Wheeler v. Acme Harvesting Machine Co.

175 Ill. App. 69, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 107
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 15, 1912
DocketGen. No. 5,512
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 175 Ill. App. 69 (Wheeler v. Acme Harvesting Machine 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
Wheeler v. Acme Harvesting Machine Co., 175 Ill. App. 69, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 107 (Ill. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Acme Harvester Company, hereinafter called the Illinois Company, was an Illinois corporation engaged in manufacturing harvesters and harvesting implements in Peoria County. In 1903 it became financially embarrassed, having assets of great book value and a large indebtedness. Conferences were held between its officers and its stockholders and its creditors. An arrangement was made by which a creditors ’ committee was appointed with authority to take charge of the business when that arrangement was assented to by a certain large majority of the creditors. More than the requisite number of creditors signed the agreement almost immediately. C. R. and M. C. W. Wheeler held a note against the Illinois company for $3,000 dated December 1, 1902, with interest unpaid thereon at six per cent, per annum from May 30, 1903. Printed copies of the agreement were sent to each of the creditors to sign, and the one sent to the Wheelers was signed by them with a reservation written therein by them. The agreement required the stockholders to deposit their capital stock with the committee and to give the committee a power of attorney to vote thereon, which should be irrevocable till the debts of the signing creditors were paid in full, and the signing creditors therein agreed to deposit with the committee all their notes and claims assigned in blank and not to sue thereon while the ag’reement remained in force. The committee took charge of the business, and was permitted to conduct the business notwithstanding a pending bankruptcy proceeding against the Illinois Company. In 1905 the committee proposed that a new corporation be organized to take the assets and conduct the business, and that the creditors take stock in such new corporation in settlement of their claims against the Illinois Company at their par value or fifty cents on the dollar in cash. In the proposition the creditors’ committee called this a re-organization of the Acme Harvester Company. This proposition seems to have been accepted by every creditor except the Wheelers, and they accepted it with a reservation. Thereupon the Acme Harvesting Machine Company of New Jersey, hereinafter called the New Jersey Company, was organized and the Illinois company transferred all the assets of the Illinois company to the New Jersey Company. The stock of the latter was subscribed by the creditors of the Illinois company, and was paid for by a surrender of their demands against the Illinois company at one hundred cents on the dollar. Thirty shares of the capital stock of the New Jersey Company of the par value of $3,000 was tendered to the Wheelers in payment of their claim against the Illinois Company, but they refused to accept it, except with the same reservation. Thereafter a certificate for said shares of stock was placed in the hands of George T. Page, an officer of the Illinois company, for the purpose hereinafter stated. C. B. Wheeler was the uncle and M. C. W. Wheeler was the half brother of Portius B. Wheeler and they had been his guardians when he was a minor, and it was the money of Portius B. Wheeler which his guardians had loaned to the Illinois Company without disclosing, so far as appears, that it was held by them as guardian, which loan was evidenced by said $3,000 note of the Illinois Compay. Portius B. Wheeler came of age and his guardians at some later date assigned this note to him, and he brought suit thereon against the Illinois Company and had a judgment on November 27, 1907, for $3,770.40 and costs and had an execution issued thereon, which was returned “No property found,” and had an alias execution issued, which was in the hands of the sheriff when this suit was begun. Thereupon Portius R. Wheeler filed this bill against the Illinois Company, the New Jersey Company, various officers of said Illinois Company, the creditors’ committee and others. The general object of the bill was to have the transfer of the assets of the Illinois Company to the New Jersey Company declared fraudulent and to have the assets of the latter subjected to the payment of this debt, and for other relief. The cause was referred to a master who reported the proofs and his conclusions. On exceptions to said report the decision was in favor of the defendants, except that by its decree the court found that at the time of the transfer of said assets it was agreed between the two companies and the Wheelers that they should either accept fifty per cent, in cash or the par value of said claim in stock, and that this agreement was binding on Portius R. Wheeler, and that there was no limit of time when the Wheelers were required to exercise said option ; and the decree gave Portius R. Wheeler an unlimited time within which to exercise said option, and decreed that when he did elect, the New Jersey Company should pay him $1,500 or deliver to him thirty shares of its capital stock, as he should elect, and that he should have an equitable lien upon the assets of the New Jersey Company to secure the performance by it whenever he made his election. The New Jersey Company appeals from that decree and urges that the bill should have been dismissed for want of equity, and Portius R. Wheeler assigns cross errors, wherein he claims that the sale of the assets should have been found fraudulent and the New Jersey corporation should have been required to pay him.

Both sides claim that .there was an agreement between the Wheelers and the two companies, but they disagree as to what that agreement was. Appellant contends that the Wheelers agreed to accept either thirty shares of stock or fifty per cent, in cash of the par value of the face of the claim in satisfaction thereof. Portius R. Wheeler claims that he was to have that option and also retain the possession of the note and his right of action against the persons whose names were written on the back thereof. Upon a consideration of all the writings we are of opinion that there never was an agreement between the committee and the Wheelers. The proposition made to the creditors in print required them to surrender their notes. In signing the copy sent to them, the Wheelers added a proviso, written in by them, reserving possession of the note and their right of action against the endorsers. They were thereafter written to and urged to accept the proposition offered them, and they wrote letters professing to accept, but in each case writing in the limitation that they reserved their right of action against the endorsers. The committee never accepted their reservation and the Wheelers never accepted the proposition as it was made to them. The fact is that the endorsers were also endorsers on most of the paper of the Ulinois Company and were the owners of most of the capital stock of the Illinois Company, and in practically sacrificing' everything they had invested they insisted that they be released from those personal debts, and such was the meaning and effect of the written proposition submitted by the- creditors’ committee. It makes no difference here whether this requirement of the proposition was fair or unfair. It never was accepted by the Wheelers, though accepted by every other creditor. The Wheelers could not be compelled to accept the terms offered, but as they did not accept the terms offered and as the committee never assented to the reservation proposed by the Wheelers, the minds of the parties never met and there was no contract. Therefore, so far as the decree was in favor of Portius R. Wheeler, and enforced a supposed agreement to permit him to exercise an option to accept $1,500 or thirty shares of the capital stock of the New Jersey Company, it is not supported by the proof and is erroneous.

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Bluebook (online)
175 Ill. App. 69, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-acme-harvesting-machine-co-illappct-1912.