Original Vienna Bakery, Coffee & Natatorium Co. v. Heissler

50 Ill. App. 406, 1893 Ill. App. LEXIS 441
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 8, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 50 Ill. App. 406 (Original Vienna Bakery, Coffee & Natatorium Co. v. Heissler) 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
Original Vienna Bakery, Coffee & Natatorium Co. v. Heissler, 50 Ill. App. 406, 1893 Ill. App. LEXIS 441 (Ill. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court,

Waterman, J.

This case is an appeal from an order appointing a receiver for the appellant company. The bill under which such order was made, set forth that the complainants were owners of 100 shares of the stock of the Vienna Bakery Company, for which they had paid the par value thereof, viz., ten thousand dollars; that William Loeb, the president of said company, has caused and is causing false entries to be made in the books of account of said company of the amount of cash received, and has caused to be entered and is daily causing to be entered a less amount of cash as having been received than is actually received, and has taken and is taking the difference himself, without entering any account or memorandum thereof on the books of account of said company; that the money so abstracted and not entered upon the books of said company amounts to from four to five hundred dollars daily; that the said company is doing a lucrative and profitable business, and that the books of said company will so show if all the money received by said company were properly entered upon the books of account thereof; but that by reason of the abstracting of money or for other reasons, which orators have been unable to ascertain, numerous debts due and payable from said company are left unpaid, and especially debts due and owing to the contractors and builders who erected the building of said company at the World’s Fair, and said company is threatened with suits and the possible winding up of its affairs by reason of such non-payment; that upon application duly made the said company has refused and does refuse the complainants an opportunity to examine the books thereof; that said Original Bakery, Coffee and FTatatorium Company of Chicago ivas organized for the express purpose of conducting a cafe or restaurant and place of amusement on the MidAvay Plaisance at the World’s Columbian Exposition, and that it has no other business whatsoever; that in order to locate and establish its plant on said Midway Plaisance a contract was entered into betAveen the World’s Columbian Exposition and the party procuring the concession, whereby there should be paid to the World’s Columbian Exposition twenty-five per cent of the receipts from the restaurant business, and that said Original Vienna Bakery, Coffee and Eatatorium TCompany in obtaining an assignment to it of said commission undertook to make the payments to the World’s Columbian Exposition specified and required in the contract granting said concession—that in case of the violation of the terms of said contract the World’s Columbian Exposition has the power to withdraw said concession, and absor luteiy prevent and prohibit the holder thereof from longer enjoying any rights and privileges therein and thereby conferred, and said World’s Columbian Exposition could compel the said-Vienna Bakery, Coffee and Eatatorium Company to close up its said place of business on Midway PlaiT sanee and absolutely prevent it from continuing in that or any other business within the inclosure of said World’s Fair.

That said Original Vienna Bakery, Coffee and Eatatorium Company has invested large sums of money in the erection of its said building and plant on said Midway Plaisance, and that its only hope of being able to pay for the said building and plant and make any return upon the capital invested therein lies in its being permitted to continue its said business under the said concession until the closing of the World’s Columbian Exposition; and thatpn case it should violate the contract granting said concession, and the World’s Columbian Exposition should act upon such violation in accordance with its rights and powers, great loss and damage would result to all the stockholders of said Original Vienna Bakery, Coffee and Eatatorium Company; that said plant of said company so erected as aforesaid on Midway Plaisance, would be and is of no value to said company in case it should not be permitted to conduct its said business there; that said World’s Columbian Exposition Company, in order to protect its interests in the receipts of said Bakery, Coffee and Eatatorium Company, established a system whereby checks to be used in said restaurant were sold to the waiters in said restaurant by a cashier located in said restaurant by said World’s Columbian Exposition Com■pany; that said Loeb, the president of said Bakery, Coffee and ETatatorium Company, soon after the opening of said restaurant devised a sclieme whereby all the checks so turned over by the waiters for deposit in said box were not so deposited, but that the same were again sold by the cashier of the Bakery, Coffee and ETatatorium Company to the waiters; that by this means checks were used a number of times, and the World’s Columbian Exposition Company Avere defrauded of the amount represented by the face value of said checks upon every successive use thereof; and that the cash received by sáid Bakery, Coffee and ETatatorium Company, represented by such successive use of said checks, has not been and is not entered upon the books of account of said company, but that the same has been and is abstracted by the said Loeb; that in case the World’s Columbian Exposition shall discover the fraud perpetrated upon it by the officers and directors of the said Original Vienna Bakery, Coffee and ETatatorium Company, it Avill be within the poAver of said exposition company to absolutely close up the said Bakery, Coffee and ETatatorium Company’s business on said Midway Plaisance, and prevent said company from hereafter doing or transacting any business of any kind Avhatever thereat; that the building and plant of said company will be absolutely worthless, and a total loss to said company and its stockholders in case said company shall not be permitted to continue conducting said business, and that the amount invested by orators and the entire profits of said enterprise, are being jeopardized daily by the action of said Loeb and his associates, as officers and directors of said Bakery, Coffee and ETatatorium Company; that orators will sustain a total loss on account thereof, in case said Loeb and directors be permitted to continue abstracting money in the manner hereinbefore set forth and violating said contract for the concession to conduct said cafe and restaurant on the World’s Fair grounds as aforesaid; that orators believe that the only Avay in which their interests and the interests of the other stockholders of said Bakery, Coffee and ETatatorium Company can be protected and secured is by the appointment of a receiver to take charge of said business, and either continue the same or wind the same up under the direction of this court, as to the court may seem for the best interests of all parties concerned.

The bid was afterward amended by adding thereto the allegation that the five directors of the company control a majority of its stock; that three of them have known of the said conduct of Win. Loeb for a long time; that a fourth director has recently been informed thereof; that no steps have been taken in respect thereto, but at a meeting of the directors called upon information had of the intended filing of complainants’ bill, it was decided to take no action in respect to the matter; that complainants can not obtain any relief at the hands of the directors of said company, they having sanctioned the refusal to permit complainants to examine the books of the company, and refused to order an investigation of the charges made by complainants, and that said directors are not the proper parties with whom to leave the management of the business of said company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 Ill. App. 406, 1893 Ill. App. LEXIS 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/original-vienna-bakery-coffee-natatorium-co-v-heissler-illappct-1893.