Imperial Building Co. v. Chicago Open Board of Trade

87 N.E. 167, 238 Ill. 100
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 87 N.E. 167 (Imperial Building Co. v. Chicago Open Board of Trade) 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
Imperial Building Co. v. Chicago Open Board of Trade, 87 N.E. 167, 238 Ill. 100 (Ill. 1908).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellant procured a judgment by confession in the circuit court of Cook county against appellee upon a warrant of attorney contained in a lease in which appellant was lessor and appellee lessee. Thereafter appellee entered a motion to vacate the judgment and for leave to plead, but the circuit court denied the motion. The appellee thereupon appealed to the Appellate Court, and that court reversed the order and judgment of the circuit court and remanded the case, with directions to vacate the judgment and give leave to appellee to plead. (Chicago Open Board of Trade v. Imperial Building Co. 136 Ill. App. 606.) Upon the case being re-docketed in the circuit court appellee pleaded nonassumpsit and mil tiel corporation. In its opinion the Appellate Court held that the appellant was not a corporation; that it was organized for a purpose for which corporations are forbidden by law to be organized, and that its charter was therefore void and the existence of appellant as a corporation subject to be collaterally attacked. When the case came on for trial in the circuit court it was the view of that court that the opinion of the Appellate Court was binding and must control the decision of the case in the trial court, and at the conclusion of the evidence the jury were instructed to return a verdict in favor of the defendant. Upon the return of such verdict the court entered judgment against the plaintiff for costs, and this appeal is prosecuted from that judgment.

The substance of the errors assigned is, that the court erred (1) in holding the charter of appellant void; (2) in refusing to hold appellee was estopped from questioning the corporate existence and charter of appellant; and (3) in instructing the jury to find against appellant.

The statement of the purposes for which appellant was organized and granted a certificate of incorporation or charter is, “that the object for which it is formed is to lease for a term not to exceed ninety-nine years, lots 4 and 9 and part; of lots 5 and 8, all in block 115, in school section addition to Chicago, for the purpose of erecting thereon a building for the accommodation of tenants, to make leases, collect rents and do all things incident to the management of said property.”

It is not controverted that corporations cannot be organized in this State for the purpose of acquiring and holding real estate. The first section of our general Incorporation act (Hurd’s Stat. 1905, chap. 32,) reads: “That corporations may be formed in the manner provided by this act for any lawful purpose except banking, insurance, real estate brokerage, the operation of railroads and the business of loaning money: Provided, that horse and dummy railroads, and organizations for the purchase and sale of real estate for burial purposes only, may be organized and conducted under the provisions of this act: And provided further, that corporations formed for the purpose of constructing railroad bridges shall not be held to be railroad corporations.” Section 5 provides that corporations formed under the act “may own, possess and enjoy so much real and personal estate as shall be necessary for the transaction of their business, and may sell and dispose of the same when not required for the uses of the corporation.” It is further provided in said section 5 that real estate acquired by the corporation in satisfaction of an indebtedness or liability to it, unless necessary and suitable for the business of the corporation, must be offered at public auction for sale once every year until sold, and that if any such corporation shall not within five years sell land so acquired at public or private sale, the State’s attorney is required to proceed by information against the corporation in the circuit court, which court shall have jurisdiction to order the sale of such land or real estate. The last clause of section 26 of the act reads: “And no foreign or domestic corporation established or maintained in any way for the pecuniary profit of its stockholders or members, shall purchase or hold real estate in this State, except as provided for in this act.”

It is not, and could not reasonably be, contended that under said general Incorporation act a corporation can be organized for the purpose of purchasing and holding real estate. This act has often been before this court, and it has uniformly been held that acquiring and holding real estate are not purposes for which a corporation may be organized but that the organization of corporations for such purposes is forbidden by the statute. (Bixler v. Summerfield, 195 Ill. 147; People v. Pullman Palace Car Co. 175 id. 125; Carroll v. City of East St. Louis, 67 id. 568; First M. E. Church v. Dixon, 178 id. 260.) Authority is given corporations organized for legitimate purposes, not prohibited by law, to acquire and hold such real estate as may be necessary for the transaction of the business of the corporation, but beyond this, corporations, no matter for what purpose organized, are forbidden to hold real estate, but are required by the statute referred to, to sell the same within five years or be proceeded against by the State’s attorney by information. That it has always been contrary to the public policy of this State to permit corporations to acquire and hold real estate was declared in Carroll v. City of East St. Louis, stipra, where in an elaborate opinion the legislation, and the reasons for it, were pointed out.

Appellant, however, contends that it was not the purpose of its incorporation to acquire real estate by lease for ninety-nine years, and that the statement of its objects as set forth in its charter is misleading; that instead of stating the object of the corporation to be to lease, etc., for the purpose of erecting thereon a building for the accommodation of tenants, and to make leases, collect rents and do all things incident to the management of said property, it should state the object to be, “to erect a building for the accommodation of tenants, to make leases, collect rents and do all things incident to the management of the property, and for that purpose to lease,” etc. The argument made is, that it is a lawful purpose to make leases, collect rents and manage property, and that to carry on the corporation organized for such purposes a building is necessary, and that corporations organized to lease property and collect rents may acquire and hold property to lease and collect the rents from. If this reasoning is sound there would be no limit to the power of corporations to acquire and hold real estate as investments and the statute would be rendered absolutely nug'atory. Our statute and the declared public policy of the State have ever prohibited corporations acquiring and holding real estate as an investment, and it is perfectly clear that that is what is being attempted by appellant. The reasons for this policy of our State, as we have said, are well stated in Carroll v. City of East St. Louis, supra, and need not be repeated here. In Bixler v. Summerfield, supra, it was said: “They [corporations] are not authorized to hold real estate for purposes of investment.” The fact that corporations organized for lawful and legitimate purposes may acquire and hold sufficient real estate to enable them to carry out such purposes furnishes no warrant for the organization of corporations to acquire and hold real estate as an investment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 N.E. 167, 238 Ill. 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/imperial-building-co-v-chicago-open-board-of-trade-ill-1908.