Cohen v. North Avenue State Bank

26 N.E.2d 691, 304 Ill. App. 413, 1940 Ill. App. LEXIS 971
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 8, 1940
DocketGen. No. 40,806
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 26 N.E.2d 691 (Cohen v. North Avenue State 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
Cohen v. North Avenue State Bank, 26 N.E.2d 691, 304 Ill. App. 413, 1940 Ill. App. LEXIS 971 (Ill. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

Mr. Justice O’Connor

delivered the opinion of the court.

Certain creditors of the North Avenue State Bank brought suit in equity on behalf of themselves and other creditors against former and final stockholders of the bank to enforce the statutory and constitutional liability of the stockholders. The bank was being liquidated by the Auditor of Public Accounts who had filed a suit for that purpose in the circuit court of Cook county. Cohen v. North Ave. State Bank, 291 Ill. App. 558. February 25, 1937, a decree was entered finding the respective amounts due from the stockholders (82 in number) and decreeing that payment be made by them to Milton Johnson and A. A. Mueller, as receivers. Thereafter execution was issued against each of the stockholders held liable and returned by the sheriff “No part satisfied.” Afterward, November 10, 1938, an affidavit for garnishment made by one of the attorneys for the creditors was filed which set up the entry of the decree against 48 of the defendants, and the amount for which each was held liable. It further set up the return of the executions; that the 48 defendants had no property within the knowledge of the affiant liable to execution but that he had just reason to believe certain banks, naming 27 different banks located in Chicago and Evanston, including the First National Bank of Chicago, as garnishees, were indebted to the 48 mentioned defendants. By the affidavit affiant apparently sought to follow the provisions of sec. 1, ch. 62, Ill. Rev. Stat. 1939 [Jones Ill. Stats. Ann. 109.284]. Garnishee summons was issued and apparently served on the 48 garnishees, one of which was the First National Bank of Chicago. November 28, interrogatories to the garnishees were filed and December 7, 1938, the First National Bank of Chicago filed its motion to quash the garnishment summons and to discharge it as garnishee. March 3, the court sustained the motion, discharged the First National Bank, as garnishee, and the plaintiff creditors and receivers appeal.

Counsel for the garnishee contend (1) that the garnishment proceeding is based on 48 separate and distinct judgments against 48 defendants and in different amounts and therefore is not authorized by the Garnishment statute (sec. 1, ch. 62, Ill. Rev. Stat. 1939); and (2) that “The affidavit filed for the issuance of garnishment ... is in the nature of a discovery and does not appear to be predicated upon such reasonable belief as is required by Section 1, Chapter 62” of the Garnishment Act.

(1) The liability imposed by the constitution of Illinois upon stockholders of a State bank is an individual liability on the part of each stockholder to each creditor of the bank. Golden v. Cervenka, 278 Ill. 409. Counsel for the garnishee say, “The question arises whether or not this decree constitutes one judgment against all the defendants, or a separate judgment against each of the defendants.” Counsel contend that the decree so far as it is involved in this garnishment proceeding, constitutes 48 separate and distinct judgments and that sec. 1 of the Garnishment Act only authorizes garnishment proceedings where there is but one judgment. That section, so far as pertinent here, provides: “Whenever a judgment shall be rendered by any court of record, . . . and an execution against the defendant or defendants in such judgment shall be returned by the proper officer ‘No property found,’ on the affidavit of the plaintiff, or other credible person, being filed with the clerk of such court . . . that said defendant or defendants has or have no property within the knowledge of such affiant, in his or their possession, liable to execution, and that such affiant hath just reason to believe that any other person is indebted to such defendant, or defendants, or to either or any of such defendants, or hath any effects or estate of such defendant, or defendants or of either or any of such defendants, in his possession, custody or charge, it shall be lawful for such clerk ... to issue a summons against the person supposed to be indebted to, or supposed to have any of the effects or estate of said defendant, or defendants, or of either or any of such defendants, commanding him to appear before said court ... as a garnishee; and said court . . . shall examine and proceed against such garnishee or garnishees, in the same manner as is required by law against garnishees in original attachments. If the garnishee is indebted to or has any effects or estate of a part only of such defendants, judgment shall be against the garnishee in favor of such part of the defendants for the use of the plaintiff. ’ ’

In Levinson v. Home Bank & Trust Co., 337 Ill. 241, 243, the court said: “It has been uniformly held by this court that the garnishment process is purely a creature of statute. (Siegel-Cooper & Co. v. Schueck, 167 Ill. 522.) Therefore, in'order to determine the extent and scope of such process it is necessary to resort to the statute which creates it.” To the same effect is Wheeler v. Chicago Title & Trust Co., 217 Ill. 128,135, where the court said: ‘ ‘ The remedy by garnishment is purely legal and every case must be brought within the scope of the statute, and whatever the effect may be the words of the statute must control. ’ ’

In the Siegel-Cooper & Co. case, decided in 1897, it was held that a judgment creditor of two individuals could not maintain garnishment on his judgment and reach a debt due from the garnishee to one of the judgment debtors because it was not authorized by sec. 1 of the Garnishment Act, but after the decision in that case that section was amended in 1923 so as to permit a judgment creditor who had a judgment against several defendants to garnishee a person or corporation that owed money to any one of the defendants. (See sec. 1, above quoted; Boska v. Buchaniec, 245 Ill. App. 602.) That section has not been changed since that time.

It has often been said that the garnisheeing judgment creditor stands in the shoes of the judgment debtor; that the judgment debtor is really the plaintiff and according to the approved practice, when judgment goes against the garnishee it is entered in favor of the judgment debtor for the use of the garnisheeing creditor. Bartell v. Bauman, 12 Ill. App. 450. Obviously this is so, but it is also often said that one of the tests whether the garnishee is liable is: Could the

judgment debtor maintain an action against the garnishee? This is still the rule where there is but one judgment debtor (Siegel-Cooper & Co. v. Schueck, 167 Ill. 522), but since the amendment to sec. 1 of the Garnishment Act in 1923, that rule does not apply where there is more than one judgment debtor and the garnishee is indebted to but one of them. Boska v. Buchaniec, 245 Ill. App. 602; Alexander v. Live Stock Nat. Bank, 282 Ill. App. 315.

In support of the garnishee’s contention that sec. 1 of the Garnishment Act does not authorize garnishment where there is more than one judgment, counsel cite Walker v. Montgomery, 236 Ill. 244; Hoier v. Kaplan, 313 Ill. 448, where it was held that “a judgment at law is a unit. A decree in equity may have the effect of several separate decrees,” and that in the instant case there are several (48) separate judgments in the decree ; that sec. 1 of the Garnishment Act only authorizes garnishment where there is “a judgment” and not several judgments.

These two cases are cited to the proposition that there is a distinction between a judgment at law and a decree in equity.

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.E.2d 691, 304 Ill. App. 413, 1940 Ill. App. LEXIS 971, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cohen-v-north-avenue-state-bank-illappct-1940.