Perry v. Pearson

25 N.E. 636, 135 Ill. 218
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 25 N.E. 636 (Perry v. Pearson) 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
Perry v. Pearson, 25 N.E. 636, 135 Ill. 218 (Ill. 1890).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is a bill, filed in the Superior Court of Cook County -on April 22, 1886, by the appellant Silas Q. Perry against the appellees James H. Pearson, Eugene H. Pearson and Granger Farwell for the purpose of setting aside a sale, made by the appellant on November 24, 1884, to the said James H. Pearson, of stock to the amount of $357,500.00 in the “Perry-Pearson Company,” a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Michigan to carry on the business of manufacturing lumber, lath, shingles, etc., and transporting and marketing the same, and, for such business, to acquire lands, timber, logs and mills, logging railroads, vessels, etc. The prayer of the bill is, that the defendants be required to re-assign to complainant the stock and property interests in said company and to account for the profits and income therefrom, or to ■account for the value of such interests in case the same have been parted with.. The cause was heard upon bill, answer, replication and proofs oral and documentary, resulting in a final decree on February 8, 1888, dismissing the bill for want of equity. This decree has been affirmed by the Appellate Court whose action in this regard is brought before us, for review, by appeal.

The articles of incorporation bear date December 12, 1882, •and are signed by Perry and the two Pearsons; they recite that the capital stock is $650,000.00, divided into 26,000 shares of $25.00 each, and is fully paid up, that Perry owns 14,400 shares, James H. Pearson 11,000 shares, and Eugene H. Pearson 600 shares, that the business is to be managed by a board of directors consisting of three stockholders, which number may be increased to nine at any annual meeting of the stockholders by two thirds vote, that directors shall be stockholders,. that the business shall be carried on in certain counties in Michigan, that the place of business and business office in Michigan shall be located at Saginaw, and that there is “to be established an office for the transaction of business of the corporation, and for the holding of the meetings of the stockholders and directors in Chicago.”

When the company was organized appellant owned about 30,000 acres of pine lands on or near the Manistique river in Michigan, and other lumbering interests including a saw mill nearly completed, and lands and buildings near the mill, and a log railway connected therewith, and a quantity of logs and horses, oxen, wagons, etc., and other personalty. These lands and the mill and the other property were then estimated to be worth $514,989.93 and were transferred to the Company at that valuation. At the same time appellant owed $153,134.80, at least $40,000.00 of which was secured by mortgage on said lands. This indebtedness was assumed by the company, and after deducting the amount of it from $514,989.93 there was left the sum of $361,855.13 as the estimated value of the interests transferred to the company by appellant. Appellant paid no money into the corporation, and, in exchange for the $361,855.13, received $360,000.00 in stock and a credit of $1855.13.

At the same time James H. Pearson was the owner of certain pine lands on or near the same river, and lumber camps and logging outfits thereon, and some other property, all of which was estimated to be worth $256,677.03 and was transferred to the company at that figure. He owed $56,677.03 secured by mortgage on his lands. This indebtedness was assumed by the company, leaving $200,000.00 as the estimated value of the property interests transferred to the company by James H. Pearson and his son, Eugene H. Pearson, the latter having an interest in said property amounting to about $15,000.00. James H. Pearson, who was a man of large means independently of what he put into this company, also furnished to the company, in money and in his individual notes, $90,000.00, making his total contributions $290,000.00, for which stock to the amount of $275,000.00 was issued to him and to the amount of $15,000.0.0 to his son, Eugene H. Pearson.

Upon the organization of the company, by-laws were adopted providing that the officers should be a president, vice-president and secretary and treasurer; salaries to b.e fixed by the board of directors; and the president to “have the general management, care and control of the business of the corporation so far as looking after and directing the same were concerned, and should appoint and employ agents, mechanics and other laborers.” The complainant, Perry, was elected president, James H. Pearson vice-president, and Eugene H. Pearson secretary and treasurer, and these three constituted the board of directors, and they continued to hold such positions respectively from December 12, 1882, to November 24, 1884.

At the latter date Perry owned $357,500.00 of the stock, and sold and transferred it to James H. Pearson and surrendered his offices of president and director, in consideration of which James H. Pearson conveyed to Perry his homestead on Washington boulevard in Chicago valued at $15,000.00, and the undivided one half of a water-lot in Chicago valued at $16,500.00, and also executed to Perry an indemnifying bond in the penal sum of $100,000.00 to hold him harmless against the debts of the company for which he was personally liable, to-wit: a note for $10,000.00 executed by Perry to one Longley in 1881, due October 20, 1885, also a note for $30,000.00 executed by Perry to Longley in 1881, and due July 1, 1885, ■also about $60,000.00 of the company’s'paper which had been guaranteed by Perry and James H. Pearson, also a claim of about $7198.00 by the company against Perry for an alleged ■deficiency in the quantity of logs originally transferred by him to the company in exchange for his stock, also a claim of the ■company of about $1400.00 against Perry for amount overdrawn by him. The notes given by Perry to Longley in 1881 had been assumed by the company upon its organization.

Various reasons are urged by the appellant in favor of the ■claim that the sale of his stock on November 24,1884, should be set aside.

First, it is said that Perry was incapable of making a sale -of the stock by reason of the impairment of his mental faculties through illness and trouble. It is urged that the weakness of his mind at the time of the sale made him an easy victim of imposition.

Mental weakness, which will justify a court of equity in setting aside a contract or deed, must be such as renders a party incapable of understanding and protecting his own interests; the contract or deed will be permitted to stand, notwithstanding the fact that the intellectual powers have been somewhat impaired by age or disease, if it appear that the contracting party retains a full comprehension of the meaning, design and ■effect of his acts. The question in such cases is, whether or not the party alleged to be affected with mental weakness is ■capable of transacting ordinary business, or of acting rationally in the ordinary affairs of life. (Lindsey v. Lindsey, 50 Ill. 79; Meeker v. Meeker, 75 id. 260; McCarty v. Kearnan, 86 id. 291; Pickerell v. Morss, 97 id. 220; English v. Porter, 109 id. 285.)

The complainant below produced a large number of witnesses who testified as to his mental condition in the-fall of 1884.

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.E. 636, 135 Ill. 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-pearson-ill-1890.