American Bonding & Casualty Co. v. Chicago Bonding & Insurance

226 Ill. App. 475, 1922 Ill. App. LEXIS 80
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 8, 1922
DocketGen. No. 27,580
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 226 Ill. App. 475 (American Bonding & Casualty Co. v. Chicago Bonding & Insurance) 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
American Bonding & Casualty Co. v. Chicago Bonding & Insurance, 226 Ill. App. 475, 1922 Ill. App. LEXIS 80 (Ill. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Morrill

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the superior court of Cook county entered February 4, 1922, which in substance finds that the appellee, Leonard A. Brundage, as receiver, is entitled to the immediate possession of certain securities amounting to $305,334 at their par value, which had been deposited prior to March 2, 1.920, with the Department of Trade and Commerce of the State of Hlinois by said Chicago Bonding and Insurance Company, an Illinois corporation organized under the statute relating to the organization, management and regulation of surety companies and formerly doing business in Illinois as a surety company.

The record shows that the original bill was filed November 3, 1920, by the American Bonding and Casualty Company, an Iowa corporation, against the Director of the Department of Trade and Commerce of the State of Illinois and said Chicago Bonding and Insurance Company. It alleged its consolidation with said Chicago Bonding and Insurance Company pursuant to the laws of Illinois and those of Iowa relating to an interstate consolidation and that thereafter it had taken possession of all of the property of the constituent companies, with the exception of said deposit with said Department of Trade and Commerce. With reference to this deposit the bill alleged that the contract of consolidation contained a provision to the effect that all securities of the Chicago Bonding and Insurance Company on deposit with said director shall remain on deposit until otherwise ordered by a court of competent jurisdiction, and the Chicago Bonding and Insurance Company agreed to secure such court order at its expense. The bill prayed that the contract of consolidation be declared valid, binding and effective; that the said Chicago Bonding and Insurance Company be found to have become extinct as a corporate entity upon its consolidation with complainant, an Iowa corporation, and that complainant be declared entitled to the immediate possession, custody and control of the securities mentioned as a part of its capital stock and reserve funds and that the said director be ordered and directed to deliver to complainant said securities. It thus appears that the purpose of the original bill was to secure an order by a court of competent jurisdiction for the surrender to complainant of the securities deposited as aforesaid.

Contemporaneously with the filing of the bill, the Director of the Department of Trade and Commerce of the State of Illinois filed his answer and a cross-bill admitting the material allegations of the bill as to the consolidation of the companies and the deposit in question and alleging that the Chicago Bonding and Insurance Company, which will be hereafter designated as the Illinois Company, has no other property or assets in the State except said deposit; that it has outstanding various debts and contracts of surety-ship ; that by virtue of certain Illinois statutes, it has become the duty of the director to hold the securities for the benefit of the creditors and holders of the obligations and contracts of the Illinois Company; that by virtue of the laws of Illinois relating to the dissolution of insurance companies, the Illinois Company, although consolidated and merged into the American Bonding and Casualty Company, which is designated as the Consolidated Company, and thereby annulled as a corporate entity for the purpose of transacting its general business, is nevertheless continúen as a body corporate under the laws of Illinois for two years after the date of consolidation for the purpose of settling claims against it and disposing of its outstanding contracts and obligations.

The cross-bill prayed that a receiver be appointed for the Illinois Company, including the securities held by the Director of the Department of Trade and Commerce, with full and complete power to settle all claims and do all things necessary and proper to wind up the affairs of the corporation. On the same day Leonard A. Brundage was appointed receiver for the Illinois Company. Subsequently the appellee, George A. Barr, became Director of the Department of Trade and Commerce and was made an additional party defendant. He then filed his cross-bill containing substantially the same allegations as that of his predecessor, with the additional charge that since the appointment of the receiver herein, the Consolidated Company has become insolvent and ceased doing business and that a receiver had been appointed for its assets.

On September 12, 1921, the appellee, the Chicago Title & Trust Company, as receiver in Hlinois, contemporaneously with the filing of its answer to the cross-bill o'f Director Barr, filed its intervening petition, alleging its appointment as receiver for the Consolidated Company within the State of Illinois on February 15, 1921, in a suit instituted January 15, 1921, in the superior court of Cook county, being case number 362,423, entitled Stoecker v. American Bonding and Casualty Company, which has been consolidated with the present case, and its acceptance of the appointment. The prayer of this intervening petition is, in substance, that the securities in question may be ordered to be delivered to the petitioner and held by it to be applied in the payment of the expense of liquidation and of all such qlaims as the court may determine shall be entitled to resort to the securities, and to the settlement of outstanding contracts of either of the constituent corporations so far as the court shall determine that the deposited funds are applicable thereto. It charged that the American Bonding and Casualty Company is not a consolidation of that company and the Illinois Company only, but that it has also acquired other insurance companies by merger and intermingled their assets with its own.

On November 4, 1921, appellant W. F. G-randy, as receiver of the Consolidated Company by appointment of the district court of Woodbury county, Iowa, was substituted as complainant in the case and filed his amended and supplemental bill, in which he alleged his appointment by the said Iowa court as receiver for the Consolidated Company on February 26, 1921. The bill alleged the substance of the original bill as above stated, admitted the truth of its allegations, set forth the prior pleadings in the case, which have been noted, and the appointment of Leonard A. Brundage as receiver. We do not deem it necessary to review the allegations of the amended and supplemental bill in detail for the reason that the findings of fact contained in the decree are undisputed and comprehensive, covering all facts upon which the appellant Grandy relies. The bill prayed, in substance, that Leonard A. Brundage be required to file his final report as receiver; that the Chicago Title & Trust Company, as receiver, be decreed to have no right to the possession of the capital stock deposit; that complainant be appointed ancillary receiver for the Consolidated Company in lieu of Leonard A. Brundage and the Chicago Title & Trust Company; that the Director of the Department of Trade and Commerce be ordered to turn over to complainant, as ancillary receiver, the said capital stock deposit; that the capital stock deposit and other property be ordered and directed to be sent by complainant as ancillary receiver to himself as receiver by appointment of the Iowa court, to be administered under the order and direction of that court.

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Bluebook (online)
226 Ill. App. 475, 1922 Ill. App. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-bonding-casualty-co-v-chicago-bonding-insurance-illappct-1922.