People ex rel. Coggeshall v. Walker Opera House Co.

94 N.E. 159, 249 Ill. 106
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 94 N.E. 159 (People ex rel. Coggeshall v. Walker Opera House 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
People ex rel. Coggeshall v. Walker Opera House Co., 94 N.E. 159, 249 Ill. 106 (Ill. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an information in the nature of quo warranto, brought by the People of the State of Illinois, on the relation of the State’s attorney, in the circuit court of Champaign county, against the Walker Opera House Company, a corporation. After leave granted in August, 1909, the original count in the information was filed, charging defendant in error with using, “without any warrant, charter or grant, the following liberties, privileges and franchises, viz.: To purchase or erect and operate a building or buildings for military and other purposes.” To this information defendant in error filed two pleas, the first stating, among other things, that said opera house company was organized June 20, 1889, under the general Incorporation act of 1872, under a certificate granted according to law by the Secretary of State, and setting out in full the statement and license, which documents, after giving the name of the corporation as the Walker Opera House Company, stated that “the object for which it is formed is to purchase or erect and operate a building or buildings for military and other purposes,” and that by this warrant the defendant in error was exercising the liberties, privileges and franchises mentioned, and that it had not usurped, or does not now usurp, any of such privileges or franchises. The second plea need not be set out, as a demurrer to it was sustained and no question is here raised with reference thereto. A demurrer was also filed to the first plea. This was overruled and leave granted to the plaintiff in error to file an additional- count and also replications to said original plea. Seven replications were filed. The first charged that the defendant had not kept or caused to be kept at its principal place of business “correct books of account of all its businessthe second, that the defendant had not given or afforded certain stockholders the right or opportunity, at reasonable times, to examine the records and books of account; the third, that the defendant was wholly without authority of law to “purchase or erect and operate a building or buildings for military and other purposes,” and that the object of the organization as a corporation, as set forth in the plea, was not definite and was not a lawful object; the fourth, that the corporation was engaged in the business of owning, possessing and enjoying more real estate than was necessary for the transaction of its lawful business; the fifth, that for a long time prior to the commencement of the suit said corporation had not been engaged in any lawful business under its articles of incorporation; the sixth, that it had usurped and was usurping, without legal authority, certain franchises, namely, to purchase or erect and operate a building or buildings for military and other purposes; the seventh, that it had been engaged in the sole business of leasing the building theretofore purchased and improved and collecting rents therefor without authority. A demurrer filed by the defendant to each of these replications was sustained.

One of the chief contentions of plaintiff in error in support of the original count, and the replications to the first plea thereto, is, that the defendant in error was organized for more than one distinct purpose, and that therefore such organization was unlawful; that the defendant in error was operating a building for opera house purposes when it was only entitled to erect and operate a building for military purposes. This argument, in effect, is that the charter was granted for illegal purposes. The plaintiff in error having filed replications to this plea after the demurrer had been overruled, necessarily admitted the sufficiency of the plea, in law, to bar a recovery. (People v. Gary, 196 Ill. 310; Hepler v. People, 226 id. 275; People v. Karr, 244 id. 374.) The rule is settled in this State that where a party to an action desires to have an order of the court overruling a demurrer reviewed in a higher court he must abide by the demurrer. By pleading over the demurrer is waived. (Heimberger v. Elliot Switch Co. 245 Ill. 448; Town of Scott v. Artman, 237 id. 394; People v. Central Union Telephone Co. 192 id. 307.) The plaintiff in error, therefore, could not thereafter question the legality of the charter of defendant in error. The demurrers to the third, fifth and sixth replications to said first plea to the original count were also properly sustained because those three replications alleged that the corporation had no legal authority to act for the purposes named in its charter. This was the very question disposed of when the demurrer to the said first plea was overruled, and, under the authorities already cited, the only way for plaintiff in error to raise that question was to abide by its demurrer to that plea. But this reasoning does not apply to the other four replications. None of these constitute a departure in pleading from the case made in the information. The plea of defendant in a proceeding of this kind must not only show that he had the right to use and enjoy the license or privilege, but that he still has such right. (People v. Central Union Telephone Co. 232 Ill. 260.) It is the duty of defendant in error, under the thirteenth section of the statute on corporations, to cause to be kept at its principal office or place of business correct books of account, and every stockholder in such corporation has the right, at all reasonable times, to examine such books of account. The first replication charged that defendant in error had not kept these books at its office or principal place of business in this State, and the second, that it had not afforded its stockholders the opportunity, at all reasonable times, to examine such records or books of account. While not every failure to comply with this statute will expose a corporation to a loss of its franchise, (North and South Rolling Stock Co. v. People, 147 Ill. 234,) the courts cannot say, as a matter of law, that any failure to comply with such a statute as is alleged in these two replications would not cause a forfeiture of the charter. The demurrers to these two replications should have been overruled.

We also think the demurrer to the fourth replication, as to leasing real estate for profit, should have been overruled and defendant in error compelled to justify on the issue raised thereby.

The charge in the seventh replication was, in substance, that defendant had leased the entire building to another person for opera house or. theatrical purposes, and that, even if it had the right to carry on an opera house under its charter, it must do so directly and not through a lessee. If the charter granted defendant in error the right to carry on an opera house, we think it was complying therewith by carrying it on through a lessee. The demurrer to this seventh replication was therefore properly sustained.

An additional count filed by leave of court alleged that the defendant in error was attempting to exercise, without warrant or authority, the following liberties, to-wit: That of owning, controlling and leasing real estate for profit and gain,—that is to say, said Walker Opera House Company, for the term aforesaid, has engaged, and is still engaged, in the business of owning and renting real estate and receiving the rents and profits thereof. To this count defendant filed three pleas.

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Bluebook (online)
94 N.E. 159, 249 Ill. 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-coggeshall-v-walker-opera-house-co-ill-1911.