Vigran v. Hamilton

53 N.E.2d 250, 321 Ill. App. 541, 1944 Ill. App. LEXIS 634
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 10, 1944
DocketGen. No. 42,350
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 53 N.E.2d 250 (Vigran v. Hamilton) 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
Vigran v. Hamilton, 53 N.E.2d 250, 321 Ill. App. 541, 1944 Ill. App. LEXIS 634 (Ill. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sullivan

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was brought by plaintiffs Benjamin Vi-gran and Adella Mae Denton, against defendants Walter Hamilton, Charles F. Henry and Claridge Apartments Company, to recover the penalty provided by statute because of the alleged wrongful refusal of the defendants to comply with the demand of the plaintiff shareholders in the defendant corporation for permission to examine the books and records of said corporation. The case was tried by the court without a jury. Judgment was entered in favor of plaintiff Benjamin Vigran for $80 against each ¡of the defendants and judgment was entered in favor of plaintiff Adella Mae Denton for $200 against each of the defendants. Defendants appeal from said judgments.

The complaint alleged in substance that plaintiff, Benjamin Vigran, was the legal, equitable and registered holder and owner of 20 common shares of no par value of defendant Claridge Apartments Company; that plaintiff Adella Mae Denton, was the legal, equitable and registered holder and owner of 50 such shares of said corporation; that both plaintiffs had owned said shares continuously for more than six months immediately preceding January 30, 1940; that both plaintiffs continued to be the legal, equitable and registered holders and owners of said shares continuously until June 3, 1940 and thereafter; that defendant Claridge Apartments Company is an Illinois corporation; that defendant Charles F. Henry had been continuously the president, treasurer and a director of the defendant corporation since on or about November 15, 1937, and defendant Walter Hamilton had been secretary, registered agent and a director of the defendant corporation during the same period; that on February 16, 1940 plaintiff Vigran made demand by his attorney on the three defendants that he be permitted, at any reasonable time or times, “to examine the books and records of account and the minutes of proceedings of the Shareholders and Directors, and the record of the Shareholders of the defendant, Claridge Apartments Company, and to make extracts therefrom”; that he informed defendants that “it was his purpose to obtain a list of the shareholders of the defendant corporation so as to be able to communicate with such shareholders and to advise them concerning the transactions and proceedings at a Special Meeting of the Shareholders of said corporation convened on January 30,1940, and to obtain from the books and records of the corporation information and extracts concerning the manner in which its business had been conducted and transactions in which it had engaged”; that said demand was made at the registered office of the defendant corporation in the City of Chicago; that defendants wrongfully refused said demand and denied Yigran and his agent and attorney the right to examine or to make extracts from the aforesaid books and records of the defendant corporation at any time or for any purpose; that on February 20, 1940 plaintiff, Adella Mae Denton, made a similar demand for the same purpose which was likewise refused; that the value of the shares of Claridge Apartments Company on February 1, 1940 and thereafter, was and still is $40 a share; and that section 45 of the Business Corporation Act (par. 157.45, ch. 32, Ill. Rev. Stat. 1939 [Jones Ill. Stats. Ann. 32.045]), provides in part as follows:

“Any officer, or agent, or a corporation which shall refuse to allow any such shareholder, or his agent or attorney, so to examine and make extracts from its books and records of account, minutes, .and record of shareholders, for any proper purpose, shall be liable to such shareholder in a penalty of ten per cent of the value of the shares owned by such shareholder, in addition to any other damages or remedy afforded him by law.”

The complaint then alleged that each of the defendants was liable to each of the plaintiffs to the extent of the statutory penalty and asked that judgment for $80 be entered in favor of plaintiff Vigran against each defendant and that judgment for $200 be entered in favor of plaintiff Denton against each defendant.

Defendants filed a joint and several 14 page answer. The major portion of the allegations contained therein were not germane to any issue presented by plaintiffs’ complaint and contained no defense to the cause of action stated in said complaint. On plaintiffs ’ motion 18 of the 24 paragraphs of the answer were stricken. The unstricken portions thereof denied that plaintiffs or either of them were entitled through their agents or attorneys to examine the books and records of the defendant corporation at the times the respective demands were made, or that such demands were made for a proper purpose or that “said 70 shares of stock were worth more than . . . $40 per share on February 1, 1940.”

So that the allegations of the answer set forth in the next paragraph may be understood, it is necessary to state that a complaint in equity had been filed on behalf of plaintiff Vigran by Attorneys Turoff and Leffmann and another complaint had been filed by one Greenberg to enjoin the first proposed sale of its property by the defendant corporation.

It was then alleged that “at the time said two demands were made, negotiations were still pending for settlement of said two suits and said settlement was consummated thereafter in spite of the efforts of said Turoff and said Leffmann to block it by stirring up the spirit of contest in said Hamilton, said Henry and said Claridge Apartments Company, by said demands; that thereafter said suits were fully settled by the said Claridge Apartments Company holding proper director’s and shareholder’s meetings for voluntarily selling all its assets to Claridge Corporation, an Illinois corporation, for the sum of $126,120, and assumption of all liabilities of said Claridge Apartments Company, with the approval and order of the circuit court of Cook county and for dissolution voluntarily of said Claridge Apartments Company; that at said shareholders meeting, 72 per cent of all the issued and outstanding shareholders of said Claridge Apartments Company, including the plaintiffs herein, voted for said sale and dissolution; that pursuant to such director’s and shareholder’s meetings and the order of the circuit court of Cook county, quitclaim deed and bill of sale of all the assets of Claridge Apartments Company were executed and delivered to said Claridge Corporation and said Claridge Corporation assumed and agreed to pay all the liabilities of Claridge Apartments Company and delivered to Claridge Apartments Company its agreement to indemnify Claridge Apartments Company against any claim made against it; that it was part of said settlement that all differences between all the clients of the attorneys settling involved in this matter, including those of these plaintiffs, were settled and discharged; that thereafter plaintiff, Ben Vigran, was paid the sum of Eight Hundred Dollars by said Claridge Apartments Company in full of his distributive share in all the assets of Claridge Apartments Company, including his claim for Eighty Dollars he now sues for and his claim herein was fully settled and discharged and said Good & Company was paid the sum of Two Thousand Forty Dollars in full of the distributive share of Good & Co., and the equitable owner of said 50 shares and one other share in all the assets' of said Claridge Apartments Company, including the claim herein of Two Hundred Dollars of said. Plaintiff, Adella May Denton and said claim of said Denton for Two Hundred Dollars herein was fully settled and discharged.”

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Bluebook (online)
53 N.E.2d 250, 321 Ill. App. 541, 1944 Ill. App. LEXIS 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vigran-v-hamilton-illappct-1944.