Teich v. Kaufman

174 Ill. App. 306, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 299
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 25, 1912
DocketGen. No. 18,686; Gen. No. 18,762
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 174 Ill. App. 306 (Teich v. Kaufman) 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
Teich v. Kaufman, 174 Ill. App. 306, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 299 (Ill. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Barnes

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellees, Teich and Boessler, filed a bill in equity against Nathan M. Kaufman, Samuel B. Kaufman, Congress Hotel Company, and Simeon Straus, praying for a preliminary and permanent injunction, the effect of which would be to enforce an agreement between said Kaufmans and appellees (therein and herein referred to as agreement B) and likewise one entered into between appellees and said Congress Hotel Company (therein and herein referred to as contract C). From the order granting a preliminary injunction on the filing and reading of the bill, the Kaufmans have appealed. After perfecting said appeal, motions to dissolve said injunction were made by said Company based on its demurrer to the bill, and on behalf of the other defendants, based upon their respective answers, affidavits and oral evidence. The motions were denied and from the denial thereof said company and said Kaufmans have appealed. As such appeals aré all in the same suit, they may properly be considered in one decision.

Appellees urge that the appeal from the order granting the injunction should be considered with reference to what appears in the record showing the proceedings on the motion to dissolve it, and cite the case of Sharples v. Baker, 100 Ill. App. 108. The statute gives the right to appeal from either the granting or refusal to dissolve such an order. The bond on the appeal from granting the injunction was approved and filed June 14, 1912. The proceedings to dissolve such injunction were at a later date and could not affect the question whether or not the injunction was properly granted. That question is before this court on the record as it stood when the appeal was taken. In the Sharpies case, supra, it appeared from the record that the injunction appealed from was not in force at the date of the appeal, having been previously modified at appellant’s own request. The injunction in the case at bar, being still in force at the time of perfecting the appeal, this court will consider the questions thereby raised.

The record discloses that the Kaufmans owned 4934 shares of the common stock of said company and appellees an equal number, which together made a majority of the outstanding voting stock. The Kaufmans as parties of the first part, and appellees as parties of the second part, entered into a written agreement B, January 10, 1911. It provided that for a period of five years therefrom all the shares of stock owned by them should be voted in the same way on any propositions that might come before any stockholders’ meeting and for the same director or directors at any election to be held, as the parties thereto might decide; that until otherwise decided all of said parties should be elected directors of said company; that as members of said board of directors they should vote for and secure the election of N. M. Kaufman as president and provide for an annual salary of $7,500, to be paid him, and the election without salary of Boessler as vice president, and Teich as secretary and treasurer, and that they should secure the making of a contract for the services of said Teich and Boessler as managing directors of said company for the period of three years, as the same had then been prepared and reduced to writing for submission at the next meeting of the board of directors, and secure an extension thereof during the life of the agreement.

The contract to employ appellees as managers, referred to as contract C, was read and approved at a special meeting of the board of directors, held the next day, and provided that the company should pay said Teich and Boessler as such managers jointly and -to the survivor of them $15,000 a year.

Agreement B further provided that each party to it, in case of default in the payment of certain notes, given by the other, might respectively pay the same and then become entitled, on terms and prices therein fixed, to stock of said company pledged as collateral to said notes. It further provided that during the lifé of the agreement neither party should sell or dispose of his shares of stock covered thereby to any other person than the parties thereto, without first giving the other parties the right to purchase the same at the market price- within thirty days; and that the sale of such stock, in any event, so long as the agreement was in force, should be made subject to the terms thereof, and with full notice thereof to the purchaser. It further provided that in case of a disagreement as to the interpretation thereof, or policy to be pursued by the parties thereto, the matters in dispute should be submitted to said Straus for decision, which should be binding on all parties.

The bill sets forth certain transactions between the parties leading up to the execution of agreement <(B” which, as we view the case, need not be referred to or considered, and certain other matters subsequent thereto, the purport of which is that the Kaufmans violated the terms of agreement B, and sought to bring about the annulment of contract G, and to that end conspired to get, and have secured, enough additional stock, to give them a majority of the common stock, and thus the means of controlling said company and annulling contract 0.

The bill further alleges that said Straus has prejudged the questions that may be submitted to him.

Among other things the bill prays that the Kaufmans may be declared trustees for appellees as to one-half of all the stock acquired by them subsequent to the date of agreement B, and account for the profits, and be required to transfer the same to appellees on certain conditions of their paying therefor; that the interests of said Kaufmans and appellees in their stockholding shall be declared joint and a partnership in effeót; that a receiver be appointed to vote said stock as joint stock, and asks for a temporary and a permanent injunction, which seek in effect a specific performance of not only agreement B but contract C.

The order for injunction was entered May 18, 1912, and enjoins the Kaufmans from selling, transferring or assigning any shares of stock owned or controlled by them “except in conformity with the terms of said agreement, Exhibit ‘B” and also enjoins them, or their agents, until further notice, from voting any shares of stock owned or controlled by said Kaufmans at any future stockholders’ meetings for directors other than such directors as may be mutually agreed upon by the Kaufmans and appellees, and enjoins the defendant Straus from acting as an umpire or arbitrator under said agreement.

The principal contention relied upon in both appeals and the only one we deem necessary to consider is that said agreement B is void as being against public policy, and, therefore, one that cannot be enforced. Holding, as we are compelled to do, that it is an agreement of suph a character, it is unnecessary to consider the matters of fact involved in the negotiations preliminary to its execution, or subsequent facts bearing on the efforts of the Kaufmans to repudiate it. If it is illegal, it matters little what was done before or subsequent to its execution (unless such agreement was known to and approved by all the stockholders) for, if against public policy, neither party is in position to assert any rights under it, or to ask for its enforcement directly or indirectly.

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Bluebook (online)
174 Ill. App. 306, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teich-v-kaufman-illappct-1912.