McIlvaine v. Foreman

126 N.E. 749, 292 Ill. 224
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1920
DocketNo. 12973
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 126 N.E. 749 (McIlvaine v. Foreman) 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
McIlvaine v. Foreman, 126 N.E. 749, 292 Ill. 224 (Ill. 1920).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion of the court:

On and prior to February 15, 1888, Lucy J. Rowe was the owner of a lot at the northeast corner of State street and Adams street, in the city of Chicago, then subject to a twenty-year lease expiring April 30, 1888. Under the provisions of this lease the lessee had erected a four-story brick building, which is still standing upon said lot. Under the terms of the lease the lessor was obligated at the end of the term to pay to the lessee eighty-five per cent of the appraised value of the building and improvements then standing upon said lot. Henry G. Foreman, one of the defendants below and an appellee here, and certain associates, being desirous of obtaining a ninety-nine year lease on .this lot, employed John P. Wilson and his associates to organize a corporation for the purpose of acquiring this leasehold. The Dakota Building Company was organized, its charter declaring that “the object for which it is formed is the erection of buildings and the construction and leasing of safety deposit vaults and the acquiring of leasehold estates in real estate situated in the said county o.f Cook and the erection and improvement of buildings thereon.” The capital stock was fixed at $100,000, and all the shares of stock were issued and delivered to Foreman and his associates. February 15, 1888, Lucy J. Rowe and her husband executed a ninety-nine year lease to the Dakota Building Company» at an annual rental of $25,000, besides the payment of taxes, insurance and assessments. The lessee company agreed to purchase the building then standing upon the premises and to spend at least $20,000 in repairing and improving said building. The company paid $45,000 for the building and spent $34,000 in repairing and improving the same. The building was an ordinary commercial building and was used for general mercantile and' office purposes. It was not a safety deposit vault nor was it so constructed as to be adapted for use as a safety deposit vault and no part has ever been used as such, nor has the building ever contained any safety deposit vaults of any kind except ordinary vaults used by the tenants of said building for their own private use. Henry G. Foreman continued as a stockholder iii the Dakota Building Company, and in addition to his original holding of 142 shares acquired 357R2 shares of stock by purchase from original holders, so that by June 16, 1902, he was the owner of one-half of the stock of said company. John P. Wilson, one of the attorneys who had charge of the organization of the company, acquired by purchase the remaining 500 shares of stock in said company. In 1907 the Dakota Building Company sub-leased the entire property to C. D. Peacock for á term of twenty years, at a net rental of $75,000 per annum for the first ten years of the term and $80,000 per annum for the last ten years of the term. In 1908 Lucy J. Rowe di.ed leaving a will, by which she devised the property in question to appellants as trustees. In October, 1917, the Dakota Building Company executed instruments of conveyance of the leasehold estate, conveying to Henry G. Foreman an undivided half interest and to William B. McIlvaine and John P. Wilson, Jr., as trustees under a deed of trust from John P. Wilson, an undivided half interest. For many years the monthly installments of rent had been paid by the lessee to the lessor by a deposit with the Northern Trust Company. The rent foy November, 1917, and December, 1917, was paid to the Northern Trust Company by McIlvaine and Wilson, trustees, and by Foreman, and the trust company issued receipts for said payments in the following printed form:

“No......... Chicago,................191..
“Received of Henry G. Foreman, of Chicago, individually, and William B. Mcllvaine and John P. Wilson, Jr., as trustees under deed of trust of John P. Wilson bearing date March 19, A. D. 1913, $2083.33 rent for above named month.
Trustees Estate Lucy J. Rowe, Deceased.
By.............................”

December 19, 1917, the lessors served notice on the lessees “renouncing and declaring null and void and of no effect that certain instrument dated February 15, 1888, and purporting to be an indenture of a lease between Lucy J. Rowe as lessor and the Dakota Building Company (so called) as lessee, which alleged lease purported to demise and lease to the said Dakota Building Company lot ten (10) in block three (3) in Fractional Section Fifteen (15) addition to Chicago, for the reason, among others, that the Dakota Building Company was not a legally organized corporation and had no power or right to receive the said purported lease or to enter on and take possession of the said premises therein described.” In the same notice the appellants, while protesting that they were under no obligation so to do, offered to pay to the persons who contributed the money therefor, or their present representatives, the fair value of all buildings and improvements situated upon the demised premises.

December 21, 1917, William B. Mcllvaine and John P. Wilson, Jr., as trustees, filed in the circuit court of Cook county their bill in partition, making Henry G. Foreman individually, and the trustees under the will of Lucy J. Rowe, deceased, defendants. The bill alleged that the appellants were claiming that said lease from Lucy J. Rowe to the Dakota Building Company was and is invalid and of no force and effect, and that said appellants claimed to be entitled to possession of the demised premises. To this bill the appellants answered, alleging invalidity of the lease and averring that the leasehold estate purported to have been created thereby was null and void, and again offering, without admitting liability so to do, to pay the fair cash value of all buildings and improvements situated on said lot, subject to the fair value of the use and occupation thereof since the date of the notice given by them renouncing the lease. January io, 1918, the appellants filed their cross-bill, asking that the alleged lease to the Dakota Building .Company (so called) be declared to be a cloud upon the title of appellants and be set aside and declared null and void, the appellants again offering to pay the fair cash value of the improvements. By their amended answer to the cross-bill the appellees, among other things, raise the defense of laches. The facts were stipulated and the only questions presented are questions of law.. The chancellor dismissed the cross-bill for want of equity and found that appellees here are the owners of the leasehold estate in said property and that they are entitled to have division and partition of said property made among them in accordance with their respective rights and interests therein, and ordered such division and partition in accordance with the prayer of the original bill. From this decree an appeal was prayed and perfected and the cause is brought hereTor review.

We are called upon to determine, first, the validity of the incorporation of the Dakota Building Company; and second, the validity of the lease entered into between said company and Lucy J. Rowe.

Whether the purpose of a corporation is within the scope of the statute under which the corporation is sought to be organized is to be determined solely from its charter. We have heretofore held that the general Incorporation act does not authorize the organization of a corporation for the purpose of.

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Bluebook (online)
126 N.E. 749, 292 Ill. 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcilvaine-v-foreman-ill-1920.