Temple v. Lemon

1 N.E. 268, 112 Ill. 51
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1 N.E. 268 (Temple v. Lemon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Temple v. Lemon, 1 N.E. 268, 112 Ill. 51 (Ill. 1884).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dickey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is a creditor’s bill, brought on August 26, 1880, by Lemon, in the Superior Court of Cook county, against the Industrial Life Association, located in the city of Chicago, and John Temple, John H. S. Quick, and others. The complainant shows that he recovered a judgment against that corporation at the January term, 1877, for $1872.24, and that an execution upon that judgment was issued January 6, 1877, which, on April 6, 1877, w'as duly returned nulla bona. Complainant seeks a decree against Temple and others, upon the allegation that they are, respectively, indebted to the corporation upon their several subscriptions to its capital stock. They, respectively, deny the allegation as to their indebtedness. Issues were formed by answers and replications, and proofs taken. The cause was heard upon the pleadings and proofs, and a decree rendered July 16, 1883, finding that the judgment was obtained, and execution issued and returned, as alleged in the bill; that there is now due to Lemon from the association, $2613.15; that before the judgment, Temple had subscribed for one hundred shares of the stock, at $100 a share, and by reason of the same remaining unpaid, is now indebted to the corporation in a sum greater than the amount due on the judgment; that before judgment, Quick had subscribed for fifty like shares, and by reason of non-payment thereof is also indebted to the corporation' in a sum larger than what is due upon the judgment; and decreeing that the defendant corporation, and Temple and Quick, pay to complainant the amount so'found due to him from the corporation, with interest from the date of the decree, and also his costs. From this decree Temple and Quick each appealed to the Appellate Court, where the decree was affirmed, and they bring the cause here by appeal.

The proof shows that on February 16, 1865, an act was approved declaring Abel P. Buckley, and others named, and their associates, successors and assigns, a body corporate, under the name of “the National Insurance Company of Illinois, ” with full power to transact an accident and life insurance business, and a general insurance business; to establish agencies in or out of this State; to make by-laws for the management of" its affairs, with a provision that the act shall be void unless the directors organize the company at Morris, in the county of Grundy, within one year from the passage of the act. The charter gives no directions as to the mode of organization, or what shall constitute an organization,—in fact does not require, except by implication, that there shall be directors, makes no express provisions for issuing any stock or receiving subscriptions to the stock, and says nothing about the amount of stock. Power is given “to make insurance and take risks, * * * and charge and receive * * * premiums therefor, * * * either upon the mutual or stock principle, or both." This charter declares the corporation subject to the “operation of such general laws as may hereafter be passed upon the subject of insurance companies. ” The proof also tends to show that an organization of some kind was effected at Morris within the year, sufficient to keep alive the charter; but it is not shown that any stock was subscribed within the year, or that any thing was done more than the election of officers by the corporators named in the act. The proof further shows meetings of the corporators from time to time, and successive elections of officers, until March 3, 1873, when, at a meeting held at Morris, the name of the corporation was changed to that of the Prudential Life Association, and its place of business was changed to Chicago. The subscriptions to stock made by Temple and by Quick, respectively, were made after this change of name and location of the company, and on their face aré payable to the “Prudential Life Association of Chicago. ” The proof further shows that the capital stock was fixed at $100,000, and had this not been shown, the general act of 1869, in relation to insurance companies, (to which this corporation, by its charter, was made subject,) required a capital of at least $100,000 to be subscribed before any legal organization for business could be accomplished. The proof farther shows that prior to the time of the hearing in this cause not more than about $40,000 had ever been subscribed.

In this state of affairs it can not be held that appellants are indebted on their subscriptions. The bill states that they are “indebted to, ” and “that there is money due from them to the Prudential Life Association, according to the tenor and effect of a certain subscription to the capital stock of said Prudential Life Association. ” There is no liability on a subscription to the stock of a corporation, the amount of whose capital stock is fixed, until the whole amount of the stock is subscribed. Stoneham Railroad Co. v. Gould, 2 Gray, 277; Proprietors Newburyport Bridge v. Storey, 6 Pick. 45, note ; Burt v. Farrer, 24 Barb. 518; New Hampshire Central Railroad Co. v. Johnson, 3 N. H. 390; Allman v. Havana, Rantoul and Eastern Railroad Co. 88 Ill. 521.

In the last named case, Mr. Justice Bbeese, speaking for this court, says: “The question is, and it is the important question in the case, was it in the power of these directors to make this call, the full amount of the capital stock not having been subscribed? This question is to be decided by authority. On reference to a leading work on railways, (1 Redfield on the Law of Railroads, 176,) we find it is there said that it is an essential condition to making'calls in these companies, when the number of shares and the amount of capital is fixed, that the whole stock shall be subscribed before any call can lawfully be made. Reference is made in support of the text to Stoneham Branch Railroad Co. v. Gould, 2 Gray, 277, in which Ch. J. Shaw uses this emphatic language: ‘It is a rule of law too well settled to be now questioned, that when the capital stock and number of shares are fixed by the act of incorporation, (in this case by the articles filed and recorded,) or by any vote or by-law passed conformedly to the act of incorporation, no assessment can lawfully be made on the share of any subscriber until the whole number of shares has been taken. This was held in Salem Mill Dam v. Roper, 6 Pick. 23, and 9 Pick. 187; Cabut and West Springfield Bridge v. Chapin, 6 Cush. 50; Worcester and Nashua Railroad Co. v. Hinds, 9 Cush. 110.’ * * * By the articles of incorporation filed and recorded, a corporation was created as efficient for all the contemplated purposes as if its power had been conferred by a special charter. The capital stock was fixed definitely at $1,000,000, to be divided into 10,000 shares, of $100 each, and that amount must have been subscribed before the corporation could have a legal existence. It was a condition precedent to the legal existence of the company. There is nothing in the ‘articles’ or in the statute which authorizes the corporation to commence operations when a less amount is subscribed. ” See, also, Somerset and Kennebec Railroad Co. v. Cushing, 45 Maine, 124.

If this be the law, it follows that this association could not have maintained any action against appellants upon this subscription, and consequently the complainant’s bill will not lie to enforce payment of such subscriptions, unless for some cause appellants are precluded from alleging that the whole of the fixed capital was never subscribed. We find nothing in the bill setting up any cause or ground of estoppel in this regard, and certainly nothing in the proofs.

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Bluebook (online)
1 N.E. 268, 112 Ill. 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/temple-v-lemon-ill-1884.