McNulta v. Corn Belt Bank

63 Ill. App. 593, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 987
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 10, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 63 Ill. App. 593 (McNulta v. Corn Belt Bank) 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
McNulta v. Corn Belt Bank, 63 Ill. App. 593, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 987 (Ill. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Pleasants

delivered the opinion oe the Court.

On the 5th of October, 1891, permission was granted to appellant and others to organize a banking association under the act of June 16, 1887, amended by that of June 3, 1889, (Hurd’s R. S., Chap. 16a,) by the name of Corn Belt Bank, at Bloomington, with a capital stock of $100,000, designed to be increased to $300,000, in shares of $100. Appellant subscribed for nine hundred shares and ten others for ten each. At a meeting of the subscribers on the 27th, the number of directors was fixed at eleven, and each subscriber was elected a member of the board; and at a director’s meeting immediately following, appellant was elected president. After several intervening meetings not necessary to be noticed, the board, on the 25th of November, adopted the following resolution:

“ Whereas, John McNulta has been elected president of the Corn Belt Bank, and preliminary to his acceptance of said office and entering upon the duties of the same, it is necessary to fix and agree upon compensation for his services as such president, therefore, be it resolved, that it is understood and agreed that the compensation of John Mc-Nulta as such president shall be one hundred dollars per year; and as a further consideration for his acceptance thereof, an additional sum equal to two and one-half (2J) per cent on all stock to be issued, payable at the time fixed for such issues, that is to say, at least one hundred thousand dollars par value of the said stock to be issued within one year after the opening of said bank for business, and another additional one hundred thousand dollars, making three hundred thousand dollars in all that is to be issued, including the first issue of one hundred thousand dollars, within two years from that date.

The said John McNulta, by his acceptance thereof, agrees to subscribe for, and take at par value all of such stock, in lots of not more than fifty thousand dollars each, within any one period of thirty days after the preceding lot has been fully disposed of, paying therefor in cash, par value with his own funds, whenever the board of directors shall find responsible persons agreeing to purchase the same from him at such a price as may be fixed by the board, not less than 105, and interest at seven per cent from date of issue of such stock; and to sell the same to the persons and in the amounts designated by the board, with only the restrictions in the transfer in use at the time of commencement of business; for the purchase and sale of which stock said John McHulta, is to also have interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum and exchange on New York on all sums so invested by him. The surplus arising from the sale of said stock by him to inure to the benefit of the bank and to be disposed of as the board of directors may see fit.”

On December 2,1891, the bank was formally opened at 10:30 o’clock a. ar., after inspection by the auditor’s deputy and delivering of his certificate and permit of that date, authorizing it to commence business. Half an hour later the directors held a meeting, at which, among other business done, the by-laws reported were adopted, and the salary and compensation of the president was fixed by re-adoption of the resolution above quoted—the record showing that the vote on the motion was taken by roll call, the vice-president presiding, and that all the members voted in favor thereof. Immediately upon its adjournment the same persons organized as a meeting of stockholders, and in that character by a unanimous vote, representing all the shares, approved the by-laws specifically and assumed generally to “ approve and confirm all the records, proceedings and transactions of the board to date.” On the same day appellant was credited on the books of the bank with $102,500, of which $100,000 was ostensibly for the price of the stock issued to him, and the $2,500—as would seem from his deposit ticket for that amount, and a charge in the expense account book of the same amount and date, for “ organization ”■—was the percentage on the amount of stock so issued, under said resolution. In Hay, 1892, the directors, against strong opposition by some and with general reluctance, issued to him an additional amount of $50,000 in stock, on which he received $1,250 as percentage under the same resolution. But afterward refusing to issue any more, he resigned his presidency at the close of the year’s service on December 2,1892, and on January 25, 1894—the “ two years after the opening of the bank for business ” having elapsed—brought this suit in assumpsit on the common counts and- two special counts upon the resolution quoted, to recover $3,750 damages for the nonpayment of the 2£ per cent on the» further amount of stock originally intended to be, but which was not, issued.

Defendant pleaded the general issue, non est factum, and set-off of $3,750, the percentage alleged to have been unlawfully received by plaintiff on the amount of stock that was issued.

A jury having been waived and the cause tried by the court, the issues were found for the defendant on the first and second plea, and against it on the last. A motion for a new trial was overruled and judgment entered for the defendant for its costs; from which plaintiff took this appeal and assigns error upon divers rulings of the court and the entry of said judgment. Defendant assigns a cross-error upon the finding on the plea of set-off.

In the argument for appellant it is said that “ the only question involved in this record is, had this corporation (the power) either by its directors in the preliminary organization, or by its directors in the completed organization, or by its stockholders after the corporation had been duly chartered, to pass the resolution in controversy.” ■

It is declared upon as embodying an absolute contract between the corporation and the appellant, its president, by which for the consideration therein mentioned, he was tb receive besides the annual salary the further sum of $5,000, “ one-half of which should be payable in any event within one year and the other half within two years, and all of which might upon a contingency be payable within the first year,” which contingency was the time to be fixed for the issues of additional stock. And the breach alleged in the special counts is not that the defendant failed to issue the stock, but that it failed to pay the money.

In support of appellant’s claim three propositions are urged: First, of fact, that the provision bound appellee to pay it whether the stock should or should not be issued; second, of law, that the directors, or if not, the stockholders, had power so to bind it; and third, of equity, that if the alleged agreement was in that respect ultra vires, yet if it had been in good faith fully executed on the part of appellant, appellee can not set- up that defense.

The first involves and depends upon the construction of the resolution. In his testimony appellant says he frequently stated to members of the board, when asked if by the resolution they were bound to issue additional stock, “ that it was in the power of the board to stop the issue of stock at any time; that it required a vote of a majority of the board to increase the stock, and without that vote it couldn’t be increased.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 Ill. App. 593, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 987, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcnulta-v-corn-belt-bank-illappct-1895.