Lemars Shoe Co. v. Lemars Shoe Mfg. Co.

89 Ill. App. 245, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 657
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 89 Ill. App. 245 (Lemars Shoe Co. v. Lemars Shoe Mfg. Co.) 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
Lemars Shoe Co. v. Lemars Shoe Mfg. Co., 89 Ill. App. 245, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 657 (Ill. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Freeman

delivered the opinion of the court.

Facts material in consideration of this case are as follows: W. E. Goodrich purchased of appellant in December, 1896, a shoe manufacturing plant consisting of land and buildings thereon, together with all the fixtures, machinery, tools and material contained in said factory, agreeing to pay $15,000 therefor. By the terms of a written contract dated December 12, 1896, Goodrich agrees to pay the purchase money in installments of $2,500 each, the first installment six months from that date and the others respectively every six months thereafter. The first installment became due or about June 12, 1897, but before it was paid the property was consumed by fire the morning of June 13, 1897.

The contract between appellant and Goodrich required the latter “ either by himself or some other responsible person to put the factory into operation within sixty days from its date ” and to “ continue to operate the same until all payments have been made,” etc. Accordingly Goodrich was given possession of the plant and other property about January 10, 1897, and February 1, 1897, before the expiration of the sixty days, caused a corporation to be organized under the laws of Iowa, called “ The Lemars Shoe Manufacturing Company,” to which he turned over the plant and other property acquired from appellant, including miscellaneous material of the value of $6,000 or $7,000. The amount of the capital stock was fixed at $50,000, represented by 500 shares, each of the par value of $100. Goodrich took 498 of the shares, which were supposed to be fully paid for by the transfer of the property referred • to. Of the remaining two shares one was issued to Jacob C. McClanahan, and another is said to have been issued to a person designated as W. M. Smith. McClanahan was an employe of Goodrich, who says he “ personally hired him to go there on a salary.” McClanahan states that he paid in cash the par value of his one share of stock, although not very clear as to how or when such payment was made. Smith, the alleged holder of the other share, who -was appointed vice-president, and one of the three directors of the corporation, the others being Goodrich and Mc-Clanahan, was never in Lemars, never attended a meeting of the stockholders or directors, was never seen by his fellow-director, McClanahan, who was the secretary, and is called by Goodrich in his testimony, “ a purely fictitious person, for the purpose of making up the stockholders and the directors of the corporation,” although he afterward says, “ Mr. Smith was a real man.” He testifies, however, that he don’t know where Smith resided, what his business was, nor how he paid for his stock. The new corporation, in the language of its secretary, “stepped right into the shoes of Goodrich and continued the business without any changes so far as the conduct of the business was concerned.” Goodrich says that “ in the transactions of the corporation with the outside world he (McClanahan) was my representative of his part of the business.” It thus appears that the new corporation, to all practical intents and purposes was Goodrich himself, carrying on the business under the corporate name.

When the corporation was organized, Goodrich procured the insurance in question, together with other insurance, in the name of the corporation, and also certain policies in his own name, in the latter of which the loss, if any, was by the terms of the policies payable to appellant. This latter insurance appears to have been taken in compliance with a provision of the contract for purchase which required §6,000 of insurance to be made so payable to appellant as its interest should appear.

The morning of June 13, 1897, the plant of the new corporation was destroyed by fire, and as Goodrich testifies, “ upon the destruction of the plant the business came to an end in Lemars. My property was gone and I didn’t conduct the business any further at Lemars.”

The day after the fire the following instrument was executed :

“ Lemars, Ia., June 14, 1897.
“ To agents of insurance companies holding risks on our property at Lemars, Iowa:
“ We "here by sell, assign and transfer to the Lemars Shoe Co., individual policies on our building, stock and machinery to the amount of $13,500, including this made payable to the Lemars Shoe Co. direct. These policies to be selected by the Lemars Shoe Co. and myself, and the Lemars Shoe Co. to make no claim on any other policy, whether these policies selected are paid in full or not. If policies are paid in full $250 to be refunded by the Shoe Co.
Lemars Shoe Meg. Co.,
W. E. Goodrich, Prest.”
W. E. Goodrich :
“We agree to the above.
Lemars Shoe Co.,
By M. A. Moore, Prest.”

Goodrich testifies that no express authority was granted by the board of directors for assigning these policies.

Two days later the selection of policies was made. They are seven in number, each for the sum of $1,000, and they were assigned' “fer the purpose of paying the Lemars Shoe Company what was owing to them on account of the sale of the factory and stock on hand.” Upon the back of each policy is an assignment bearing the signature, “ Lemars Shoe Mfg. Co., W. E. Goodrich, Prest.” In one case the form is “ By W. E. Goodrich, Prest.,” and in another the signature has a scroll attached with the letters (L. S.) indicating a seal. The policies in controversy were turned over to appellant, the loss was adjusted, the companies agreed to pay fifty cents upon a dollar, and in due time drafts for that purpose were delivered by the companies to Goodrich apparently for transmission to appellant. They were still in his hands or the hands of his representative when these proceedings were instituted, apparently with his connivance.

It is first contended bv appellee’s counsel that the assignment to appellant of said policies so selected was made in payment of the individual debt of Goodrich, and not having been expressly authorized by the board of directors of the corporation was invalid.

That there was no formal authorization at a regularly called meeting of a board of directors is conceded. But it is equally true that no such formal meetings were called . for the transaction of any of the corporate business. The only stockholders and directors who ever appeared or acted in any manner at any time for the corporation were Goodrich, the president, and McOlanahan, the secretary. They held all the stock and all the offices, if we except Smith, whom the evidence tends to show is a mythical personage. There was one meeting of the- stockholders, Goodrich and McOlanahan, to elect directors, at the time the corporation was formed. There was one meeting of the directors, Goodrich and McOlanahan, held at or about the same time. If there were ever any other meetings formally held, there is no evidence of it in this record worth considering. At this directors’ meeting, the by-laws, consisting of four short sections, were adopted.

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Bluebook (online)
89 Ill. App. 245, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lemars-shoe-co-v-lemars-shoe-mfg-co-illappct-1900.