Landstrom v. Johnson

281 Ill. App. 470, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 564
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 18, 1935
DocketGen. No. 8,977
StatusPublished

This text of 281 Ill. App. 470 (Landstrom v. Johnson) 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
Landstrom v. Johnson, 281 Ill. App. 470, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 564 (Ill. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dove

delivered the opinion of the court.

On January 5, 1935, the plaintiff below, appellee in this court, filed his complaint, making Armer E. Johnson, Benjamin F. Frick, Jr., R. R. Claybaugh, Luther E. Todd, Earl M. Johnston, E. L. Roy, Consolidated Industries Corporation, Free Sewing Machine Company and Landstrom Furniture Corporation defendants. The relief sought was to have the individual defendants, other than Armer E. Johnson, declared to have been wrongfully and unlawfully elected as directors of the Consolidated Industries Corporation and removed as such directors, that they be also removed as voting trustees of the first preferred stock of the Consolidated Industries Corporation and that successors to them as such voting trustees be designated by the court, and that all the individual defendants be temporarily restrained from removing, discharging or voting against the continuance in office of the plaintiff as a director of the said Industries Corporation and as a director and president of the Landstrom Furniture Corporation, and that they, the said individual defendants^ as directors of said Industries Corporation, be restrained from calling a meeting of the stockholders of the Landstrom Furniture Corporation and from interfering with plaintiff’s conduct of said offices of such director and such president of said Furniture Corporation. A preliminary injunction as prayed was issued on the day the bill was filed. Thereafter a motion to dissolve the preliminary injunction was heard and denied and thereupon the several individual and corporate defendants answered the complaint and again moved for a dissolution of the temporary injunction. This motion was referred to the master in chancery, who took the proofs and on May 23, 1935, submitted to the court his amended report recommending that the motion to dissolve the temporary injunction be denied. On June 5, 1935, the chancellor entered an interlocutory decree approving the master’s report, overruling defendant’s motion to dissolve said temporary injunction and continuing the said injunction pending the final hearing of the cause. From this interlocutory decree this appeal has been prosecuted.

The pleadings and proof disclose that in 1927, Consolidated Industries, Inc., an Illinois corporation, was organized and took over all of the assets of the then existing Haddorff Piano Company, the Free Sewing Machine Company, the Eockford Cabinet Company and the Landstrom Furniture Company. In order to finance this merger and consolidation, Consolidated Industries, Inc. executed a trust deed upon the properties acquired by such consolidation, to secure the payment of a bond issue of $1,500,000 executed to the Mississippi Valley Trust Company, as trustee. Thereafter the business of the Consolidated Industries, Inc. was conducted in three divisions, the piano business in the name of Haddorff Piano Company, the sewing machine business in the name of the Free Sewing Machine Company and the furniture business in the name of Landstrom Furniture Company. The plaintiff Landstrom and the defendant Armer E. Johnson are residents of Eockford and had been friends, business associates and stockholders in these several companies for years and each was instrumental in effecting the consolidation and merger of these concerns and it was mutually agreed at the time of the consolidation that Johnson should have the management of the sewing machine and piano divisions and the plaintiff Landstrom should continue in the management of the furniture division of Consolidated Industries, Inc. At this time Landstrom, the plaintiff, became president of Consolidated Industries, Inc. and Armer E. Johnson became vice president and treasurer, and L. I. Johnson, a brother of Armer E. Johnson, was made secretary thereof. Thereafter financial difficulties arose and on December 15, 1931, Consolidated Industries, Inc. defaulted in making the payments then due upon its outstanding bonds and continued in default through the year 1932. In the spring of 1933 foreclosure proceedings were instituted in the United States District Court of the Northern District of Illinois. Appellee, together with appellant, Armer E. Johnson and others interested, including a bondholders’ protective committee formulated a plan for reorganization, and as one of the steps in this reorganization plan, a new corporation known as Consolidated Industries Corporation was incorporated under the laws of the State of Delaware in August, 1933, with authority to conduct any line of manufacturing business and to act as á holding company. It was licensed to do business in Illinois and its principal, place of business is Rockford. The Landstrom Furniture Corporation and the Free Sewing Machine Company were also organized and each incorporated about the same time under the laws of Illinois and all the stock of both of these last corporations was subscribed for by the Delaware Corporation and it is now the holder and owner of all the capital stock of these subsidiaries. Thereafter a decree of foreclosure and sale was rendered by the United States District Court and in order to carry out the reorganization plan, Consolidated Industries Corporation acquired the title to the real estate and plants formerly owned by Consolidated Industries, Inc. and it, the said Consolidated Industries Corporation, thereafter executed a trust deed covering such real estate and plants to secure the payment of bonds in the sum of $663,250, and it was these bonds and the first preferred stock of said Consolidated Industries Corporation which were used to satisfy and discharge the said decree of foreclosure. Pursuant to its charter, Consolidated Industries Corporation issued 104,910 shares of first preferred stock, 389,354 shares of second preferred and 13,955 shares of common stock. Appellee is the owner of 103,145 shares of the second preferred stock and 5,732 shares of the common stock. The entire voting power of this corporation until payment of the bond issue amounting to $663,250 and until the retirement- of the first preferred stock is vested in the holders of the first preferred stock, and all of this stock was held under a voting trust agreement, which was entered into on October 24, 1933. By the provisions of this voting stock agreement, appellee and the said individual appellants herein became vested with the exclusive power and authority to vote all the preferred stock of Consolidated Industries Corporation. This agreement, to which appellee was a party, authorized a majority of these seven gentlemen to vote all of this stock and at the initial meeting held in 1933, these seven gentlemen, by virtue of this trust agreement, elected themselves directors of Consolidated Industries Corporation, who in turn elected appellant Frick president of this corporation. On the same day they elected the first board of directors of the Landstrom Furniture Corporation, consisting of appellee and four other gentlemen. Appellee was chosen president of the board and he and two other gentlemen were designated to constitute the executive committee. 'At a meeting on January 16, 1934, one of the members of the executive committee resigned and Wm. R. Blacldock was elected to fill the vacancy. Blacklock was not a director, but at the time of his election appellee was present and participated and the record of the meeting does not show that he in any way protested. Dissensions among the parties arose- and in the fall of 1934, appellant Frick, the president of Consolidated Industries Corporation, wrote appellee that in order to save him, appellee, from future embarrassment, he, Frick, was giving appellee one more opportunity to tender his resignation effective immediately.

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281 Ill. App. 470, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landstrom-v-johnson-illappct-1935.