positive statutes, and therefore void.

The act of March 1,1867, under which appellee first became incorporated, by its first section, empowers “ The Land Improvement and Irrigation Company to have, hold, possess and enjoy, by themselves, successors and assigns forever, lands, tenements, hereditaments, goods, chattels, dioses in action, and effects of every kind,, and the same to grant, sell, alien, invest, loan and dispose of;” and the fourth section of that act is as follows:

“The chief objects of this association shall be to examine, survey and purchase lands or interests in lands, watercourses or interests therein, which are as near as may be adapted by nature to the use of water to irrigate the same, to facilitate the growth of crops in dry seasons, and to improve and cultivate the same for such crops chiefly as require irrigation to produce the largest returns.” Private Laws of 1867, Yol. 2, p. 241.

Section 21 of the general incorporation law, approved March 26, 1872, under which appellee changed its name and increased its capital, contains this proviso: “And provided further, that any corporation other than corporations for manufacturing purposes, availing itself of or accepting the benefits of, or formed under this act (except the mere change of name), shall be subject to the general laws of this State now in force, or which may hereafter be passed, regulating corporations of like character.” 2 Gross, 59.

One of the general laws then and still in force regulating corporations, provides that “'no foreign or domestic corporation established or maintained in any way for the pecuniary profit of its stockholders, shall purchase or hold real estate in this State,” except as provided for in that act. 2 Gross, 106, sec. 36.

Section 10 of that act authorizes corporations to “ own, possess and enjoy so much real and personal estate as shall be necessary for the transaction of their business,” and “to sell and dispose of the same when not required for the uses of the corporation;” and it contains a proviso that “ all real estate so acquired in satisfaction of any liability or indebtedness, unless the same may be necessary and suitable for the business of such corporation, shall be offered at public auction, at least once every year,” etc.

In case any corporation shall fail to sell such lands, it is made the duty of the State’s Attorney of the proper county to proceed against the corporation, by information, to the end that such lands shall be decreed to be sold. 2 Gross, 103.

And the first section authorizes corporations to be formed in the manner by the act provided, for any lawful purpose except banking, insurance, real estate, brokerage, the operation of railroads, and the business of loaning money. Conceding ■ that, in determining appellee’s powers, these several ¡Drovisions must be construed together, and that appellant’s construction, that appellee has authority only to examine, survey and pur-"' chase lands or interests in lands, watercourses or interests therein, which are as near as may be adapted by nature to the use of water to irrigate the same, etc., is correct, does it fol- j |; low that the title to lands conveyed to and held by it for other‘•f,' and different purposes is absolutely void, and may be so de- ¡| dared at the instance of the grantor seeking, for that cause alone, to repossess himself of the property?

The authorities cited in the brief for appellant—Bank U. S. v. Owens, 2 Peters, 538-9, Munsell v. Temple, 3 Gilm. 93, Cin. Mut. etc. v.

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Bluebook (online)
73 Ill. 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hough-v-cook-county-land-co-ill-1874.