M. H. Vestal Co. v. Robertson

115 N.E. 629, 277 Ill. 425
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1917
DocketNo. 10981
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 115 N.E. 629 (M. H. Vestal Co. v. Robertson) 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
M. H. Vestal Co. v. Robertson, 115 N.E. 629, 277 Ill. 425 (Ill. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal' from a judgment of the Appellate Court for the First District reversing a judgment of the municipal court of Chicago in favor of the appellant for $72.52. A certificate of importance was granted, reciting, among other grounds, that the question upon which the opinion was based is involved in and decisive of many other suits now pending in the municipal court similar in character to this one.

This suit was brought under section 18 of the general Incorporation act to recover against the appellee, who was president and a director of the Chicago Real Estate Show Company, a pretended corporation, for a balance due on printing and materials sold and delivered to said show company and ordered by appellee, or under his direction and with his knowledge, as such officer and director. A certificate of complete organization of said corporation was issued by the Secretary of State January 31, 1911. The principal office of said company was in Cook county, but the certificate of complete organization was never filed for record in the recorder’s office of said county, as provided by section 4 of the general Incorporation act. ■ The printing and materials for which this suit is brought were sold on an open account covering a period from February 15 to May 6,1911. The suit was commenced December 10, 1914.

The main question involved in the Appellate Court and in this appeal is whether or not the suit is an action to recover a statutory penalty and barred by section 14 of the Limitation act because not brought within two years from the time the cause of action accrued. Appellee contends that this is a suit to recover a statutory penalty, while appellant insists that the suit is on an implied contract or statutory liability, and that the five year Statute of Limitations or section 15 of the Limitation act is applicable in this case.

Section 18 of thé general Incorporation act provides: “If any person or persons being, or pretending to be, an officer or agent, or board of directors, of any stock corporation, or pretended stock corporation, shall assume to exercise corporate powers, or use the name of any such corporation, or pretended corporation, without complying with the provisions of this act, before all stock named in the articles of incorporation shall be subscribed in good faith, then they shall be jointly and severally liable for all debts and liabilities made by them, and contracted, in the name of such corporation, or pretended corporation.” (Hurd’s Stat. 1916, p. 640.)

There can be no question of the liability of appellee under said section of the statute, if, as contended by appellant, the printing and materials sued for were furnished by. it .to the - Chicago Real Estate Show Company upon the order or direction of appellee, as an officer or agent of said show company, before the filing of the certificate of com-, píete organization of the company. Section 4 of the Incorporation act provides that as part of the proceedings for the incorporation of a company the commissioners shall make a full report of their proceedings, including therein a copy of the subscription list; a statement of the amount of the capital, not less than one-half actually paid in; the amount of such capital not paid in; what disposition has been made of stock subscribed and not paid, and if any proportion of the capital has been paid in property the same shall be appraised by the said commissioners and they shall report the fair cash value thereof; the names of the directors or' managers elected and their respective terms of office;—which report shall be sworn to by at least a majority of the commissioners and filed in the office of the Secretary of State; that the Secretary of State shall thereupon issue a certificate of complete organization of the corporation, making a part thereof a copy of all the papers filed in his office about the organization of the corporation and duly authenticated under his hand and seal of State, and shall be recorded in a book for that purpose in the office of the recorder of deeds of the county where the principal office of said company is located, and that upon the recording of said copy the corporation shall be deemed fully organized, and may proceed to business. This court expressly decided in Loverin v. McLaughlin, 161 Ill. 417, that liability under said section 18 is incurred if such officers or agents therein named contract for work or materials in the name of the corporation or pretended corporation before the filing of the certificate of incorporation or before all stock named in the articles of incorporation shall be subscribed in good faith. It was further held in that case that the object of the statute is to inflict a punishment for its violation, and that therefore it is penal in its character.

In the case of Diversey v. Smith, 103 Ill. 378, this court adopted the definition in Potter’s Dwarris on Statutes, that a penal statute is one which imposes a forfeiture or a penalty for tratisgressing its provisions or for doing a thing prohibited, and then said: “It is the effect—not the form— of the statute that is to be considered, and when its object is clearly to inflict a punishment upon a party for violating it,—i. e., doing what is prohibited or failing to do what is commanded to be done,—it is penal in its character, and the circumstance that in punishing, remedy is likewise afforded to those having an interest in the observance of the statute is unimportant.” This court accordingly held in that case, and also in the case of Gridley v. Barnes, 103 Ill. 211, that section 16 of the Insurance statute (one very similar in character to the one now under consideration) is a penal statute and that a right of action thereunder is barred by section 14 of the Limitation act. Said section 16 provides that the trustees and corporators “shall be severally liable for all debts or responsibilities of such company, to the amount by him or them subscribed, until the whole amount of the capital of such company shall have , been paid in, and a certificate thereof recorded as hereinbefore provided.” (Hurd’s Stat. 1916, p. 1484.) The doctrine was also announced and approved in the case of Diversey v. Smith, supra, that an affirmative statute introductive of a new law which directs a thing to be done in a certain manner means that such thing shall not be done in any other manner, even though there be no negative words prohibiting it. That rule is equally applicable in this case, and said section 4, which provides that the certificate of complete organization shall be filed for record in the county where the principal office of the corporation is located before the corporators shall commence business, is equivalent to an express prohibition against the authority to do so unless that certificate shall be first filed for record.

A remedial statute is one which not only remedies defects in the common law but defects in our civil jurisprudence generally, embracing not only the common law but the statutory law. (2 Lewis’ Sutherland on Stat. Const, sec. 583.) We find nothing in said section 18 to bring it within the class of remedial statutes. It cannot be said that the legislature intended thereby to grant to creditors a remedy for the recovery of their claims which the common law does not give them. They had a right of action against the corporators as partners. (Bigelow v. Gregory, 73 Ill. 197.) That remedy has been in no way changed or taken away by the enactment of said section 18. (Loverin v. McLaughlin, supra; Richardson Fueling Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
115 N.E. 629, 277 Ill. 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-h-vestal-co-v-robertson-ill-1917.