Johnson v. Hotel Lawrence Corp.

169 N.E. 240, 337 Ill. 345
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1929
DocketNo. 19768. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 169 N.E. 240 (Johnson v. Hotel Lawrence Corp.) 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
Johnson v. Hotel Lawrence Corp., 169 N.E. 240, 337 Ill. 345 (Ill. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Heard

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was a bill in chancery filed on August 2, 1927, in the circuit court of Lawrence county, by sixteen stockholders of the Hotel Lawrence Corporation, representing a total of 87 shares of stock, to set aside a sale of all the assets of the Hotel Lawrence Corporation on June 29, 1927, to the Lawrenceville Hotel Company, as illegal and a fraud by the majority stockholders upon the minority stockholders of the Hotel Lawrence Corporation, praying the court to declare a forfeiture of a lease of the premises, and that the Hotel Lawrence Corporation be declared insolvent and the corporation dissolved, and that a receiver be appointed to take charge of the property and close up the affairs of the corporation. To this bill the defendants filed an answer on November 2, 1927, and on December 6, 1927, they filed an amendment to the answer, which set up a special meeting of the stockholders of the Hotel Lawrence Corporation held on October 22, 1927, which ratified and approved the sale and transfer of all the property and assets of the corporation which was attempted on June 29, 1927. After a hearing, the court on January 30, 1928, entered a decree dismissing the bill for want of equity, and this writ of error has been issued to review the record.

The bill charged that P. B. McCullough and H. H. Knipe, for the purpose of wrecking the Hotel Lawrence Corporation and depreciating the value of its property and appropriating it for their own use, suffered and committed waste and allowed the premises to become badly in need of repair and the furniture, fixtures and equipment to become broken and destroyed, with the fraudulent intent to gain possession of the property before their lease expired; that McCullough and Knipe, after they became the owners of the lease and after acquiring the control of a majority of the stock of the company, conspired and planned to destroy the holdings of the minority stockholders, and with that fraudulent design caused a special meeting on June 28, 1927, to be called, at which meeting the resolution for the sale of the property was passed; that McCullough and Knipe and the members of their families voted 401 shares of stock for the passage of the resolution, and that the purchase of the property of the Hotel Lawrence Corporation by the majority of the stockholders at a sale authorized by themselves and at a price fixed by them was illegal, fraudulent and void, and that the interest of the majority stockholders lay wholly outside of and in opposition to the interest of the corporation and the minority stockholders and was a wanton and fraudulent destruction of the rights of the minority stockholders. The bill further charged that McCullough and Knipe failed to keep the premises in good and tenantable repair on the inside, failed to make additions and replacements to the equipment, failed to furnish sufficient heat to keep the fifth floor of the building reasonably warm and comfortable, were in arrears with the rent, and failed to provide proper elevator service and failed to secure the consent of the lessor to the assignment of the lease.

The Hotel Lawrence Corporation was organized October 3, 1919, by the public-spirited citizens of Lawrenceville, who subscribed for approximately 775 shares of the capital stock, of the par value of $100 per share, and to complete the construction and equipment of the hotel $75,000 of first mortgage bonds and $5500 of second mortgage bonds were issued and an additional $36,000 was borrowed. The hotel was leased to the Lawrenceville Hotel Company for a period of ten years from December 1, 1920, at a yearly rental of $6000 per year. The lease provided, among other things, that the lessee would not suffer or commit any waste on the premises, and agreed to keep the premises in good and tenantable repair on the inside and not assign the lease or under-let the premises without previous consent in writing, and that the lessee would furnish sufficient heat to the fifth floor of the building to keep the same reasonably warm and comfortable for the occupants thereof, and furnish reasonable and prompt elevator service for the occupants of the fifth floor as well as to the officers, employees and other persons having business with such occupants. The lease further provided that if the rent, or any part thereof, should at any time be in arrears or unpaid, or if the lessee should at any time fail or neglect to perform or observe any of the covenants, conditions or agreements, it should be lawful for the lessor, or any person duly authorized, without formal notice or demand, to enter upon said premises and to hold peaceable possession thereof.

The Lawrenceville Hotel Company was first incorporated by E. G. Brennan and Frank T. Read, and when they disposed of their interest in the lease Cal Butterfield acquired the same. After a period of operation of the hotel by Butterfield the same was acquired by the defendant P. B. McCullough and Ham Mills and William Thorn, who operated it until the defendant H. IT. Knipe purchased the interest of Mills and Thorn in January or February of 1927. McCullough and Knipe were the owners of the lease and operators of the hotel at the time the property of the Hotel Lawrence Corporation was sold to the Lawrenceville Hotel Company. There was no consent in writing by the Hotel Lawrence Corporation for the assignment of any of these transfers. The only income of the Hotel Lawrence Corporation was derived from rental, which was not sufficient to pay the interest on its indebtedness and retire the bonds as they became due, and for a long time before the filing of the bill the corporation was, as admitted by complainants in their brief, insolvent and unable to pay its debts. After McCullough and Knipe became interested in the lease of the hotel they began to purchase and acquire the common stock of the Hotel Lawrence Corporation at ten per cent of its par*value, and also acquired the past-due bonds of the corporation, which they held without any attempt to force payment, and at the time of the hearing they held $25,000 worth of past-due bonds. On June 23, 1927, the Lawrenceville Hotel Company, a new corporation, (the old Lawrenceville Hotel Company having been dissolved,) was organized by McCullough and Knipe, 149 shares being owned by McCullough, 149 shares by Knipe, one share by Mary C. McCullough, a daughter of P. B. McCullough, and one share by J. L. Knipe, a son of H. H. Knipe. The authorized issue of capital stock was $200,000, but only $30,000 worth was issued, and this company was the purchaser of the property of the Hotel Lawrence Corporation.

It is claimed by complainants that the lease under which the hotel was operated having contained a provision that the same should not be assigned without the written consent of the lessor, upon its assignment by the Lawrence-ville Hotel Company without such written consent it became void. That question is not material here. A clause in a lease that the same shall not be assigned without the written consent of the lessor is for the benefit of the lessor, only. It does not render the assignment, when otherwise made, absolutely void but voidable only, at the option of the lessor or his representative. The receipt of rent from an assignee or purchaser of the lessee will constitute a waiver of such right of forfeiture and will preclude the lessor from insisting upon a forfeiture on the ground the assignment was made without his written consent, as provided in the lease. Vintaloro v. Pappas, 310 Ill. 115; Johnson v. Northern Trust Co. 265 id. 263; Webster v. Nichols, 104 id. 160.

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Bluebook (online)
169 N.E. 240, 337 Ill. 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-hotel-lawrence-corp-ill-1929.