Union Mutual Life Insurance v. Frear Stone Manufacturing Co.

97 Ill. 537, 1881 Ill. LEXIS 34
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 3, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 97 Ill. 537 (Union Mutual Life Insurance v. Frear Stone Manufacturing Co.) 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
Union Mutual Life Insurance v. Frear Stone Manufacturing Co., 97 Ill. 537, 1881 Ill. LEXIS 34 (Ill. 1881).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The bill in this case was brought by the Union Mutual Life Insurance Company, a corporation existing under the laws of the State of Maine, against the Frear Stone Manufacturing Company, a corporation existing under the laws of the State of Illinois, and the stockholders in the last mentioned company. It is a creditor’s bill, and the facts necessary to an understanding of the question of law raised and discussed may be readily stated, as most of them appear by admission on demurrer.

An act of the General Assembly of the State of Illinois, approved February 23,1867, created a corporation styled the Northwestern Manufacturing Company. Section two, of the charter, provided the capital stock of the company should be $'200,000, and might be increased by resolution of the board of directors to any amount not exceeding $1,000,000, and should be divided into shares of $100 each. The corporation was duly organized, under the charter, in 1867, and after-wards, under the provisions of section two of the charter, the capital stock of the company was increased, by a resolution of the board of directors, to $300,000. The shares were fixed at $100 each. The company thus organized commenced, as it was authorized to do, the manufacture of artificial stone, under the “ Frear patent.”

In 1868, a number of persons, named as defendants in the bill, became subscribers to the capital stock of the Northwestern Manufacturing Company, under an agreement, of which, omitting the date and signatures thereto, the following is a copy, viz: “We, the undersigned, subscribers to the capital stock of the Northwestern Manufacturing Company, of Chicago, do hereby subscribe for, and agree to take, the number of shares of $100 each, in the stock of said company, set opposite our names, and pay for the same according to the terms following, and as follows, to-wit:

“ 1st. The stock of the company shall be and remain as it now is, at $300,000, in shares of $100 each.
“2d. The business of the company shall be the manufacture and sale of Frear’s patent artificial stone, stucco, mastic, cement, etc., and the sale or disposal of the patent right to parties in other parts of the State of Illinois.
“3d. Ho assessment shall ever be made upon the stock of the company.
“ 4th. The said company are to pay the present owners of the patent right, above mentioned, $125,000 for such exclusive right in and to the State of Illinois.
“5th. We agree to pay ten dollars upon each share of stock subscribed by us, which is the sum total we shall be held liable to pay.
“6th. Fifteen thousand dollars of the proceeds of the sale of stock, as above, shall go to the company and be used as further working capital, in carrying on the manufacture.
“7th. Fifteen thousand dollars in cash shall be paid the present owners for the manufactory and contents on hand for work, including stock on hand, which shall go to the credit of the company, in part payment for this patent right, leaving due the present owners of the patent right the sum of $110,000, which shall be paid out of the first earnings of the company, or the disposal of patent rights in other parts of the State.”

The total number of shares which the subscribers to the agreement obligated themselves to take, was two thousand five hundred and eighty-five, of the value of $100 each, representing a total value of stock of $258,500. Persons not subscribers to the agreement, took other shares. Certificates of stock were issued to, and accepted by, the subscribers to the agreement. On the 9th day of March, 1869, by an act of the General Assembly, the name of the corporation was changed to “The Frear Stone Manufacturing Company,” under which name it continued until it ceased to do business, in January, 1874. On the 8th day of December, 1870, the Union Mutual Life Insurance Co. loaned the defendant corporation the sum of $50,000, which indebtedness was evidenced by a promissory note payable five years after date, with interest, at the rate of eight per cent per annum, and was secured by trust deed on certain real estate owned by the company. The interest was paid on this note until 1872, when default was made. After the maturity of the note, judgment was obtained on it for the sum of $72,254, upon which execution was issued, and, on the 13th day of March, 1877, it was returned by the proper officer wholly unsatisfied. A bill was filed to foreclose the trust deed, and, on decree obtained for the sale of the mortgaged property, it was sold, to complainant for $10,000, which, it is alleged, was twice its value. After giving credit for all that was realized by the mortgage sale, there remained the sum of $65,221.06, still owing to complainant, to recover which the present bill was filed against the corporation and the stockholders. Most of the defendants paid $10 on each share by them held, but others paid nothing, and the allegation of the bill is, that each shareholder is liable for the unpaid portion of his stock, whatever it may be. It is further alleged, no officer or agent of the complaining corporation had any knowledge or notice of the existence of the subscription paper, or that the stockholders had, in any manner, undertaken to limit their liability to pay for the stock by them subscribed, until ¡November, 1876, which was long after the indebtedness to complainant had become due. Other matters are stated in the bill, but, as they are not material to the decision of the case, they need not be noted. Most of the stockholders named as defendants, demurred to the bill; others pleaded discharges in bankruptcy; others answered, and some were defaulted. The circuit "court sustained the demurrér to the bill, and, as the court was of opinion the bill could not be maintained against any of defendants, for want of equity, and that no relief could be.decreed in favor of complainant on the facts alleged, on motion of complainant the bill was dismissed as to all of defendants, with the reservation to complainant of the right to assign error on the decision. That decree was affirmed in the Appellate Court, and complainant brings the case to this court on appeal.

In the view of the case we have taken, it is not material whether the agreement providing that the capital stock of the corporation shall be non-assessable, applies to the whole stock, or only to that held by the subscribers to the agreement, and we shall not now discuss that question.

The charter of the defendant corporation was granted to it by the General Assembly before the adoption of the present constitution, and, consequently, long before the passage of the general Incorporation act, and is not, therefore, affected either by the constitution or the general law on the subject of corporations. It is not claimed the charter imposes any liability on the stockholders beyond their obligation to pay for the stock by them subscribed, or, what is the samé thing, the obligation to pay for such stock implied in the act of subscription. Whether there is any express promise to pay for stock at the time of subscription, or not, the law implies such promise by the acceptance of such stock on the part of the holder.

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97 Ill. 537, 1881 Ill. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-mutual-life-insurance-v-frear-stone-manufacturing-co-ill-1881.