Brand v. Schmitz

11 N.E.2d 974, 293 Ill. App. 114, 1937 Ill. App. LEXIS 368
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 15, 1937
DocketGen. No. 39,510
StatusPublished

This text of 11 N.E.2d 974 (Brand v. Schmitz) 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
Brand v. Schmitz, 11 N.E.2d 974, 293 Ill. App. 114, 1937 Ill. App. LEXIS 368 (Ill. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Denis E. Sullivan

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment for $15,275.87, entered against defendants in the above entitled cause. Robert E. Brand, plaintiff appellee, on April 23, 1936, confessed judgment against George C. Schmitz and Louise Rowen Schmitz, defendants appellants, on certain mortgage bonds in the aggregate of $15,275.87, and the defendants thereafter on May 20, 1936, made a motion to open the judgment and were given leave to appear, plead and defend and to file a counterclaim in equity. The counterclaim in equity was filed and when the matter came on for hearing the trial judge permitted the law case and the counterclaim in equity to be tried at the same time. The issues involved were tried without a jury. The cause was heard by the court upon an agreed statement of facts made orally together with certain documentary proof. The court entered a decree denying the prayer of the counterclaim in equity and decreed that the judgment as confessed on April 23, 1936, rendered against the defendants for $15,275.87, stand in full force and effect as of the date of rendition of judgment and that plaintiff have execution against defendants for said judgment together with costs and charges.

The facts and circumstances in this case are rather involved, but we shall set forth the pertinent points:

In the year 1924, the defendants George 0. Schmitz and Louise Rowen Schmitz were the owners of a fee title of a certain lot located in the City of Chicago, known as 1017-1021 North Dearborn street, upon which they built a hotel; that the defendants secured a construction loan in the sum of $200,000, of which the bonds being sued on in this present suit are a part. The bonds were signed individually by the defendants. The hotel was called “The Walton Hotel” and the bond issue was known as “The Walton.”

• In 1926 the defendants sold the hotel business, together with title to the real estate, to a corporation known as the Brons Hotel Company. The properly recorded deed by which the transaction was carried out contained no language by which the Brons Hotel Company assumed liability for the mortgage.

In November, 1927, the Brons Hotel Company sold to Alice Olhausen, and the deed of conveyance of title recited, “Subject to trust deed dated June 10, 1924,” . . . The trust deed therein referred to is the trust deed given to secure the bonds in question.

In August, 1935, Alice Olhausen, by quitclaim deed, conveyed the property in question to Walton Hotel Company, a corporation organized by her and a few others. This last named deed contained the following:

“Subject to balance dne on bonds secured by trust deed dated June 10, 1924, and recorded in the Recorder’s Office of Cook County, Illinois, on June 13, 1924, as Document No. 8465892, which said indebtedness the grantee hereby assumes and agrees to pay.”

Approximately 30 days later, on September 24, 1935, the Walton Hotel Company filed a petition in the District Court of the United States for the Northern District of Illinois, eastern division, No. 61,363, under section 77B of the Federal Bankruptcy Law, seeking reorganization.

The bonds were in default a considerable time prior to the transfer of the Walton Hotel Company, in fact, a bill of foreclosure had been filed in the circuit court of Cook county entitled, “The Chicago Title and Trust Company, Trustee, etc. v. George C. Schmitz, et al. No. B-215617,’’ and a decree of foreclosure and sale was entered therein on June 11, 1932. The property has not been sold under that decree. That suit is still-pending and undisposed of.

In the petition under section 77B of the Federal Bankruptcy Law, the debtor corporation informed the United States District Court that all the bonds had matured and were due and payable, that it did not have sufficient working capital and was too heavily indebted to do business with its present financial structure; that it then suggested to the court that a simple, general, complete, satisfactory organization of the affairs of the debtor was possible and that no other court, without the powers, of the United States District Court, would have the power to stay individual bondholders from exercising their liens. By the exercise of its power the courts can unify, simplify and make more harmonious the treatment of the situation pending a proper reorganization of the company’s affairs (viz. its mortgage indebtedness), and facilitate the preparation, consideration and effectuation of such a reorganization.

Among other things, the petition prayed for the appointment of a trustee and the granting of power and authority in the trustee as a receiver in equity, to operate the business, that the trustee be given the power to issue trustee’s certificates for operation expenses. It also requested the rejection of contracts of the debtor which were not beneficial to the estate, for reasonable time within which the claims and interests of creditors and shareholders might be filed, and for stay orders against the debtor corporation upon a claim from which a discharge would be a release and enjoin or stay the commencement or continuance of suits against the debtor corporation until after the final decree.

An order was entered in that proceeding approving the filing of the petition as having been filed in good faith, and at the same time a stay order was entered on October 7, 1935, which provided that “all creditors, bondholders, stockholders, noteholders and trustees, and all other persons claiming or acting by, through or under them, and their officers, agents, attorneys, representatives, servants and employees are enjoined and restrained from instituting or prosecuting any action at law or suit or prosecution in equity against the said debtor in any court of law or equity.” The stay order was entered several months prior to the filing of the suit with which we are presently concerned.

A temporary trustee was appointed in that proceeding and he reported to the Federal court, among other things, that there was an indebtedness of $155,500' with interest from June 10, 1929, “represented by Serial 7% Gold Bonds dated June 10, 1924, executed by George C. Schmitz and Louise Bowen Schmitz, his wife, and indebtedness thereof assumed by the debtor corporation herein, is still outstanding and unpaid.

The summary of assets is given as follows: “Cash, $4,446.36; tax warrants, $275'; judgment notes, $568.88; furnishings, unknown, and real estate, present value $157,500; or a total of $162,790.24.

“A plan of reorganization as amended and supplemented was filed on December 9, 1935, by the attorney for the debtor corporation.”

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Related

Rohrer v. Deatherage
168 N.E. 266 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1929)
Barnett v. Gitlitz
8 N.E.2d 517 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.E.2d 974, 293 Ill. App. 114, 1937 Ill. App. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brand-v-schmitz-illappct-1937.