Wesselhoeft v. Schanze

153 Ill. App. 443, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 982
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 31, 1910
DocketGen. No. 15,028
StatusPublished

This text of 153 Ill. App. 443 (Wesselhoeft v. Schanze) 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
Wesselhoeft v. Schanze, 153 Ill. App. 443, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 982 (Ill. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee brought an action on the case for deceit against several defendants, but before trial dismissed as to all the defendants except Schanze and Dicus. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff against said defendants for $2,500, and Schanze appealed.

The suit grew out of the sale by Dicus to plaintiff of 60,000 shares of the capital stock of the Superior Oil & G-as Company, a corporation incorporated under the laws of the Territory of Arizona. The company was incorporated November 5, 1903, with a capital of $1,250,000 in shares of $1 each, and at the first meeting of the board of directors, November 16, 1903, Schanze was elected president and Dicus secretary. The agreement fdr the purchase and sale of said 60,000 shares of said stock was made between plaintiff and Dicus July 11, 1904, and the next day Dicus delivered to plaintiff a certificate for 60,000 shares of said stock, and plaintiff paid him therefor $2,500. Said certificate was signed by Schanze as president and Dicus as secretary. It stated that the said corporation was incorporated under the laws of the Territory of Arizona; that its capital stock was $1,250,000; the shares $1 each; certified that plaintiff was the owner of 60,000 shares of the capital stock of said corporation, “full paid and non-assessable,” transferable, etc., and was dated July 12, 1904. On the same day, and as a part of said transaction, Dicus made and delivered to plaintiff the following agreement in writing:

“I hereby agree that in consideration of Diederich Wesselhoeft purchasing Twenty-five Hundred Dollars ($2,500) worth of Superior Oil & Gras Company stock, that any time within six months from this date, that if he wishes to return his stock that with the giving of sixty days notice, the stock may be returned to me and the said $2,500 will be returned with interest at six per cent per annum from this date until the return of said stock.

J. B. Digits.”

Schanze took no part in the negotiations or transaction between plaintiff and Dicus, and plaintiff did not know Schanze until long after such purchase.

The amended declaration contains two counts. The first sets out a large number of representations which the evidence shows were made by Dicus alone.

The second count alleges Henry Schanze was president and J. B. Dicus was secretary of said corporation; that on July 12, 1904, they conspired to wrongfully and fraudulently induce the plaintiff to purchase other corporate stock and deprive him of large sums of money by false, fraudulent and deceitful assertions, and July 12, 1904, exhibited to the plaintiff a certificate of corporate stock of said corporation for 60,000 shares, signed by Schanze as president and Dicus as secretary; that the defendants caused the certificate to be issued to the plaintiff, and by means of said certificate the defendant falsely and fraudulently represented to the plaintiff that the capital stock of the corporation was $1,250,000; that said 60,000 shares were full paid and non-assessable; that said shares were $1 each, by which false representations the defendants fraudulently induced the plaintiff to deliver Ms check to J. B. Dicus payable to the order of the Superior Oil & Gas Company, for $2,500, which check was paid and charged against the plaintiff; that defendants delivered the said stock and a written instrument dated July 12, 1904, and signed by J. B. Dicus, in which Dicus agreed that if Wesselhoeft purchased said stock, at any time within six months he could return the stock to Dicus and the $2,500 would be returned to plaintiff ; that plaintiff believed said representations, whereas in fact the capital stock was not $1,250,000, but on the contrary thereof its shares of stock, or any of them, had not been paid or subscribed by solvent or responsible persons; that said shares were without value and worthless, the - corporation not possessed of any property and insolvent; that the shares of stock were not one dollar each, but represented no money or valuable thing and were worthless; that “the certificate of sixty thousand shares so delivered to plaintiff was not full paid and non-assessable, nor was any part thereof paid, nor was the same of any value” when said representations were made; that Dicus and the corporation are insolvent; that plaintiff has not been repaid, etc., and_so by means of, etc., defendants have defrauded plaintiff to his damage, etc.

At the trial plaintiff put in evidence said certificate for 60,000 shares of stock, signed by Schanze as president and Dicus as secretary; the said written agreement signed by Dieus to take back said stock and return to plaintiff his money and the record of the proceedings of the board of directors of said corporation at their first meeting November 13, 1903, from which it appeared that on that day Dieus proposed to sell to said corporation an oil and gas lease of lands in Kansas known as the Hottenstein lease, in consideration of 1,245,000 shares of the capital stock of the corporation; that the proposition was accepted by the board and a certificate for 1,245,000 shares of said stock issued to Dieus, who presented to the corporation a certificate for 245,000 shares, to be used by the corporation as the board of directors might see fit.

Dieus testified that he invested in the property $25,000, for which he received, after deducting the 245,000 shares returned to the company, a million shares of stock.

Defendants offered in evidence, and the court excluded, a certified copy of the Articles of Incorporation of said Superior Oil & Gas Company. Art. Ill of said Articles is as follows:

“Article III.

The authorized amount of capital stock of this corporation shall be One Million Two Hundred Fifty Thousand Dollars ($1250000), divided into One Million Two Hundred Fifty Thousand shares of the par value of One Dollar ($1.00) each. At such time as the Board of Directors may by resolution direct, said capital stock shall be paid into this corporation either in cash, services or by the sale and transfer to it of real or personal property for the uses and purposes of said corporation, in payment for which shares of the capital stock of said corporation may be issued, and the capital stock so issued shall thereupon and thereby become and be fully paid and non-assessable, and in the absence of actual fraud in the transaction, the judgment of the Directors as to the value of the property purchased shall be conclusive.”

We think the court erred in excluding the Articles of Incorporation. There is no averment in the declaration that the directors were guilty of fraud in accepting said lease' in payment for the shares of stock issued to Dicus. The evidence excluded tended to show that the shares issued to plaintiff were non-assessable.

The court gave for the plaintiff the following instruction:

“2. If the jury believe from the evidence that the defendants Henry Schanze and John B. Dicus were acting in concert in an effort to dispose by fraud and deceit or by means of false representations of the corporate stock of the Superior Oil & Gfas Company, which was issued and delivered to the plaintiff, and to secure money therefor, for the use of said Superior Oil & Gras Company, or for John B.

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Bluebook (online)
153 Ill. App. 443, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 982, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wesselhoeft-v-schanze-illappct-1910.