People ex rel. Dr. Pierre Chemical Co. v. Municipal Court of Chicago

17 N.E.2d 999, 297 Ill. App. 431, 1938 Ill. App. LEXIS 674
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 30, 1938
DocketGen. No. 40,118
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 17 N.E.2d 999 (People ex rel. Dr. Pierre Chemical Co. v. Municipal Court of Chicago) 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
People ex rel. Dr. Pierre Chemical Co. v. Municipal Court of Chicago, 17 N.E.2d 999, 297 Ill. App. 431, 1938 Ill. App. LEXIS 674 (Ill. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hebel

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from an order entered by the superior court of Cook county sustaining the motions of the defendants to strike plaintiff’s petition for a writ of prohibition and thereby dismissing plaintiff’s petition.

'The petition for a writ of prohibition alleges that on October 5,1937, a certain suit was filed in the municipal court of Chicago by one Robert V. Taft against petitioner Dr. Pierre Chemical Company, a corporation.

The statement of claim alleges that said Robert V. Taft, the plaintiff, is the owner of $196,000 of debenture bonds of an outstanding issue of $1,240,000 of debenture bonds issued by the Dr. Pierre Chemical Company ; that said bonds mature January 1, 1956, and draw interest “to the extent that the available net income of the company, as determined by the standard methods of accounting, would suffice for payment at the rate of 7% per annum”; that during the year 1936 Dr. Pierre Chemical Company earned $42,087.50, “which was sufficient as determined by the standard methods of accounting, to pay interest on all outstanding and unpaid bonds at the rate of 3.39% per annum”; that during the first quarter of 1937 the Dr. Pierre Chemical Company earned $9,300 “which was sufficient as determined by the standard methods of accounting, to pay interest on such outstanding and unpaid bonds at 3% per annum and still leave a surplus in the treasury of $53,013.88”; that according to the terms and conditions of said bonds and the standard methods of accounting, the defendant in said suit, Dr. Pierre Chemical Company, “should have distributed said surplus of $53,013.88 as interest on said bonds during the first quarter of 1937, but failed so to do”; that on or about December 31,1937, an item of $6,264.03 was deducted from the account of the plaintiff, Robert V. Taft; and credited to the account of one Eva A. Taft; that in March, 1937, said sum of $6,264.03 was charged to general expense instead of charging same back to Eva A. Taft; that the officials of said Dr. Pierre Chemical Company, are unfriendly to plaintiff and such charge was deliberately made to defeat the plaintiff of the sum of $964.66, which otherwise would have been paid to him if said sum had been charged back to the account of Eva A. Taft; that on December 31, 1936, an item of $2,199.60 was “illegally charged to Profit and Loss ’ ’; that the plaintiff is entitled to recover his pro rata share, amounting to 15.4 per cent, or the sum of $338.74.

As pointed out to this court, the statement of claim in the suit in the municipal court of Chicago further sets forth a tabulation of the amounts claimed to be due the plaintiff, totalling $17,346.29, less credits of $2,368.47, and claiming an alleged balance of $14,977.82; that the Dr. Pierre Chemical Company appeared in said suit in the municipal court of Chicago and filed a motion to dismiss the same on the ground that the municipal court of Chicago had no jurisdiction over the subject matter of said suit, which motion was overruled by one of the judges of the municipal court of Chicago; that Dr. Pierre Chemical Company thereupon filed in the superior court of Cook county a petition for a writ of prohibition, praying therein that such writ issue restraining and prohibiting the said Joseph J. Drucker and each and every other judge of the municipal court of Chicago from assuming jurisdiction in said suit of Robert V. Taft v. Dr. Pierre Chemical Co., upon the ground stated in said petition.

Separate motions to dismiss said petition for a writ of prohibition were filed by the defendant Judge Joseph J. Drucker by his attorney and by defendant, the municipal court of Chicago, by its attorney. The superior court of Cook county sustained said motions and ordered the petition for a writ of prohibition dismissed, from which order this appeal is taken.

The first point called to the attention of the municipal court of Chicago is that the obligation of the Dr. Pierre Chemical Co. to pay interest on its income bonds is identical with the obligations of a corporation to pay (preferred) dividends to its stockholders. The obligation of Dr. Pierre Chemical Co. to pay interest is provided in the bond as follows: “to pay interest thereon ... to the extent that the available net income of the company, as determined by the standard methods of accounting, would suffice for payment,” and the plaintiff cites in support of its contention Yol. 6 Fletcher on Corporations, Perm. Ed., in speaking of income bonds, sec. 2644, where it is said: “They bear a close resemblance to .capital stock.” Section 2645, is as follows:

“The corporation has the right, notwithstanding such mortgage and bonds, to conduct its operations as it sees fit, subject only to the conditions of its organic law, unless the bonds or provisions of the mortgage contain limitations upon the powers of the corporation. It may make such improvements, alterations or changes as appear desirable. The only right the bondholders have is to compel the officers of the corporation to observe good faith in determining what is to be treated as net income, as governed by provisions in the bonds and mortgage as to what shall constitute net income. ’ ’

The question involved in the litigation is whether the plaintiff as a holder of income bonds has the same right to compel the payment of interest that a stockholder has to compel payment of dividends, and whether such action to enforce this right can be brought only in a court of equity.

The petitioner urges that to recover interest alleged to be due under the terms of the income debenture bonds, the suit of Robert V. Taft v. Dr. Pierre Chemical Co. was filed in the municipal Court of Chicago, and the suit being essentially an action for an accounting, the municipal court was without jurisdiction; that a suit to compel payment of interest could properly be maintained only in a court of equity, and quotes from the express terms of the bond whereby the Dr. Pierre Chemical Co. agrees to pay interest upon its debenture bonds “to the extent that the available net income of the Company, as determined by the standard methods of accounting, would suffice for payment at the rate of 7% per annum.”

The question before the court is whether the municipal court of Chicago had jurisdiction to determine the issue raised in that court regarding the amount of interest alleged to be due under the terms of the bond issued by the petitioner. We have passed upon the question of jurisdiction of the municipal court in matters of equity in the case of Barry v. Knight, 296 Ill. App. 277, in which an appeal was denied by the Supreme Court, and where the question arose as to whether the municipal court of Chicago had jurisdiction to enter a decree in a foreclosure proceeding. What we said in that case is controlling in disposing of the question of whether the municipal court has jurisdiction in equity matters. In quoting from the opinion it is necessary to do so at length. We there said:

“It is further suggested by the plaintiff that prior to the adoption of the Amendatory Act of 1931, there were many provisions contained in the original act which prescribed methods of practice which the judges were bound to follow, but after the adoption of the Amendatory Act in 1931, by the operation of Rule 311, which became effective on November 1, 1935, those provisions became ineffective except to the extent that they were not in conflict with the rules adopted by the judges.

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.E.2d 999, 297 Ill. App. 431, 1938 Ill. App. LEXIS 674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-dr-pierre-chemical-co-v-municipal-court-of-chicago-illappct-1938.