Roberts v. Weimer

130 Ill. App. 297, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 620
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 27, 1906
StatusPublished

This text of 130 Ill. App. 297 (Roberts v. Weimer) 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
Roberts v. Weimer, 130 Ill. App. 297, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 620 (Ill. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Puterbaugh

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by the administrator from an order entered by the Circuit Court in the matter of the estate of Charles A. Weimer, deceased. The following facts are disclosed by the evidence: Charles A. Weimer’ died intestate on March 5, 1903, leaving him surviving his widow, Sue A. Weimer, a daughter, Edith, aged 17 years, and a son, Karl, aged 12 years, as his only heirs at law. At the time of his death he was engaged in the 'manufacture and sale at retail and wholesale of cigars and tobacco, and did an extensive business. On March 18, 1903, upon petition of the widow, appellant was appointed and duly qualified as administrator of said estate. At the same time he was appointed as guardian of Karl, and the widow was appointed as guardian of Edith. On March 23, 1903, appellant obtained an order from the County Court authorizing him to sell the business at private sale, and to continue the same until such • sale might be effected. From thence forward until January 6, 1904, he operated the business, buying stock and manufacturing and selling goods. In the meantime he made no report of his acts and doings in the premises, either to the County Court, or the heirs. About January 6, 1904, appellant reported to the County Court that he had sold the business to the widow for $5,500, as of the date of March 23, 1903, and at the same time obtained an order authorizing him to distribute to the widow and heirs the sum of $4,500.

A few days prior to this time he had organized a corporation called 6.‘The C. A. Weimer Cigar Company,” with a capital stock of $15,000, consisting of 150 shares of the par value of $100 each. The subscribers thereto, as reported to the secretary of state, were Sue A. Weimer, thirty shares, Fielden M. Roberts, fifty shares, Charles H. Eldred, thirty-five shares, and Jacob Graser, thirty-five shares.

On April 25, 19.04, appellant filed his report in the County Court, .in which he charged himself with the sum of $5,500, proceeds of the sale of the business, and took credit for the payment under order of court of the sum of $1,500 each to Sue A. Weimer, F. M. Roberts, as guardian of Karl Weimer, and Sue A. Weimer, as guardian of Edith Weimer, which report was approved by the court.

Appellant testified that of the fifty shares subscribed by him, jfif teen- were taken as- guardian for Karl and the remainder for himself. Appellant and Graser each paid to the corporation on account of their subscriptions, $1,500, while Eldred, who was a brother-in-law of appellant, turned the shares subscribed by him over to appellant, who hypothecated the same to secure his personal note at a bank for $1,500. Prior to the complete organization of the corporation, appellant, Eldred and Graser had entered into a written "agreement between themselves that payment for sixty of the total shares to be subscribed by them should not be called for by the directors, but that the same should be held by the corporation as “treasury stock.”

At all subsequent meetings of the stockholders, they voted the full number of shares subscribed by them respectively and elected themselves directors. Eldred was elected treasurer, and appellant, who assumed entire management and control of the business of the corporation, was elected secretary, and was allowed and received a salary, the amount of which does not appear. When Edith attained her majority, a settlement of the guardianship accounts was effected, upon the suggestion of appellant, by the transfer by the guardian to Edith of fifteen shares of the stock in question at its par value. In 1905 appellant presented to the County Court his final report as administrator, to "which the widow and Edith each filed exceptions, alleging that appellant had in his former report improperly taken credit for the sum of $1,500 paid to Sue A. Weimer and for a like amount paid to Sue A. Weimer as guardian of Edith, whereas in fact said Sue A. Weimer had never received individually or as guardian said sums nor the value thereof in property of any kind or value; that in said former report he had reported that he had sold the assets inventoried at a private sale for the alleged consideration of $5,500, when in fact said assets, were well worth more than $10,000; that said pretended sale was a mere shift and device whereby the property could be kept by said administrator for his own use and benefit, through the instrumentality of the corporation referred to, and that from the time he took possession of the business until the purported sale to the widow, he sold large quantities of the stock of merchandise at private Sale to various parties without having ever reported the same to the court or accounting therefor to the heirs; and praying that the same administrator be required to properly account for the proceeds of all merchandise so sold by him and that he be charged therewith. Whereupon the County Court entered an order finding that the alleged sale of the business to the widow whereby the same might be transferred to a corporation in which the administrator owned a majority of the stock, and of which he was the managing officer, was contrary to law and not binding upon the heirs unless they saw fit to ratify the same; that the sums of money for which the administrator had taken credit in his former report, were never in fact paid by him, but that on the contrary he had induced the widow to accept in lieu thereof, stock of the corporation at par value, while he and the other shareholders had paid less than fifty cents on the dollar for the shares taken by them, by means of which said exceptors were defrauded; that between the times when sáid administrator took possession of the business. and the purported sale of the same to the widow, he made purchases and sales of merchandise from which he realized a profit, and that, he had failed to make report thereof. The administrator was therefore ordered to restate Ms said report and account, and upon the surrender to him of the certificates of stock held by them respectively, to surcharge himself with the amounts with which he had wrongfully taken credit in his former report; and also that he make report to the court of all merchandise 'purchased and sold by him from the date of his appointment until the alleged sale of the business; and further that said widow indorse in blank and deposit with the clerk of the court, the certificates of stock in question, to be delivered to the administrator upon his paying to the exceptors the sum of $1,500 each. Upon appeal by the administrator to the Circuit Court such order was affirmed.

The evidence further tends to show that the consent of the widow to the organization of the corporation, the purchase of the property in her name, and her consent to receive shares of stock in lieu of the shares of herself and Edith in the proceeds of the purported sale, weré obtained through the representations of appellant that the property could not otherwise be disposed of and that the enterprise would be very profitable. It further appears that the business, when conducted by Weimer in his lifetime, was well established and profitable and that the stock of merchandise and fixtures, exclusive of the good-will of the business, was worth much more than the sum purported to have been paid therefor by the corporation, and, further, that while the business was being conducted by appellant prior to the formation of the corporation, it was both prosperous and profitable.

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Bluebook (online)
130 Ill. App. 297, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-weimer-illappct-1906.