Tobey v. Sundling

323 N.E.2d 30, 25 Ill. App. 3d 205, 1974 Ill. App. LEXIS 2347
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 13, 1974
Docket59987
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 323 N.E.2d 30 (Tobey v. Sundling) 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
Tobey v. Sundling, 323 N.E.2d 30, 25 Ill. App. 3d 205, 1974 Ill. App. LEXIS 2347 (Ill. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

Mr. PRESIDING JUSTICE SULLIVAN

delivered the opinion of the court;

Plaintiff brought a suit in equity to rescind stock sales and to recover the original purchase price plus interest and attorney’s fees pursuant to the Illinois Securities Lav/ of 1953 (the Act) (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1973, ch. 121½, par. 137.1 et seq.), which makes certain sales of securities voidable at the option of the purchaser and creates a right of rescission. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1973, ch. 121½, par. 137.13). An order was entered substituting Sundling, Pelikan and Carr, not individually but as co-trustees of NX Corporation (formerly Nuveen Corporation) as party defendants in lieu of NX Corporation. (Hereafter, the co-trustees will be called defendants, and NX Corporation and Nuveen Corporation will be treated as one and termed Nuveen.) Judgment was entered in favor of plaintiff for the original purchase price in the amount of $34,303.80, but recovery of interest and reasonable attorney’s fees was denied. Defendants appeal from that portion of the decree refunding to plaintiff his purchase price, and plaintiff cross-appeals from that portion of the decree denying him recovery of interest and attorney’s fees.

Numerous issues are presented for review. However, we need decide only the first, i.e., whether plaintiff is precluded from obtaining relief under the Act because before attempting to rescind, he sold the securities on which the rescission action was based and thus could not tender the securities to Nuveen. The facts are essentially as follows:

Plaintiff was hired by the Equities Department of Nuveen, an investment banking firm, on August 4, 1968. He was a college graduate and, although he had extensive experience in the securities business relative to sales, he had no experience with the “paperwork” connected with completing a transaction nor had he ever been employed in the “bank office” or the “Compliance Department,” which handled the necessary filings with the State regulatory bodies. Nonetheless, as a condition of his employment, plaintiff became qualified as a registered salesman under the Act and executed an affidavit which stated that “he has read the Illinois Securities Law of 1953 [and] that he is familiar with the requirements thereof * *

Shortly after commencing his employment, plaintiff purchased 500 shares of nonvoting common stock of Nuveen, which at that time was a member corporation of the New York Stock Exchange. The rules of the Exchange required member corporations to restrict their stock ownership to certain permitted holders; namely, those persons legally qualified to engage in securities transactions on behalf of the member corporation. Authorization for plaintiff’s purchase had been given by Nuveen’s board of directors prior to the date of his actual employment, to become effective on his employment, and he paid $21,117 for 500 shares of the Nuveen nonvoting common stock for approximately $42 per share. Subsequently, on January 31, 1969, plaintiff purchased an additional 300 shares of Nuveen nonvoting common stock for $13,186.80 or approximately $44 per share. The purchase prices were based upon book values, and no commissions were paid in connection with the sales.

These two sales to plaintiff were not registered under the Act nor were they accompanied or preceded by a prospectus, both of which are required in connection with the sale by an issuer of registered securities under section 12(B) and (D) of the Act. No report of sale was filed with respect to the first transaction as is required in order to perfect an exemption to the application of the provisions of the Act under section 4(G) as a sale to 15 or fewer persons within a 12-month period. However, it was alleged in Nuveen’s answer and testified to by Walter Sundling, an officer of Nuveen, that the failure to file the 4(G) report of sale was due to inadvertence. This was not denied in plaintiff’s reply or contested at the trial.

During the summer of 1969, Nuveen experienced financial reversals which, required it to withdraw from the securities business and to enter into a plan of liquidation for the benefit of its creditors and security holders. The name of the corporation was changed to NX Corporation. Its equity department was closed down, and plaintiff’s services were terminated on August 15, 1969. On that date plaintiff tendered his stock certificates pursuant to a provision in Nuveen’s articles of incorporation which reserved to it a right of first refusal to purchase the stock of any security holder upon termination of his employment. From the dates of his purchases, plaintiff’s stock certificates remained in the possession of Nuveen. On September 17, 1969, plaintiff and other stockholders were informed by letter of plans for liquidation and the sale of assets. In this letter, plaintiff learned for the first time that the Nuveen bylaws had been amended on July 12, 1969, to allow terminated employees to remain as permitted holders of the stock of the corporation, and that redemption of such employee’s stock would not be made ‘otherwise than in connection with the dissolution of the corporation.” It was also stated in this letter that “[t]his procedure was considered necessaiy out of fairness to all stockholders * * * to treat all stockholders as equally as possible.”

On October 31, 1969, plaintiff requested the return of his 800 shares, the certificates for which were returned to him on November 5, 1969. Thereafter, in December of 1969, plaintiff contacted Robert Kelling, a lawyer who was employed at John Nuveen & Co., formerly a subsidiary of Nuveen, and on December 31, 1969, he sold his 800 shares of Nuveen nonvoting common stock to Kelling for $1 per share. Testimony indicated that plaintiff sold his stock to Kelling to take a tax loss. In fact, on his tax return plaintiff, on the advice of his accountant, declared the loss as a business rather than as a capital loss, thus deducting the loss against ordinary income. Plaintiff justified this on the ground that he was initially informed he was required to buy stock before he could become a voting officer of Nuveen, and it was for that reason he purchased the stock in question. It should be noted, however, that the shares purchased were nonvoting common stock. At any rate, plaintiff delivered to Kelling the stock certificates representing his 800 shares, with an executed stock power.

Plaintiff testified that he first learned that 4(G) reports of sales of stock to him had not been filed by Nuveen when he was so informed by a former employee of Nuveen in June of 1970, some six months after the sale of his stock to Kelling. Thereupon, he attempted to repurchase the stock from Kelling. However, by that time Kelling had registered the stock in his own name and, in exchange, had received a certificate of participation in the liquidation of Nuveen and had already received liquidating dividends of $4.70 per share ($3,760).

Specifically, plaintiff testified that on June 9, 1970, on the advice of his attorney, he telephoned Kelling, who was still employed as a vice president of John Nuveen & Co., and offered to repurchase the shares. During that telephone conversation, after some discussion as to price, plaintiff stated that a figure of $2 per share was agreed upon. In a subsequent conversation on the same day, plaintiff said Kelling agreed to resell the shares to him and also told him to call Walter Sundling, the Nuveen officer who had physical possession of the certificates.

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Bluebook (online)
323 N.E.2d 30, 25 Ill. App. 3d 205, 1974 Ill. App. LEXIS 2347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tobey-v-sundling-illappct-1974.