Waterman v. Chicago & Iowa Railroad

15 L.R.A. 418, 139 Ill. 658
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 15 L.R.A. 418 (Waterman v. Chicago & Iowa Railroad) 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
Waterman v. Chicago & Iowa Railroad, 15 L.R.A. 418, 139 Ill. 658 (Ill. 1892).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the Opinion of the Court:

In this action of assumpsit, Waterman, plaintiff in error, seeks to recover from the Chicago and Iowa Eailroad Company, defendant in error, his salary as president of said corporation for a period of about two years, at the rate of $5000 per annum. The issues were tried in the circuit court before the judge and without a jury, and the questions of law and mixed questions of law and fact involved in the controversy were amply preserved by exceptions to the rulings made on the various propositions submitted. The judgments of the circuit and Appellate courts were against Waterman, and he brought the record here by this writ of error.

At the annual meeting of the stockholders of the railroad company, held in March, 1879, Joseph Eeising, Daniel B. .Waterman, George W. Kretzinger, B. T. Lewis, F. E. Hinckley, P. B. Shumway and Joseph K. Barry were elected directors of the corporation, and said directors elected F. E. Hinckley president of the company, and also elected a vice-president and secretary. On January 3,1880, Lewis resigned his office of director, and E. G. Montony was appointed a director in his place and stead. The by-laws of the company provided for an annual meeting of its stockholders, to be held at the office of the company, in the city of Chicago, Illinois, on the first Wednesday in March, in each year, and for an election by them at that time of a board of seven directors, who were to hold office until the next annual election and until their successors were elected. On Wednesday, the third day of March, 1880, various persons met at said office for the purpose of holding said annual meeting, and among them were Hinckley, the president, and- all of the directors. Immediately before a meeting was organized an injunction was served, which restrained the voting of certain stock. Thereupon Eeising and Montony organized and held what purported to be the annual meeting of the stockholders. They were neither of them stockholders, and neither of them had proxies to vote any stock. The town of Aurora was the owner of 1000 shares of the capital stock of the corporation, and Joseph Eeising, supervisor of the town, voted 993 of said shares for Daniel B. Waterman, Joseph Eeising, E. G. Montony, L. D. Brady, E. E. Allen, Holmes Miller and William McMicken for directors, and they receiving all the votes cast, were declared elected.

The by-laws provided that the directors elected at the annual meeting should, at their first meeting thereafter, to be called as soon as might be and as soon as a quorum could be convened, proceed to organize the board by the election of a president, vice-president and secretary of the company, to hold office during the pleasure of the board, and that the board of directors should have authority to fill all vacancies that should occur therein, occasioned by death, resignation or otherwise. They also provided: “Eegular meetings of the board of directors shall be held at the office of the company, in the city of Chicago, on the first Thursday of every month, at ten o’clock in the forenoon. ”

On the 4th day of March, 1880,—which was the first Thursday in that month,—the seven directors who had been elected, as above stated, on the preceding day, met “at the office of E. G-. Montony, at 97 Clark street, in room 27,” and at that meeting McMicken resigned the office of director, and George W. Kretzinger was elected to fill his place. Thereupon said directors, they all being present, elected Waterman president of the company, and also elected a secretary and a treasurer, and an executive committee. Several motions in regard to the business affairs of the company were also made and carried at that meeting. Said directors also held meetings on March 19, April 23, May 28 and June 21, 1880, and on several subsequent days, at which meetings considerable business was done, such as adopting motions and resolutions, appointing officers and attorneys, ordering the payment of various sums of money to various persons, etc.

At the time of said elections in 1880, the railroad of defendant in error was in the hands of and operated by a receiver appointed by the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of Illinois in a foreclosure suit, but a petition was pending in said court which claimed that the company was entitled to have the road turned over to it. On June 19, 1880, the receiver, in conformity with an order of the «court, surrendered the road to the company by delivering it to Waterman, Montony, Eeising and Kretzinger, who were a majority of the board of directors, whether the elections of 1880 be regarded or not. Four days thereafter, on June 23, 1880, the road was again placed in the hands of a receiver, and remained in the hands of a receiver, and was operated by Mm, until after F. H. Head was elected president of the company, in 1882.

On March 28, 1880, an information in the nature of a quo warranto, on the relation of Hinckley, Shumway and Barry, who had been elected directors in 1879, was filed in the Criminal Court of Cook county, against Eeising, Waterman, Mon-tony, Kretzinger, Brady, Allen and Miller, and on the 19th day of March, 1881, a final judgment was rendered in said-suit, wherein it was “ordered and adjudged by the court that Montony, Waterman, Eeising, Kretzinger, Brady, Miller and Allen be and they are ousted from the office of directors of the Chicago and Iowa Bailroad Company, and from exercising -any of the privileges, functions and franchises of the office •of directors under the election for directors of said company alleged to have been held on the first Wednesday of March, A. D. 1880; but this judgment does not in any manner affect the rights of defendants acquired under the election for directors in March, 1879.” The substance and meaning of this final judgment is, that Allen, Miller and Brady are absolutely ousted from their offices of directors of the railroad company, but that Montony, Waterman, Eeising and Kretzinger are merely ousted from exercising any privileges, functions and franchises of directors by virtue of the election of March, 1880, and are left-clothed with whatever rights they may have acquired prior thereto.

At the meeting held on May 28, 1880, by the seven persons, alleged to have been elected directors on the third day of that month, a motion fixing the salary of the president of the company at $5000 per year was adopted. Plaintiff in error-claimed to be president of defendant in error, and performed some acts as such, until one F. H. Head was elected president on the 15th day of March, 1882. During the whole of said time Hinckley also claimed to be president of the company by virtue of his election in 1879, and also performed some acts as such.

One of the contentions of plaintiff in error is, that the election of March 3, 1880, was a valid election, and that by means thereof Waterman, Eeising, Montony, Brady, Allen, Miller and Kretzinger became and were the lawful and rightful directors, of the corporation. It is a sufficient answer to this claim to-say that it was decided'otherwise in the quo warranto suit, and that plaintiff in error was a party to the judgment rendered therein, and is bound thereby.

It is claimed that, at all events, each and every one of the-persons last named came into office under color of an election, and was therefore a director de facto, and the board, at the-least, a de facto board of directors when' it elected Waterman president.

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Bluebook (online)
15 L.R.A. 418, 139 Ill. 658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waterman-v-chicago-iowa-railroad-ill-1892.