Howe v. Illinois Agricultural Works

46 Ill. App. 85, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 509
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 11, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 46 Ill. App. 85 (Howe v. Illinois Agricultural Works) 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
Howe v. Illinois Agricultural Works, 46 Ill. App. 85, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 509 (Ill. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wall.

This was a bill in chancery filed by Samuel E. Howe, Chicago Malleable Iron Company and Union Hational Bank of Chicago against the Illinois Agricultural Works, a corporation, and its stockholders, for the purpose of winding up the affairs of the corporation and reaching the stockholders to the extent of their liability for unpaid stock. The complainants were judgment creditors of the corporation which was organized under the general law of this State. Executions had been issued upon their judgments and returned nulla bona. It was charged in the bill that the stockholders had paid but fifty cents on the dollar for their stock, and as the corporation was insolvent it was sought to enforce liability for the residue as far as might be necessary to pay the judgments held by complainants.

After the bill was filed a number of other judgment creditors were, on their motion,' admitted as complainants. Answers were filed by the corporation and by Smith, Tracy, Mendenhall and Mrs. L. H. Coleman, stockholders. It appears that when the cause came to be heard, the only question remaining for determination was as to the liability of the stockholders for the alleged unpaid balance on the stock, all the other assets of the corporation having been disposed of in satisfaction of liens prior to those of complainants. The court, upon a final hearing, dismissed the bill, and by writ of error the creditors bring the record to this court, assigning error upon said decree of dismissal.

It appears that in 1883 L. II. Coleman, C. W. Post and WT. Reed entered into a partnership for the purpose of manufacturing and selling agricultural implements. They started with a capital of $00,000 cash, having also a parcel of ground valued at about $7,000, containing some eight acres, which was donated to them by parties who wished to encourage the enterprise. At the end of the first year’s operations it was announced that the firm had cleared the sum of $18,000 and that it was then proposed to organize a corporation with a capital stock of $3,000, to be known as ee The Illinois Agricultural Works.” Tracy, Mendenhall and Mrs. Coleman were to be stockholders in the x corporation. They knew the result of the first year’s business, actively participated in the various conferences necessary to perfect the corporate organization, and were fully advised of all the facts relating thereto. In brief, the plan finally agreed on was to convey to the corporation all the property of Coleman, Post & Reed in payment for all the stock of the corporation, which was to be issued to them as follows: To Coleman 1,500 shares, $150,000; to Post 1,000 shares, $100,000; to Reed 500 shares, $50,000. Then Coleman, Post & Reed were to transfer one-half of the stock so issued to them to Mendenhall, as trustee for the company, and Mendenhall should sell one hundred thousand dollars of the stock at fifty cents on the dollar for the benefit of the company and hold the remainder for such disposition as might be determined thereafter. It was understood that Tracy, Mendenhall and Mrs. Coleman, who were, as already stated, actively concerned in the creation of the company, should have their stock at fifty cents on the dollar and they so obtained it, paying therefor to the company, and so did Smith. The certificates of 200 shares to Mrs. Coleman, 100 to Smith, 50 to Mendenhall and 100 to Tracy were issued ¡November 24, 1884, by the company, and Mendenhall, as trustee, surrendered his certificate of 1,500 shares, dated November 10th, and received another for 1,050 shares. This last certificate was dated November 27, 188-1. It "was arranged in the beginning that this transfer of stock to Mendenhall as trustee, should be on account of the assumption by the company of the debts of Coleman, Post & Eeed, estimated at §70,000, and it was perfectly understood that the proceeds of the stock so transferred to Mendenhall should belong to the corporation and not to Coleman, Post & Eeed. The property held by Coleman, Post & Eeed was worth somewhere in the neighborhood of $140,000, but of course was subject to the indebtedness of $70,000, which the corporation was to assume; and it follows that while they were to hold $150,000 of “full paid” stock, it was to cost them a little less than fifty cents on the dollar. The plan thus stated and thus carried out was all settled when it was determined to organize the corporation, and all those who subsequently received stock, except Smith, were parties to the transaction and were perfectly informed as to it all. The defense interposed by Tracy, Smith, Mendenhall and Mrs. Coleman to the claim of the corporation creditors was that the stock was fully paid when it was issued to Coleman, Post & Eeed and that there is no further liability in respect thereto.

It is urged that the conveyance to the corporation of all the assets of Coleman, Post & Eeed was accepted by the corporation as full payment of the sum represented by the face of the stock and that though there may have been some overvaluation, yet this can not be attacked except for fraud. This transaction was had between Coleman, Post & Eeed in their individual capacity on the one hand and in their corporate capacity on the other. The purpose in part was to show a complete subscription for the stock. A further purpose was to place the block of stock from which Tracy and the other new parties were to get their shares in the nominal form of paid-up stock, and in the hands of some one not an original subscriber; thus to furnish some colorable pretext for the position now assumed, that the stock was in fact paid up and that it was bought-in the market and without notice of anything to the contrary, or at least to place the burden of showing the true situation upon those who might seek to impose liability for the corporate indebtedness. It is argued that no matter how much the plant was overvalued there is no suspicion of fraud; that in addition to the actual property transferred there was great value in sundry patents and in the prospects for business, based on the success of the first year. This argument wholly ignores the fact which can not be denied, that it was not the intention to convey the property clear of incumbrance, but subject to the assumption of the debts of Coleman, Post & Beed of $70,000 incurred in the acquisition of the very property, leaving the real value of the transfer less than $75,000; and that while Coleman, Post & Beed were to subscribe and receive certificates for the entire stock of 0300,000, they were to place one half of it in the hands of Mendenhall, as trustee for the company, and Mendenhall was to sell one hundred thousand dollars of it at fifty cents for the benefit of the company—not for the benefit of Coleman, Post & Beed. This was, in effect, a distinct recognition of the fact that the value of tlie transfer was not 0300,000 or even 0150,000; and there is no room for any serious contention to the contrary. It was in effect a subscription by Coleman, Post & Beed for only one-half of the stock. The form thus gone through was but a sham, and the whole proceeding was merely a device to evade the law and to give color to the suggestion that the stock was fully paid up when it was not. Had the arrangement been carried out and enough of the “ trustee ” stock sold to pay off the debts of Coleman, Post & Beed there would have been no real change in the situation aside from the payment of debts; but instead of the partnership concern, with property worth 0140,000 or $150,000, there would have been a corporation with a capital stock of $300,000, nominally paid in full and nothing in the treasury.

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Van Cleve v. Berkey
44 S.W. 743 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1898)
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63 N.W. 514 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1895)
Coleman v. Howe
53 Ill. App. 82 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1893)

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Bluebook (online)
46 Ill. App. 85, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howe-v-illinois-agricultural-works-illappct-1892.