Alexander ex rel. Tobey Furniture Co. v. Live Stock National Bank

282 Ill. App. 315, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 651
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 12, 1935
DocketGen. No. 38,196
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 282 Ill. App. 315 (Alexander ex rel. Tobey Furniture Co. v. Live Stock National Bank) 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
Alexander ex rel. Tobey Furniture Co. v. Live Stock National Bank, 282 Ill. App. 315, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 651 (Ill. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Justice O’Connor

delivered the opinion of the court.

By this appeal plaintiff seeks to reverse a judgment of the municipal court of Chicago which discharged The Live Stock National Bank of Chicago as garnishee.

The record discloses that on January 18, 1932, The Tobey Furniture Company caused judgment by confession to be entered against L. B. Alexander for $337.82. Afterward an execution was issued and returned by the bailiff no part satisfied. More than two years afterward, November 15, 1934, plaintiff filed an affidavit for a garnishee summons which was issued and served on The Live Stock National Bank; it filed its answer in which it set np that it had no property in its possession belonging to Alexander. The answer was contested. The matter came on for hearing January 4, 1935; evidence was heard and thereupon a motion to discharge the garnishee was denied. The cause was then continued to January 25th. January 10th the garnishee by leave of court filed an amended answer. The hearing was then completed, the court found from the evidence and from the admissions of the garnishee that at the time- of the service of the summons on the garnishee it had in its possession a certificate for 40 shares of stock of the Ever Ready Transit Company, an Illinois corporation, the certificate being in the name of the judgment debtor, Alexander, and indorsed by him in blank. The court further found that subsequent to. the service of the summons on the garnishee it delivered the certificate for the 40 shares of stock back to Alexander. The court then found the issues against the garnishee and entered judgment against it for $404.19, being the amount of the judgment against Alexander with interest thereon. .February 13th the garnishee’s motion for a new trial was allowed, and it was stipulated that neither side had any other evidence to offer, and that the court might decide the case on the evidence theretofore adduced. Thereupon, the court found the issues in favor of the garnishee, it was discharged, and plaintiff appeals.

The substance of the facts as shown by the evidence, and which is not in dispute, is that at the time the garnishee bank was served with summons, for a considerable time prior thereto and for some time thereafter, the bank held certificates for 120' shares of the capital stock of the Ever Ready Transit Company, an Illinois corporation, which were indorsed in blank and held by the bank under an escrow agreement dated December 29, 1932, from which agreement it appears that in addition to the stock certificates the bank held in escrow a promissory note for $2,000 signed by Alexander, due November 21, 1933, on which, there “was $500 still due. The agreement recited that upon production of satisfactory evidence of the payment of a note for $816, dated December 27, 1932, which was signed by Alexander and Charles L. Bingham, the bank was authorized to deliver the certificates of the 120 shares of stock, together with the $2,000 note to “Alexander and Charles L. Bingham”; that in the event of the failure of Alexander and Bingham to pay the note for $816, in accordance with the terms of a certain other agreement (which is not in the record) the bank was authorized to deliver the stock certificates and the $2,000 note to Bernhard H. Stephenson and Herman F. Frank, and the escrow agreement would be thereupon terminated. The escrow agreement was signed by Stephenson, Frank, Alexander and Bingham, and accepted by the garnishee bank.

The amended answer of the garnishee set up that the bank under the escrow agreement had in its possession “120 shares of stock of the Ever Beady Transit Company, an Illinois corporation, 40 shares of which was endorsed in blank by LeRoy D. Alexander” and deposited with the bank; that after the service of the garnishee summons on the bank the escrow agreement Avas terminated by the acts of the parties and the stock certificates for the 120 shares were delivered by the Bank to Alexander and Bingham, that the stock at the time of the service of the garnishee summons was of no value, was still of no value, and that the bank had no property in its possession belonging to Alexander.

A witness called by plaintiff testified that about November 20, 1934 (which was three days after the bank was served by the garnishee summons) he talked with a trust officer of the garnishee - bank and was told by the officer that the bank still had the certificate of stock which Alexander had deposited with it. Another witness called by plaintiff testified that he was one of the original incorporators and stockholders of the Ever Eeady Transit Company; that the par value of the shares was $50, and that at the time of the service of the garnishee summons he was of opinion the stock was worth $25 a share, or a total of $1,000 for the 40 shares. This evidence was objected to on the specific ground that there was no showing that the witness was qualified to place a value on the stock. The objection was overruled and the evidence admitted.

Plaintiff contends that shares of stock of an Illinois corporation owned by a judgment debtor and for which a certificate has been issued and is in the possession or custody of a third party, are subject to garnishee process. His counsel says that neither the Appellate nor the Supreme Court of this State “have ever decided this precise question squarely,” and counsel for the garnishee agree with this statement but say that the question has been decided by the courts of many States, as well as by the Federal courts, and that in no case has such a method of attaching stock been held valid.

At common law a shareholder’s interest in a corporation could not be taken under an execution; the proceeding is statutory. Goss & Phillips Mfg. Co. v. People, 4 Ill. App. 510. Section 1 of our Garnishment Act provides that upon the return of an execution “No property found,” garnishment proceedings may be instituted where it is made to appear by affidavit that any person has “any effects or estate” of the judgment debtor in his possession, custody or charge. (Ill. State Bar Stats. 1935, p. 1729.) The word “effects ’ ’ as used in sec. 8 of the Attachment Act has been defined by our Supreme Court to include shares of stock in a corporation; (Union Nat. Bank of Chicago v. Byram, 131 Ill. 92) and we hold that the word “ef fects” in section 1 of our Garnishment Act is used in the same sense.

In the Byram case the sheriff levied a writ of attachment on certain shares of stock of an Illinois corporation. The court said (p. 97): “The only question which the record presents for our consideration is this: are shares of stock in an incorporated company subject to attachment under the laws of .this State?

“Section 52 of chapter 77 of the Rev. Stat., being ‘An Act in regard to judgments and decrees,’ . . . provides that ‘the shares or interest of a stockholder in any corporation may be taken on execution and sold as hereinafter provided.’ ”

The court then analyzes and discusses other sections of that act and continuing says (p. 98): “The language of sections 53, 54 and 57 plainly indicates that the Legislature intended to subject to attachment the same shares of stock which were liable to be taken on execution.” And continuing (p. 99) says: “It is claimed that the Attachment act, and the act in regard to judgments and executions, contain no provision that stock shall be subject to attachment, and that, if they do contain such provision, they provide no mode of levying an attachment upon stock.

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Bluebook (online)
282 Ill. App. 315, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 651, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-ex-rel-tobey-furniture-co-v-live-stock-national-bank-illappct-1935.