Leonhard v. Chicago Fire & Marine Insurance
Leonhard v. Chicago Fire & Marine Insurance
Opinion of the Court
Prior to March 5, 1929, the defendant, hereafter called the company, was a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state of Illinois. Its authorized capital stock was $1,000,000, composed of 100,000 shares of the par value of $10 each. On or about March 5, 1929, its capital stock was, after due and proper action taken by the company and its stockholders, reduced to $500,000. Thereafter certain preliminary steps were taken by the company pursuant to the laws of the state of Illinois to increase its capital stock from $500,000 to $1,000,000. Under the laws of that state an Illinois fire and marine insurance company of a stock type had no authority to increase its capital stock except upon compliance with the laws of that state and the rules and regulations of the Division of Insurance of its Department of Trade and Commerce. To increase the capital stock of such a corporation certain preliminary steps were required to be taken which included among others the following: (1) Filing with the Department of Trade and Commerce a certified declaration of intention to amend its charter, together with a copy of the proposed amended charter; (2) obtaining from the superintendent of insurance a certificate reciting that he had examined the proposed amended charter and other proofs and that the same complied with the constitution and laws of that state. After that was done a corporation was permitted to open books for subscriptions to the proposed in
After the defendant company had filed with the Department of Trade and Commerce its declaration of intention to amend its charter and a copy of its proposed amended charter, and after it had obtained the required certificate from the superintendent of insurance, the company opened subscription books and offered to each of its old stockholders the right to subscribe for two shares of the new stock for each share of the old stock held by him. The subscription price was $40 per share.
At that time one Jacob L. Krings of the city of Madison was the owner of at least fifty shares of the old stock. Under the subscription rights offered, he was entitled to subscribe for one hundred shares of the new stock, which was to be issued when all of the increased stock was fully subscribed and paid for. Mr. Krings did not care to subscribe
Late in the fall of that year the company, not having succeeded in obtaining subscriptions for all of the proposed increase in its capital stock, and the crash in the stock market having occurred, decided not to proceed further with the attempt to increase its capital stock. It appears that the company notified nearly all of the subscribers for new stock that it would refund the moneys paid in. It refused, however, to refund to the plaintiffs the $4,000 contributed by them for the very specious reason that when Mr. Krings assigned the temporary certificate to the plaintiffs it resulted in there being outstanding more stock (obviously old stock) than the company was authorized to issue, and required the company, in order to protect itself from an illegal and unauthorized overissue of its stock, to go into the open market
That this action lies under all of the circumstances for - the sum claimed gives rise to no doubt in our minds.
An action for money had and received is- maintainable whenever the- defendant receives money which in equity and good conscience he ought to pay to the plaintiff. Wells v. American Express Co. 49 Wis. 224, 229, 5 N. W. 333; Limited Investment Asso. v. Glendale Investment Asso. 99 Wis. 54, 59, 74 N. W. 633; Johnston v. Charles Abresch Co. 109 Wis. 182, 184, 85 N. W. 348; J. V. LeClair Co. v. Rogers-Ruger Co. 124 Wis. 44, 50, 102 N. W. 346; Siggins v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co. 153 Wis. 122, 125, 140 N. W. 1128; Sheboygan County v. City of Sheboygan, 209 Wis. 452, 245 N. W. 87. The increase of the capital stock was never authorized by the state of Illinois. At the time the company obtained the $4,000 from the plaintiffs it was merely authorized to solicit subscriptions for the proposed increase in capital stock. Upon receiving plaintiffs’ money the company was required by law to keep it in a special account until all of the 100,000 shares of proposed new stock were subscribed and paid for. Failing in its efforts to float the proposed issue of new stock, it never became authorized to issue any of the new stock.
With all of these contentions, with the exception of 7 and 8, we are in accord, but they do not in any way militate against the recovery herein. Contentions 7 and 8 are obviously inconsistent. If the plaintiffs took nothing by the purported assignment, then certainly the assignment was without effect and Mr. Krings’ assignment could not have-operated to bring into existence stock in excess of that authorized to be issued by the company. A further answer to defendant’s contention is found in the fact that the company knew that the $4,000 which accompanied the Krings
The particular document which, throughout this opinion, has been referred to as a “temporary certificate” was neither such in fact nor in legal effect. It was merely a receipt evidencing the payment of $4,000 to the company for one hundred shares of stock which the company proposed to issue pursuant to the subscription when and if it was authorized so to do. The pretended assignment of the temporary certificate, which was nothing but a receipt for the money paid in, conferred no rights upon the so-called as-signee. The purported assignment, coupled with the delivery of the temporary certificate, amounted to nothing but a parting with a receipt which evidenced the payment of money. When the plaintiffs attempted to assign and sell their temporary certificates no rights were thereby conferred upon the purchaser. Whether the company or another purchased plaintiffs’ temporary certificates does not appear. In any event the pretended sale of plaintiffs’ temporary certificates conferred no rights upon the so-called purchaser, in the absence of a contract assigning all of the plaintiffs’
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Leonhard and another v. Chicago Fire & Marine Insurance Company
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published