Schipper v. Block & Kuhl Co.

283 Ill. App. 486, 1936 Ill. App. LEXIS 667
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 10, 1936
DocketGen. No. 8,959
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 283 Ill. App. 486 (Schipper v. Block & Kuhl Co.) 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
Schipper v. Block & Kuhl Co., 283 Ill. App. 486, 1936 Ill. App. LEXIS 667 (Ill. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wolfe

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought by some of the stockholders of the Block & Kuhl Company, an Illinois corporation, to enjoin it from further performing the covenants of a written lease, entered into on July 1, 1920, between the corporation and Jean M. Morron, and also to restrain actions at law by Jean M. Morron to recover from the corporation, rent stipulated in the lease to be paid to her by the corporation. We shall hereafter designate the complaining stockholders as the complainants, the Block & Kuhl Company as the lessee, and Jean M. Morron as the lessor.

Block & Kuhl Company was incorporated in 1914. The articles of incorporation provided, in part, as follows: “The object for which it is formed is to do a wholesale manufacturing business, and to buy, sell and deal in, at wholesale and retail, all kinds of manufactured and unmanufactured products.”

It may be stated that the lease demises for a period of 99 years a parcel of real estate fronting 20 feet on Adams street in the city of Peoria, at a monthly rental, and contains a covenant that the lessee shall erect a building on the leased premises by July 1, 1934. The lessor has brought actions at law to collect rent past due under the terms of the lease. Further, it is the contention of the complainants that when the lessee executed the lease it exceeded or abused the general power conferred on it by its charter to own and control real estate and that it is now doing unauthorized acts, transactions and business, for the reasons that it acquired improperly, and now holds improperly, real estate under the lease beyond its legitimate requirements and needs, for corporate purposes, under its charter. The suit is a proceeding in a court of equity to secure a judicial cancellation of the lease.

The foregoing statement will clarify three propositions which have been considered by this court. 1. The case does not concern a wholly ultra vires act of the lessee in the sense of the term that the lessee had no power under its charter to acquire the real estate, and occupy it, as a leasehold and erect a building on the premises.

In 1932, the lessor brought an action at law in the .circuit court of Peoria county against the lessee for rent due and payable under the terms of the lease for June, July, August and September of 1932. In November, 1933, the lessor brought a like action for rent then due under the lease and matured since September, 1932. The lessee has pleaded the defense of ultra vires to the actions. The lessee has in the actions, and also in the snit at bar, repudiated the lease for the reasons heretofore stated.

Therefore the complainants cannot protect their interests, as stockholders, in the funds and property of the lessee, by or through any action of the lessee by reason of any claimed or alleged abuse of the powers of the lessee by the lessee. In other words, if the lessee could defend the actions at law by urging that the lease, or the performance thereof by the lessee, is ultra vires of the corporation, the complainants would be attempting to enjoin the lessee from performing the covenants of the lease, when in fact it is not doing so. (Stewart v. Erie & Western Transp. Co., 17 Minn. 372; Clark v. Apex Gold Min. Co., 13 N. M. 416, 85 Pac. 968; Baxter v. Board of Trade, 83 Ill. 146; City of Chicago v. Cameron, 120 Ill. 447.)

The complainants, being stockholders of the lessee, have the right to prosecute this suit because they are among the real beneficiaries of the lessee and they cannot obtain redress or relief through the lessee for alleged abuse of its powers. (Marseilles Land & Water-Power Co. v. Aldrich, 86 Ill. 504; City of Chicago v. Cameron, supra.) The right of the complainants to maintain this suit, however, may be barred by laches, ratification or acquiescence on the part of the complainants on the grounds of equitable estoppel. The question of the ratification of the lease by the lessee is not here referred to. (Vide, Klein v. Independent-Brewing Ass’n, 231 Ill. 594.) We are dealing with private rights and the question of public policy is not involved.

This doctrine of estoppel is stated in the case of Berkeley County Court v. Martinsburg & Potomac Turnpike Co., 92 W. Va. 246,115 S. E. 448, as follows: “Equity will not allow a stockholder with notice of a contract which he complains of as ultra vires, or with the means of becoming acquainted therewith, to wait an unreasonable length of time, with the view to ascertaining whether the contract will result profitably, and then repudiate it if he finds it will result in loss.” The doctrine is also stated in Vol. 6 of Fletcher Cyclopedia of Corporations (1st Ed.) in sec. 4073, as follows: “A stockholder who participates as an officer or as a stockholder in illegal or ultra vires transactions on the part of the directors or stockholders, or consents thereto, or who, with full knowledge of the intention to engage in such transactions, acquiesces therein, instead of objecting and taking steps to prevent the same, is estopped to afterwards sue in equity to set the transactions aside; and it can make no difference that he sues on behalf of himself and other stockholders, and that there are other stockholders who might maintain the suit.” (Leigh v. National Hollow Brake-Beam Co., 224 Ill. 76.) (See also Memphis & C. R. Co. v. Grayson, 88 Ala. 572, 7 So. 122; Baker v. Spokane Sav. Bank, 71 F. (2d) 487; and Bissell v. Michigan Southern & N. I. R. Co., 22 N. Y. 258.) Rabe v. Dunlap, 51 N. J. Eq. 40, 25 Atl. 959.

Before the incorporation of the lessee in 1914, Schipper & Block, a corporation, operated a large department store in its own buildings situated on the corner of Adams and Fulton streets in the city of Peoria. These buildings, when the lessee was incorporated, consisted of a nine-story steel frame building, including basements, and a 10-story steel and concrete building connected by a bridge over an 18-foot alley, named Fulton Court, which runs parallel with Adams street and separates the two buildings. The two buildings are not situated on the same lot of Original Peoria. Adams street runs north and south; 171 feet east of Adams street is Fulton Court; 171 feet east of Fulton Court is S. Washington street which runs parallel with Adams street and it is one block east of Adams street. The nine-story building, called the Big White Store, is located on lot five and occupies the entire lot having a frontage of 72 feet on Adams street and extending 171 feet on Fulton street. Lot six lies between Fulton Court and S. Washington street and it is directly east of lot five; it has a frontage on S. Washington street of 72 feet and a depth on Fulton street of 171 feet. The 10-story building, known as the Fulton street annex, is located on the west 75 feet of lot six. Adjoining and north of lot six is lot seven having the same dimensions as lot six and fronting on S. Washington street. In 1914 Sehipper & Block also owned two large warehouses situated on lot seven Avhich were used in connection with their department store to store china and furniture.

Sehipper & Block, in 1914, also held a 99-year lease on what is known as the Anderson property which fronts 30% feet on Adams street with a depth of 171 feet to Fulton Court. The Anderson property adjoins the Big White Store on the north.

The lessee (Block & Kuhl) was incorporated to operate the business of Sehipper & Block.

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