Burch v. West

25 N.E. 658, 134 Ill. 258
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 25 N.E. 658 (Burch v. West) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burch v. West, 25 N.E. 658, 134 Ill. 258 (Ill. 1890).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

On the 27th day of October, 1887, James J. West, one of the appellees herein, understanding himself to be under obligations to protect the interests of the Union Trust Company, the Kalamazoo Paper Company, the Chicago Paper Company and the Western Publishing House, in respect to the matter of their claims against the J. L. Began Printing Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Illinois, called upon the president and secretary of said printing company, and induced them to execute and .deliver to him three judgment notes of said corporation, each authorizing the entry of judgment thereon at any time, either before or after the maturity thereof. Two of said notes were made payable to the Union Trust Company, and one of them was for $5440.06, and the other for $4881.45, and the third note was for $9375.98, and was made payable to West himself, and was intended to cover the claim of the Chicago Paper Company for $3212.46, the claim of the Kalamazoo Paper Company for $2000, and the claim of the Western Publishing House for $4163.52. The aggregate of the three notes executed at that date was $19,697.49. . At and prior to that time said West held and owned six similar judgment notes given by the J. L. Began Printing Company, and the aggregate amount of principal, and interest thereon to that date, was $35,344.74; and the Union Trust Company also held two other judgment notes of the printing company, and the principal and interest thereof to that date was $5400.

Shortly after the procurement of the three first mentioned judgment notes, and on the same day, judgments were rendered, by confession, on all the above mentioned judgment notes, in the Superior Court of Cook county, against the said J. L. Began Printing Company. The aggregate of the judgments in favor of West, in his own right, was the aforesaid sum of $35,344.74, the aggregate of the judgments in favor of the Union Trust Company was $15,721.51, and the judgment in the name of West, but for the benefit of the two paper companies and the publishing house, was $9375.98, making $60,442.23 in all. On the same 27th day of October, 1887, executions were sued out on said judgments, placed in the hands of the "sheriff of Cook county, and levied upon all the assets and property of the J. L. Began Printing Company, except the book accounts and choses in action. On the same day, but after the levy aforesaid, the J. W. Butler Paper Company sued out of the said Superior Court a writ of attachment for the sum of $1426.33, which was also levied upon the said property. On the next day, October 28, 1887, two judgments were rendered in the same court, upon judgment notes, by confession, in favor of Carleton Prouty, and against the printing company, one for $1548.04, and the other for $2308.51, and executions were immediately issued thereon, and levied on the same property.

On November 7, 1887, the circuit court of Cook county, in a suit in equity brought by certain creditors of the J. L. Began Printing Company, on behalf of themselves and all other creditors, entered a decree dissolving the corporation, and on November 10, following, Charles S. Burch, the now appellant, was appointed receiver of the assets of said printing company. A few days thereafter the receiver filed in said circuit court this bill, for the purpose of enjoining a sale of the assets of the J. L. Began Printing Company by the sheriff, under the aforesaid executions, and praying that each of said executions be quashed, and that the judgments on which they had issued be set aside. The grounds "upon which it was claimed in the bill that the relief therein sought should be granted, are thus summarized in the brief and argument of appellant:

“Because the-officers who executed the notes and warrants of attorney had no authority to execute the same; that the power to confess judgment against the corporation at any time after the giving of the notes, and before the maturity of the same, was unusual and extraordinary, and could not be conferred by the officers, who were only authorized to transact the ordinary business of the company; that when the several judgment notes obtained by West were given, the company was, to his knowledge, insolvent, being largely indebted to a great number of persons and corporations, whose just claims it was unable to pay; that the judgment notes were obtained by West with intent to immediately enter up judgments upon the same before the maturity thereof, ruin the business of the company, acquire the ownership of its assets when forced on the market by the sheriff, at a sum much less than their value, and fraudulently prevent the company’s bona fide creditors from enforcing or collecting their just demands; that all the property of the company was seized by the sheriff under the executions issued upon the said judgments, and in consequence its general creditors have been prevented from collecting their demands ; that the board of directors had no authority to empower the president and secretary, or either of them, by any resolution, to bind the corporation by such a warrant of attorney ; and that the judgment notes were not based on a good or sufficient consideration.”

On November 16,1887, an order was entered that the sheriff, upon the receipt by him of a bond for $65,000, turn over to the receiver all the property of the corporation in his possession, and that all liens and rights of all parties upon the said property should be preserved until the further order of the court.

Answers were filed by the several defendants, to the bill of complaint, and replications to such answers.

Upon the hearing, the circuit court decreed in favor of the validity of the claims and judgments of the several judgment creditors, and that their execution liens, and the lien of the attaching creditor, the J. W. Butler Paper Company, were prior and superior to the rights of the receiver, and should be first paid out of the assets surrendered by the sheriff. The court, however, first reduced the judgment for $9375.98, wherein West was trustee for the Western Publishing House and two other corporations, in the sum of $3463.52, for work done for said publishing house during the month of October, 1887, and for which no bill had been rendered at the time of the entry of said judgment; and also reduced the Carleton Prouty judgments very considerably, on account of payments received on collaterals held, attorney’s fees improperly included in the judgments, etc. The court found, by its decree, that the prior liens amounted to $61,233.96, and that the receiver had received from the proceeds of the property surrendered by the sheriff, more than the sum of $61,233.96,—the amount of said liens. Upon appeal to the Appellate Court for the First District the decree was affirmed, and the cause was then brought here by this further appeal.

It was urged in the Appellate Court, apparently for the first time, that the judgment in favor of West for $9375.98, and the judgments in favor of the trust company for $5440.06 and $4881.45, respectively, were preferences in fraud of the act concerning voluntary assignments, and therefore void. Neither the facts alleged in the bill nor the facts established at the hearing show either that there was a voluntary assignment or a case within section 13 of the Voluntary Assignment act. In Hide and Leather Nat. Bank v. Rehm, 126 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.E. 658, 134 Ill. 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burch-v-west-ill-1890.