Schroeder v. Otto

240 Ill. App. 567, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 276
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 15, 1926
DocketGen. No. 7,875
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 240 Ill. App. 567 (Schroeder v. Otto) 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
Schroeder v. Otto, 240 Ill. App. 567, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 276 (Ill. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

On August 7,1922, appellee H. V. Schroeder, acting for himself and as president of the Minier Manufacturing Company, a corporation, entered into a contract with Daniel Otto individually and as vice president of the Schroeder Manufacturing Company, a corporation, William F. Oehler, A. H. Nafziger, Stuart Walters and E. W. Wickert, appellants, by the terms of which appellee Schroeder agreed to purchase certain shares of stock of the individual appellants in the Minier Manufacturing Company, and there was a purported accounting of the affairs and differences between said corporations and a cancellation of indebtedness between said corporations and an adjustment of differences between said individual parties.

The complainant Schroeder \yas born and raised near the village of Minier in Tazewell county and had lived in Minier for about 30 years. He was a man about 55 years of age, had accumulated a considerable property but had little education and had, to a large extent, intrusted the bookkeeping and details of his business to others. Appellee Schroeder and his brother, Ernest Schroeder, in 1903 started the business of the Schroeder Manufacturing Company which consisted of making and selling a portable grain elevator and dump, as it was sometimes called, and for a number of years it was a comparatively small business. In the beginning appellee and his brother worked in the factory. About the year 1908, appellee’s brother Ernest withdrew and appellee continued the business. In about 1908, C. W. Bird, who had been a school teacher, married the daughter of appellee Schroeder, and was engaged by his father-in-law to assist in the business. The business ran along in this way for a couple of years, appellee furnishing all of the capital and being the owner of the entire business. In 1910, appellee sold a one-fourth interest in the business to appellant Daniel Otto, who was a farmer living in McLean county, and who had purchased the first three machines manufactured by Schroeder Bros, for use upon his farms. Otto had also acted as agent for the Schroeder Bros, in the sale of the machines when he could get away from his farm work. During the next eight years appellee Schroeder and his son-in-law, Bird, together with appellant Otto, conducted the business of the Schroeder Manufacturing Company. In 1918, appellee Schroeder sold an additional one-fourth interest in the business to appellant William F. Oehler, and at that time, and for a considerable period thereafter, the business was successful and earned a good income.

Early in 1919 Bird and Simon Schroeder, son of appellee, commenced the manufacture of washing machines and in July, 1919, the washing machine business was incorporated under the name of the Minier Manufacturing Company and will be called the Minier Company. Appellee was not one of the incorporators of the Minier Company and did not own any stock until six months after the incorporation when he purchased some from his son Simon. Bird was the manager of the Minier Company from its inception until the time of trial. The Schroeder Company and the Minier Company used the same office room, the same bookkeeper and had the same manager, Bird, until a short time prior to August 7,1922, when the Schroeder Company moved into another office and secured another bookkeeper and manager. When they officed together their affairs were somewhat intermingled and they loaned machinery back and forth from one factory to another, but kept their business separate and kept distinct sets of books. In December^ 1919, appellants Stuart Walters and E. W. Wickert were traveling-salesmen and visited Minier. They were offered good positions with the Minier Company, Walters as general manager and Wickert as sales manager. They bought some shares of stock in the Minier Company, as appellants claim, from appellee Schroeder, Wickert buying seven shares and Walters 34 shares at $150 per share. • When they bought the stock Bird told them that if they became dissatisfied with their purchase he would buy the stock from them at the price they had paid. On November 1, 1920, a controversy having-arisen over their salaries, they requested Bird to repurchase their stock, and he bought from them giving them notes due in 90 days. Appellants Walters and Wickert continued in their positions with the company and in 60 days went to Bird and desired to repurchase their stock from him. Wickert then bought his seven shares back at $150 per share and Walters purchased 27 shares back at the same price, Bird retaining seven shares of the Walters stock and each were notified by Bird that he should feel under no obligation to repurchase the stock. Walters and Wickert at that time had been in the active management of the business for about 11 months. On or about January 1, 1920, appellee Schroeder sold an additional one-fourth interest in the Schroeder Company to appellant A. H. Nafziger for $26,000. In payment therefor appellee Schroeder took the personal judgment notes of Nafziger for $12,000, which were signed also by Nafziger’s mother, and notes for $14,181.60, made out directly to appellee Schroeder and not to his order, but containing the following statement: “This note is given and received in payment of one-fourth of the inventory of the merchandise on hand in the factory of H. V. Schroeder Mfg. Company, a partnership, consisting of H. V. Schroeder, Daniel Otto and William Oehler, on January 1, 1920. To secure the payment of this note I promise to pay H. Y. Schroeder to be applied hereon $100.00 from the proceeds of the sale of each share of capital stock now owned by me, amounting to 400 shares of the H. Y. Schroeder Mfg. Company (a corporation) organized July 1, 1920, successors to H. Y. Schroeder Mfg. Co., a copartnership. All dividends received by me from the corporation shall be applied to the payment of this note. If I default in the above payments, or in case this note is. not paid at maturity, I agree to assign to H. V. Schroeder enough shares of the H. Y. Schroeder Mfg. Company at their book value to the amount of the unpaid balance thereon.” This was a stock note in fact and shows that Nafziger secured substantially $26,000 in stock for $12,000. At about this time it appears Otto, Oehler and Nafziger purchased 100 shares of the stock of the Minier Company. There is a dispute as to whether the purchase was made from appellee Schroeder or from his son, Simon Schroeder, but so far as we can see it can make no difference in the result of this cause. Appellants contend that this last stock was purchased from appellee Schroeder. It is not contended by appellants that in any of the transactions set out there was any fraud or misrepresentations made on the part of appellee Schroeder, or by any of the parties to this suit. It is. contended that as to the sale of the 100 shares of stock in the Minier Company to Otto, Oehler and Nafziger about January 1,1920, that Bird approached them and informed them in the presence of appellee that the Minier Company had earned 15 per cent of its capital stock during the last four months of 1919, and that they were declaring a dividend of that amount for the benefit of the stockholders of the company in which appellants would not participate. Bird denies making the particular statement, but does state that he informed Otto on the train that he thought the company had earned 15 per cent of its stock and evidently Bird believed this statement to be true, and on February 1, 1920, a dividend of 15 per cent was declared to the stockholders, but later, upon an audit of the affairs of the company having been taken, the Minier Company recovered back from the government $1,400 in income tax it had paid.

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Bluebook (online)
240 Ill. App. 567, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schroeder-v-otto-illappct-1926.