People ex rel. Carus v. Matthiessen

269 Ill. 499
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 27, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 269 Ill. 499 (People ex rel. Carus v. Matthiessen) 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
People ex rel. Carus v. Matthiessen, 269 Ill. 499 (Ill. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cooke

delivered the opinion of the court:

The People, on the relation of Mary Hegeler Carus, individually and as trustee under the will of Edward C. Hegeler, deceased, appellee, filed an information in the nature of a quo warranto in the circuit court of LaSalle county against the appellant, F. W. Matthiessen, calling upon him to show by what authority he was exercising the office of director of the Matthiessen & Hegeler Zinc Company, an Illinois corporation. The plea of appellant set forth his election as a director on December 18, 1913, and averred title to the office by virtue of such election. The circuit court found that the appellant had been duly and regularly elected a director of the company at a stockholders’ meeting held December 18, 1913, and a judgment of not guilty was entered. This judgment, on appeal, was reversed by the Appellate Court for the Second District and a judgment of ouster was entered. The cause is brought here by appeal on a certificate of importance.

The sole question involved is whether the meeting of December 18, 1913, was a legal meeting of the stockholders of the corporation. It is the claim of appellee that as the notice of the meeting required by law was not given, any action taken was invalid, while appellant contends that sufficient notice was given, and if not, that all the stockholders were present, and it was therefore immaterial whether notice was given. ■

The corporation was organized in 1871 under a general incorporation act passed in 1857. (Laws of 1857, p. 161.) The capital stock was divided into 426 shares, and these shares were distributed among E. W. Matthiessen and Edward C. Hegeler and the members of their immediate families, the members of each family owning 213 shares. Section 6 of the act of 1857, under which the company was organized and which became a? part of the charter of the corporation, provides that an annual election of directors shall be held at such time and place as the board may designate, and a written or printed notice of such election shall be given to each stockholder personally or sent to him through the mail at least fifteen days before the day of the election, and the election shall be made by such of the stockholders as shall attend for that purpose, either in person or by proxy. It is conceded that the notice required by this section of the statute was not given of the meeting of December 18, 1913. The by-laws of the company provide that the annual meeting of the stockholders for the election of a board of four directors shall be held at the office of the company, in the city of LaSalle, on December 18 of each year, excepting when that day shall fall on Sunday, in which case the meeting shall be held on the following day. The hour for holding the meeting is not fixed in the by-laws.

There was no material controversy as to the facts. It appears that the notice of the annual meeting required by the statute had never been given, but ever since the organization of the company the stockholders met by common consent some time during December 18 of each year, usually about the hour of ten o’clock A. M., for the annual election of the board of directors. If for any reason it did not suit the convenience of either appellant or Hegeler to meet at the office of the company, the meeting, by consent of all the stockholders, was held elsewhere. The stock was held by a very limited number of persons and the business was transacted harmoniously, two members of the Matthiessen family and two members of the Hegeler family being elected to the board of directors each year. After the death of Edward C. Hegeler 211 shares of the Hegeler stock was held by

Mrs. Carus as trustee under the will of her father, one share was held by Mrs. Carus in her own right, and one share by C. B. Lihme, a son-in-law of Edward C. Hegeler. Mrs. Carus was a director and president of the company, and Lihme was the other director representing the Hegeler interests. This was the situation on December 18, 1913. On December 17, 1913, appellant and others instituted ■ quo warranto proceedings against Lihme to contest his right to hold the office of director in the company, and summons in that case was served on him either that evening or the next morning.1 Mrs. Carus and Lihme went to the office of the company in LaSalle about ten o’clock the morning of December 18, 1913. They found there present all the Matthiessen stockholders, either in person or b)r proxy. Lihme was much excited over the action which had been instituted against him, and he at once demanded of appellant that no election be held and no business be transacted at that time. Some of the witnesses testify that he demanded that the meeting adjourn until some time in the future, but all the testimony is to the effect that he demanded that no-action be taken that day. While Lihme was engaged in making his demands a member of the Matthiessen family moved that appellant be made the chairman of the meeting, and this motion was put and declared carried. Mrs. Carus was in the same way selected as secretary of the meeting. About the time the vote ■was being taken on Mrs. Carus as secretary she and Lihme withdrew from the room. Mrs. Carus said nothing whatever while she was in the room, and -neither she nor Lihme voted on the two motions put while they were* present. It is contended that as Lihme continued to demand that the meeting adjourn after appellant had been selected as chairman and had taken charge of the meeting, he thus participated to the extent that he is bound by the action of the meeting. Lihme did nothing but protest against the taking of any action or the transaction of any business at that time; but be the effect of his actions what it may, Mrs. Carus said nothing and did nothing that could be construed as consenting to the holding of the meeting. Unless the provisions of the by-laws constituted sufficient notice of the annual meeting, or the physical presence, alone, of Mrs. Carus constituted a waiver of the statutory notice, the meeting was not a legal one and any election held thereat would be invalid. After Mrs. Carus and Lihme had departed the election was held and appellant was elected as one of the directors for the ensiling year.

While the trial court held as a proposition of law that a by-law of a corporation which names a day, but not the hour, for the holding- of the annual meeting is insufficient notice to the stockholders of the time of holding the meeting, it took the view that no stockholder can urge the invalidity of such meeting for want of notice unless he has been injured or deprived of some substantial right by lack of notice; that where all the stockholders are present on the day and at the place fixed in the by-laws and at an hour at which for over twenty years it was customary to hold the annual meeting, and where each stockholder knew that the annual election for directors was then about to take place, in law each stockholder had the right and opportunity to participate in the meeting and was not injured by lack of notice or deprived of any substantial right and cannot urge the invalidity of the meeting on the grouhd of lack of notice. The court properly held that the by-laws did not constitute, notice to the stockholders of the holding of the annual meeting for the election of directors. Section 6 of the act under which this company was incorporated provides that this meeting shall be held at such time and place as the board of directors may designate, and expressly requires written notice to be given the stockholders each year.

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269 Ill. 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-carus-v-matthiessen-ill-1915.