Venner v. Chicago City Railway Co.

152 Ill. App. 398, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 741
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 24, 1910
DocketGen. No. 14,853
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 152 Ill. App. 398 (Venner v. Chicago City Railway 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
Venner v. Chicago City Railway Co., 152 Ill. App. 398, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 741 (Ill. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Holdom

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant, a stockholder in the respondent corporation, filed his petition for a mandamus commanding the respondent corporation and its officers to permit him to examine the books, papers and records of the corporation. A demurrer to the petition having been sustained, it was afterwards amended. Respondents filed an answer to the amended petition, to which, after denial of motion by petitioner to strike out certain parts of the answer, he interposed a general and special demurrer. Upon the hearing of this demurrer it was, on motion of respondents, carried back to the amended petition and sustained by the court, whereupon, petitioner electing to stand by his demurrer, the amended petition was dismissed with costs against petitioner, from which order and judgment petitioner prosecutes this appeal, seeking a reversal. The carrying back of the demurrer to the answer to the amended petition, and sustaining the same to the amended petition, eliminates from the case the answer of respond- ■ ents. Our inquiry on this review is consequently limited to the one controlling question—does the amended petition state such facts which, uncontradicted,. entitles petitioner to the writ of mandamus prayed.

The respondent corporation was organized under a special act of the Illinois Legislature passed February 14, 1859, and amended by the same authority by a further act passed February 6, 1865. These acts are public acts, and are to be taken judicial notice of as such.

The original petition was framed and the right to the writ grounded in virtue of the general incorporation act and the powers conferred by section 13 of that act. When the demurrer of respondents to that petition was sustained, upon the holding of the court that the general incorporation Act had no application to the respondent corporation, for the reason that it was incorporated and existed under special legislative enactments, the amended petition was drawn in an attempt to state a case which would entitle petitioner to the writ of mandamus sought by force of the common law. Section 13, chapter 32 Revised Statutes, title ‘ ‘ Corporations, ’ ’ which is the general corporation Act of the state, reads thus: “It shall be the duty of the directors or trustees of every stock corporation to canse to be kept at its principal office or place of business in this state correct books of account of all its business, and every stockholder in such corporation shall have the right at all reasonable times, by himself or by his attorney, to examine the records and books of account of the corporation.” The averments of the amended petition, it is contended, state sufficient facts entitling petitioner to the writ of mandamus prayed by force of the common law. These averments are to the effect that the board of directors, without the consent of petitioner or authority from the stockholders, executed a mortgage conveying all the property of the respondent corporation to secure its bonds, to be issued from time to time as the board of directors may direct; that such board is, in such issue, controlled by instructions from the New York financial firm of J. P. Morgan & Co., to whom large commissions for the sale of such bonds have been paid, and that petitioner has learned, through the public press, that the respondent company “has spent large sums of its money for the purpose of influencing the voters of the city of Chicago to vote favorably upon the ordinance of February 11,1907, at the election held in April, 1907; * * * that the inspection of the books, contracts and accounts of said railway company would reveal other irregularities and breaches of trust on the part of the directors and officers of said company.” It seems from petitioner’s original and amended petitions that the learned counsel who now appears for him acted in all that was done in the subject-matter of this controversy for Ms client, under a power of attorney given for that purpose prior to instituting this litigation; that several interviews were had between such counsel and some of the officers and one of the counsel of the respondent corporation, and that at one time petitioner’s counsel had access to certain books, from which he made some memoranda, and was offered a copy of certain proceedings appearing upon the record book, wMch latter counsel refused, and insisted upon continuing indefinitely his examination of and probing into the books and records of the respondent corporation, therefrom to judge of the condition of its affairs and the legality of its proceedings.

Counsel, at the request of the representative of the respondent corporation, left Ms task without completing it, and it is averred by the amended petition that he has not been able to resume or complete that task. In the succeeding* attempt to examine the books, records, etc., of the respondent corporation, counsel, representing his client, proceeded upon the assumption of his right so to do without making any special demand or assigning any particular reason why his request should be granted. It was of the essence of the right to examine that a demand for such examination should have been made, accompanied with a statement revealing its purpose and object. Such demand and accompanying statement cannot be dispensed with. They are not simply important, but absolutely essential, in order to charge the respondent corporation with such a dereliction of its duty in its refusal as to make it amenable to the writ of mandamus and to entitle the petitioner to so proceed to obtain, in that way, the redress sought, when wrongfully denied. The amended petition contains no information from which an inference would arise that such legal requirement had been met. We shall base our decision upon two grounds, deeming all other questions raised and urged upon us in argument as non-essential to the conclusions reached: First, does the right to the writ of mandamus demanded exist under section 13, chapter 32 R. S. supra, and is it inapplicable by reason of the fact that the respondent corporation is the creature of a special charter? Second, does the amended petition by its averments state necessary facts which entitle petitioner, as a matter of law, to an award of the writ of mandamus in force of the common law?

First. The Acts of the legislature creating the respondent corporation antedate the general incorporation Act, chapter 32 s%(,pra, and section 13 thereof. Those Acts constitute a contract between the state and the corporation, at least until the state, in the exercise of its powers, changes or alters the same by appropriate legislation. Until the state does so, the contract thus created remains inviolable. It was undoubtedly within the lawmaking power of the state to make section 13 supra applicable to and binding upon existing corporations brought into being as the creatures of special legislation, had it seen fit to so provide. Some sections of chapter 32 supra are made so binding by special provision that they shall be. It is doing no violence to the settled canons of construction to hold that the legislature not having so provided, did not so intend. Such is the trend of the Illinois cases cited. Wherever the general corporation Act has been held operative as to antecedent corporations, it has resulted from the fact that the Act, or some part of it, by the words used clearly made them subject to such provisions.

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Bluebook (online)
152 Ill. App. 398, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/venner-v-chicago-city-railway-co-illappct-1910.