Nowak v. National Car Coupler Co.

103 N.E. 222, 260 Ill. 260
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 103 N.E. 222 (Nowak v. National Car Coupler Co.) 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
Nowak v. National Car Coupler Co., 103 N.E. 222, 260 Ill. 260 (Ill. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellants, Frank Nowak and Charles A. Nowak, were stockholders of the National Car Coupler Company, a corporation of this State organized under the act concerning corporations, in force July 1, 1872. (Laws of 1871-72, p. 296.) The charter expired on May 2, 1912, but by section 10 of the act the corporate capacity was continued during the term of two years, for the purpose, only, of collecting the debts due the corporation and selling and conveying its property and effects. On December 24, 1912, the appellants filed their bill of complaint in the superior court of Cook county against the corporation and officers and directors thereof, asking the court to wind up the corporation, to enjoin a contemplated sale of its real estate and other property and its good will and business, and, if a new corporation of the same name which had been organized should succeed to or acquire the property, to determine the value thereof and to distribute the proceeds among the stockholders in proportion to their stock. A preliminary injunction was denied and the sale took place. H. R. Bailey, a director of the corporation, became the purchaser and transferred his rights to the new corporation. The appellants then filed a supplemental bill alleging these facts and praying the court to set aside the sale and conveyances of the property which had been made, and repeating the prayer that the court would wind up- the corporation and dispose of its property by a sale of its assets, good will and business for cash, and would distribute the surplus, after the payment of debts, among the stockholders. The supplemental bill added the new corporation as an additional defendant. The court sustained a demurrer to the original bill and supplemental bill as amended, and the appellants having elected to stand by said bills, they were dismissed for want of equity.

The corporation owned real estate in the city of Attica and town of Converse, in the State of Indiana. The original bill was filed in the superior court of Cook county, in which county the principal office of the corporation was, to enjoin the corporation and its officers from making the intended sale. An injunction was refused and the sale was made, but the court had acquired jurisdiction of the persons-who made it and executed conveyances under it, and had power to compel them to restore the status as of the time when the bill was filed. Having acquired jurisdiction fhe court could set aside the sale and conveyances, which involved the freehold, and it was not material that the real estate was located in the State of Indiana. (White Star Mining Co. v. Hultberg, 220 Ill. 578.) If the court had set aside the sale and conveyances it could have enforced •its decree, and this court has jurisdiction of the appeal.

The material facts alleged in the original and supplemental bills and admitted by the demurrer are as follows: The corporation was organized to manufacture and sell car couplers and railway appliances and to do general foundry work, with its principal office in Chicago and its plant at Attica, Indiana. The capital stock was in 3000 shares of the par value of $100 each, of which 2790 shares were issued, and the appellants were the owners of 172 of the shares. J. W. Harrison was president and general manager and owned the majority of all the shares. -At the expiration of the charter the corporation was a solvent and going concern. On March 14, 1912, notice was sent to the stockholders of a meeting to be held in Chicago on March 28, 1912, to take action for the winding up and closing of the business and disposing of the property of the corporation. On March 16, 1912, Harrison addressed a letter to each stockholder advising the organization of a new corporation of the same name under the laws of Indiana, which were said to be more liberal toward corporations than those of this State. His proposal was that the new corporation should take the property on a plan for an exchange of stock in the new corporation, to be distributed pro rata among the stockholders. At the stockholders’ meeting the appellant Charles A. Nowak, acting for himself and the appellant Frank Nowák, dissented from the proposition and it was not adopted, and on that day a notice signed by the directors was sent to each stockholder for a meeting to be held on April 29, 1912, to determine whether the corporation should seek an extension of the existing charter. Harrison addressed another letter to each stockholder again urging the organization of the new corporation under the laws of Indiana, which should take the property for the existing stockholders by an exchange of stock. At the meeting of April 29, 1912, it was determined to apply for an extension of the charter for a period of seventy-nine .years. There were two days intervening before the expiration of the charter, and the certificate of the proceedings did not reach the Secretary of State before May 2, 1912, when the Secretary refused to receive the application. On June 3, 1912, a proposal to form a corporation, to be called “The National Car Coupler Company,” (which was the name of the old corporation,) was filed in the office of the Secretary of State by persons acting in the interests of the old corporation, and a new corporation was organized. On October 10, 1912, Harrison addressed another letter to the stockholders proposing a re-organization under the new corporation, each stockholder to have the same number of shares of stock as in the old company, the subscriptions being merely an exchange of shares. On November 20, 1912, a notice was addressed to the stockholders for a meeting to be held on December 3, 1912, to consider and take appropriate steps concerning the action of the directors and ordering and directing a sale of the property at public sale in order to wind up the affairs of the corporation. On December 3, 1912, a meeting of the stockholders of the'old corporation was held and a resolution was passed reciting the necessity of effecting a re-organization in order that the property might be kept together and the business as previously conducted by the corporation be preserved and continued for the benefit of the stockholders; that a new corporation had been organized for that purpose arid had made a proposition to purchase the property, good will and business of the old corporation and to pay therefor $278,966.66 in capital stock of the new company, to be distributed pro rata among the stockholders of the old corporation, and accepting the proposition. The stockholders present voted for the resolution, but it was announced that the law required the consent of every stockholder to make the resolution legal, and therefore it was necessarily lost. Thereupon a resolution was passed describing at length the real estate and other property of the corporation and directing the board of directors to sell and dispose of it at public sale to the highest bidder for cash, after giving notice of the sale in newspapers of general circulation in the city of Marion and city of Attica, Indiana, and the city of Chicago. The directors met the same day and made an order for the sale and the publishing of notices according to the resolution of the stockholders. Notices were given and the property in the city of Attica was offered for sale in that place and the other real estate was offered at the city of Marion, but no bid was received at either- place, and the sales were adjourned to the office of the corporation in Chicago, where all the property, good will and business were offered, and H. L. Bailey bought the property for $90,000 cash, subject to all debts, which he was to pay. The appellant Charles A.

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Bluebook (online)
103 N.E. 222, 260 Ill. 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nowak-v-national-car-coupler-co-ill-1913.