Crouch v. First National Bank

40 N.E. 974, 156 Ill. 342
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 40 N.E. 974 (Crouch v. First National Bank) 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
Crouch v. First National Bank, 40 N.E. 974, 156 Ill. 342 (Ill. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Wilkin

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Appellate Court for the First District, affirming a decree of the circuit court of Cook county sustaining a demurrer to a bill in chancery. The bill was filed by .appellant Chester C. Corbin, in behalf of himself and all other creditors of the limited partnership of Boies, Fay & Conkey, against William A. Boies, Benjamin B. Pay, Lucius W. Conkey, Julius K. Graves, the First National Bank of Chicago, and others. It alleges that the complainant purchased of the limited partnership of Boies, Fay & Conkey, on November 15, 1882, their two promissory notes, dated October 30, 1882, due in ninety days and four months from date, one for $1734.21 and the other for $2016.92, both payable to the order of the makers and endorsed by the firm name. It then sets up the organization, on March 30, 1882, of a limited partnership by Boies, Fay and Conkey, with Julius K. Graves as a special partner, contributing to the partnership the sum of $50,000, to continue to March 30, 1887, setting out the certificate of partnership, acknowledgment, filing and recording of the same, in conformity with sections 4, 5 and 6, of chapter 84, of the Revised Statutes. (2 Starr & Curtis, 1565). Also the filing of an affidavit by Benjamin B. Fay, one of the general partners, required by section 7 of the same chapter, the affidavit being copied at length. It further alleges publication of the terms of the limited partnership, and that “having in all things complied with the provisions of the Limited Partnership act, William A. Boies, Benjamin B. Fay and Lucius W. Conkey, with Julius K. Graves as a special partner, constituted a limited partnership, under the firm name of Boies, Fay & Conkey,” and thereupon, on March 30,1882, commenced in the city of Chicago the business of dealing in groceries at wholesale, which it continued to carry on, under its firm name, until in the month of January, 1883; that during that time it contracted debts and incurred obligations amounting to much more than its assets, and being insufficient to pay more than fifty cents on the dollar thereof; that during said month of January, and for several months prior, it had great difficulty in meeting its debts and to pay the same as they matured, and to conceal the actual condition of its affairs and its insolvency it borrowed and procured large sums of money, by loans and discounts of its commercial paper; that on or about December 2, 1882, said Boies, Fay, Conkey and Graves, well knowing said limited partnership was insolvent, and with the intent to hinder, delay and defraud such of the creditors of said limited partnership as they did not intend to prefer, and in contemplation of insolvency, and with intent to prefer certain of their creditors, and with the intent to evade the provisions of the said act under which said limited partnership was organized, pretended to dissolve said limited partnership, and for that purpose they caused to be filed, on or about December 20, 1882, a paper purporting to be a dissolution of said partnership, but that said paper writing was ineffectual for the purpose of effecting any dissolution of said limited partnership, and was a mere device, contrived by said Boies, Fay, Conkey and Graves, to evade the provi-. sions of said Limited Partnership act, and to give color of authority and validity to the acts of said Fay and Conkey in the execution of judgment notes and confessions of judgments thereafter to be entered against them; that after said pretended dissolution said Fay and Conkey pretended to carry on said business, and assumed to own all the assets of said limited partnership; that said Boies and Graves pretended to release and convey their interest in the limited partnership assets to said Fay and Conkey, but that such release or conveyance thus executed was wholly inoperative, and fraudulent and void as against the complainant and other creditors of said limited partnership, and made with the intent to hinder, delay and defraud such creditors; that under said act of the General Assembly of Illinois under which said limited partnership was formed, all the assets of the said limited partnership were secured and pledged to the payment of the debts ratably, and that it was the duty of said Boies, Fay, Conkey and Graves, when they first had knowledge of the insolvency of said limited partnership, or at the time of their pretended dissolution thereof, to have some competent trustee appointed to take possession and charge of the assets of said partnership and convert the same into money, and distribute it ratably among the creditors of said limited partnership; that on January 22,1883, in pursuance of said fraudulent scheme and contrivance, said Benjamin B. Fay and Lucius W. Conkey executed their judgment notes, payable on demand, with warrants of attorney annexed, as follows: One judgment note to the First National Bank of Chicago, for §40,000; one to said Julius K. Graves, (special partner,) for §17,500; one to John H. Lull, for §2500; one to George E. Johnson, for §5000; one to J. W. Doane & Co., •for §15,000; another to J. W. Doane & Co., for §9853.18; and one to Mary Murison, for §1500; that on said January 22, 1883, there were entered, in and by the Superior Court of Cook county, judgments against said Benjamin B. Fay and Lucius W. Conkey upon each of said notes, in pursuance of the warrants of attorney thereto annexed, together with costs and five per cent attorney’s fees, as follows: One judgment in favor of the First National Bank of Chicago, for §42,000; one judgment in favor of Julius K. Graves, (special partner,) for §18,375; one in favor of John H. Lull, for §2625; one in favor of George E. Johnson, for §5250; one in favor of J. W. Doane & Co., for §15,750; one in favor of J. W. Doane & Co., for §19,345.83; one in favor of Mary Murison, for §1620; that on January 22, 1883, in the further pursuance of the said fraudulent scheme and contrivance, the said Benjamin B. Fay and Lucius W. Conkey executed other judgment notes, payable on demand, with warrants of attorney annexed: one to Julius K. Graves, for §27,000; one to the Commercial National Bank of Dubuque, Iowa, for §14,250; one to the Dubuque County Bank, for §11,900; one to the Importers and Traders’ National Bank, for §16,000; one to the Merchants’ National Bank of Ohio, for §4298.17; one to J. L. Dobbins, for §840; one to Alvin F. Shumway, for §6990; one to- Addison B. Robinson, for §1100; one to the Bay State Sugar Refining Company, for §10,000; one to the First National Bank of Westboro, Mass., for §11,000; one to Hiram A. Sheldon, for §5500; one to Martha J. Fay, for §3700; one to D. C. Adams, for §1770.64; one to the Necedah Lumber Company, for §1350; and one to Walter Potter for $4300; that on the same day there were entered, in and by the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of Illinois, at Chicago, judgments against said Benjamin B. Fay and Lucius W. Conkey upon each of said last named notes, in pursuance of said warrants of attorney thereto annexed, with costs and five per cent attorney’s fees, as follows: In favor of Julius K. Graves, for $28,350; the Commercial National Bank of Dubuque, for $14,962.50; the Dubuque County Bank of Dubuque,.for $12,495; the Importers and Traders’ National Bank, for $16,800; the Merchants’ National Bank of Ohio, for $4508.97; J. L. Dobbins, for $882; Alvin F. Shumway, for $7339.50; Addison B. Robinson, for $1155; the Bay State Sugar Refining Company, for $10,500; the First National Bank of Westboro, Mass., for $12,600 ; Hiram A. Sheldon, for $5775; Martha J. Fay, for $3885 ; D. C.

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Bluebook (online)
40 N.E. 974, 156 Ill. 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crouch-v-first-national-bank-ill-1895.