Biegler v. Merchants Loan & Trust Co.

62 Ill. App. 560, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 476
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 11, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 62 Ill. App. 560 (Biegler v. Merchants Loan & Trust 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
Biegler v. Merchants Loan & Trust Co., 62 Ill. App. 560, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 476 (Ill. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shepard

deliveeed the opinion of the Couet. _

Pursuant to previous negotiations the appellant purchased of George W. Leihy & Son a one-third interest in nine certain race horses and certain racing equipments, and agreed to pay therefor the sum of $13,500, of which $6,000 was paid in cash and the remaining $7,500 was evidenced by two promissory notes made by the appellant.

Those notes, with indorsements thereon, were as follows:

“ $3,750. Chicago, Jany. 15, 1894.
Five months after date, for value received, I promise to pay to the order of G. W. Leihy & Son the sum of thirty-seven hundred and fifty dollars, at my office in Chicago, with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum after date.
P. Louis Biegler,
379 1ST. Clark St.
(Indorsed:)
This note is secured by a lien upon my interest in certain horses named in an agreement this day made between said G. W. Leihy & Son and myself.
Chicago, January 15, 1894..
P. Louis Biegler.”
“$3,750. Chicago, Jany. 15, 1S94.
Six months after date, for value received, I promise to pay to the order of G. W. Leihy & Son the sum of thirty-seven hundred and fifty dollars, at my office in Chicago, with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum after date.
P. Louis Biegler,
379 ÍL Clark St.
(Indorsed:)
This note is secured by a lien upon my interest in certain horses described in an agreement this day made between G. W. Leihy and myself, dated January 15, 1894.
P. Louis Biegler.”

A partnership agreement in writing, bearing the same date of the notes, was entered into between appellant and the Leihys, and it is contended that a verbal agreement was made between them at the same time, whereby, if the appellant should desire at any time thereafter to withdraw from the partnership, he should lose the $6,000 cash paid by him, give up his interest in the horses, and receive back the said two notes, and that the indorsement on the notes had reference to such verbal agreement, and was, as well, notice of what the partnership agreement contained, and put any person dealing with the notes upon inquiry as to what that agreement was.

On January 30,1894, the six months note was deposited by Leihy & Son with the Merchants Loan and Trust Company, the appellee, as collateral security to an indebtedness of $3,000, then owing by them to said bank, and, on May 7, 1894, the said bank discounted for Leihy & Son, in its regular course of business, the other note due at five months.

The notes were not paid at maturity, and on December 1, 1894, the appellee sued the appellant on them, at law.

In the meantime the appellant had filed a bill in equity against the Leihys, which was pending, and about the time the suits on the notes were to be reached for trial, the appellant filed a supplemental bill in the equity case, and made appellee a party defendant with the Leihys, and set up various equitable defenses to the notes, and prayed for an accounting, that said notes be surrendered and given up to him, and for an injunction against the further prosecution of the suits on the notes, and obtained an injunction restraining appellant from further prosecuting said suits.

Appellee answered said supplemental bill, and filed its cross-bill, denying that any equitable defenses existed against the notes as between appellant and the Leihys, the payees thereof, and insisting that if any such equitable defenses did exist as between the maker and payees thereof, that such defenses were unavailing against cross-complainant, the appellee, under the circumstances of acquiring them as set forth in the said cross-bill, and praying that appellant be decreed to pay the amount due on the notes.

In his answer to said cross-bill the appellee admitted as follows:

“ That his counsel and the counsel for said cross-complainant agreed in open court, at the time that the said injunction was granted as aforesaid, that all questions in contention and controversy arising between this defendant and said cross-complainant and said Leihy & Son upon the said notes of this defendant, as in the said cross-bill of complaint set forth, should be submitted and determined upon a hearing of the original bill and supplemental bill in this cause, and that if it was found that this defendant was indebted to said cross-complainant, that it should be decreed in this cause that he pay to said cross-complainant whatever sum should appear upon an accounting to be justly due from this defendant to said cross-complainant upon said two notes or either of them.”

The cause was referred to a master, who found and reported, among other things, that the appellee received the notes without notice of any of the equitable defenses against them claimed by the appellant, and that there was due to appellee the sum of §4,045 on the note that it discounted, and $2,068.83 on the indebtedness that the other note was pledged as collateral to.

The cause coming on to be heard upon exceptions filed by the appellant, to the master’s report, it was ordered, on motion of appellant’s solicitor, that the original bill and supplemental bill of appellant be dismissed as to the Leihys, and thereupon, on the court’s own motion, the cross-bill of appellee, and the supplemental bill as to it, were also dismissed.

Subsequently, on motion of appellee, the court set aside its order dismissing the original and supplemental bill, as to appellee, and also appellee’s cross-bill, and entered a decree confirming the master’s report in respect to the allegations of the cross-bill, and that appellee, said cross-complainant, have and recover from appellant the sum so found due by the master, together with lawful interest from the date of the report, and ordered execution therefor.

It is from such decree that this appeal is prosecuted.

It is contended by the appellant that he having dismissed his original and supplemental bill as against the Leihys, the court properly dismissed the same as to the appellee, and also appellee’s cross-bill, and that it was error to vacate such order of dismissal.

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Bluebook (online)
62 Ill. App. 560, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biegler-v-merchants-loan-trust-co-illappct-1896.