Stobo v. Davis Provision Co.

54 Ill. App. 440, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 136
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 2, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 54 Ill. App. 440 (Stobo v. Davis Provision 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
Stobo v. Davis Provision Co., 54 Ill. App. 440, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 136 (Ill. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellee is an Illinois corporation, having its principal office in the city of Chicago.

Its by-laws provide for a board of directors tp consist of three persons; and at the time of the removal of appellant from the position of secretary, which is the act complained of, its board of directors consisted of Smith H. Weed, Henry Davis, and the appellant, Robert Stobo; and Davis was president, and Stobo was secretary of the corporation. Weed and Davis resided in Hew York, and Stobo in Chicago.

Stobo was also an officer of the Anglo-American Provision Company, another corporation doing business in Chicago, with which appellee had had extensive dealings, out of which litigation had resulted and was pending.

In consequence of such a condition of things, Weed and Davis, constituting a majority of appellee’s board of directors, deemed it to be for the best interests of appellee, that Stobo should be removed from the office of secretary.

The by-laws of the appellee corporation provide that a majority of the board of directors shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of all business; and also, that 66 either the president or secretary may call special meetings of the board of directors whenever he shall deem it expedient to do so; ” and also, that “ any officer may be removed by the board of directors at any meeting, either general or special, and other persons elected to fill vacancies so caused.”

This condition of affairs existing, Messrs. Weed and Davis came to Chicago, and a directors’ meeting was held, on December 2, 1893. It is admitted that no previous notice of an intention to hold a meeting at that time and place was given to Stobo.

The following minutes of that meeting, as introduced in evidence, are extracted from the abstract of the record, filed here:

“ A meeting of the Board of Directors of the Davis Provision Company, held this 2d day of December, 1893, at room 60, Board of Trade Building, Chicago, Illinois.
61 Present, all the directors, Messrs. Henry Davis, Smith M. Weed and Robert Stobo.

The president called the meeting to order, and the secretary, Robert Stobo, read the following call for the meeting:

' In pursuance of the by-laws of the Davis Provision Company, the president of said company, the undersigned, Henry Davis, deems it expedient that a special meeting of the Board of Directors of this company be held, and he hereby .calls a special meeting of the board to meet at once—all the directors being present, at the general office of the company in Chicago.
(Signed) Henry Davis.
December 2,1893.’
“ The secretary, Hr. Stobo, now got the minute book, and presented it.
“Mr. Weed stated to Mr. Stobo, that under existing circumstances the secretary ought to be changed, and gave his reasons. Mr. Stobo then said that he thought it would be better for the board to remove him from office, than for him to resign, and looked over the company’s by-laws to see the power of the board in the premises.
“Mr. Weed now offered the following resolution:
“ Whereas, Eobert Stobo, Esq., the secretary of this company, is interested in or employed by the Anglo-American Provision Company and Fowler Brothers, and these companies are hostile to the interests of this company; it is therefore
‘ Resolved, That it is for the best interest of this company that Eobert Stobo be and he is hereby removed from the office of secretary of this company, and he is hereby directed to hand over the seal, books, records and papers of this company to his successor.’
“ The passage of this resolution having been duly moved and seconded, Mr. Stobo first said he would protest against its passage, and then said he would say nothing, and left the room.
“ The resolution was now put to the meeting and duly declared carried.
“ Mr. Weed now moved the passage of the following resolution :
1Resolved, That Michael L. Freiberger, of Howland Block, Chicago, Illinois, be and he is hereby elected secretary of this company in place of Eobert Stobo, removed, and that he be and is hereby authorized and directed to demand and receive from Eobert Stobo, the late secretary, the seal, books, records and papers of this company.’
“ Its passage having been duly seconded, it was put to this meeting and carried.
“ Michael L. Freiberger now appeared and accepted the office of secretary.
(Signed) a Hemet Davis,
“ President.”

Stobo, the secretary and appellant, refused to comply with a demand made upon him by Freiberger, the newly elected secretary, for possession of the records and corporate seal of the company, and thereupon a petition for a writ of mandamus was filed by the appellee to compel such delivery.

The issue turns upon the question whether the meeting of directors, at which appellant is claimed to have been removed and Freiberger to have been elected, was a legal meeting of directors, and could effectually accomplish .what was attempted to be done.

Appellant contends that no notice having been given of said meeting, it required not only the physical presence in the room when the president elected to call a meeting of all the directors, but it required the assent of all to the holding of a meeting at all, and until such assent had been given no meeting could be legally held, and that everything that was done at such meeting was of no force and effect as the act of the corporation.

Appellant upon the record also raised the question of the good faith of Smith M. Weed and Henry Davis in attempting to remove Stobo from the office of secretary, and contended that even though it be conceded that Mr. Stobo assented to the holding of a meeting, if such assent was procured by trick, device, surprise or fraud, so that the director whose presence was so secured had no opportunity to elect whether or not he would be present and assent to the holding of a meeting, such presence would be ineffectual to constitute a legal meeting of the board of directors of the Davis Provision Company.

Appellant also submitted to the court and asked leave to go to the jury on the question of fact as to whether the action of Smith M.

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Bluebook (online)
54 Ill. App. 440, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stobo-v-davis-provision-co-illappct-1894.