Eames v. Becker

185 Ill. App. 138, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 988
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 3, 1914
DocketGen. No. 17,486
StatusPublished

This text of 185 Ill. App. 138 (Eames v. Becker) 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
Eames v. Becker, 185 Ill. App. 138, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 988 (Ill. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Clark

delivered the opinion of the court.

On December 5, 1902, an order was entered in the County Court in this ease ordering a distribution of seventeen per cent, of the amount of claims allowed, after payment of $3,000 to the attorney for the assignee, the order also permitting the assignee to retain $1,000 for his services. After compliance with the order about $150 was left in the hands of the assignee undistributed.

On December 17, 1902, an order was entered allowing Kate Becker to file her petition, and a petition was filed January 27, 1903. This petition set forth that the petitioner had been the occupant of an apartment in a building which was in possession of the assignee as part of the estate of the assignor, and suffered an accident caused by the railing of a porch giving away, for which petitioner claimed damages to the extent of $10,-000. To this petition an answer in the nature of a demurrer was filed by the assignee on January 27th.

On April 4, 1903, the assignee was ruled to file a report showing the condition of the estate, and it was ordered that the time for Kate Becker to file an amended petition be extended fifteen days. No amended petition, however, was filed.

On July 11, 1903, an order was entered denying without prejudice a motion of Kate Becker for leave to file a motion to vacate the order of December 5, 1902.

On July 15, 1904, the petitioner was given leave to make the assignee a party defendant to a suit in a proper court. No further order seems to have been entered in the case until April 1, 1909, when leave was given to Kate Becker to file her claim “against said estate.” On October 29th of the same year an order was entered on her motion, the court finding that there was due her $2,000 on a judgment, with interest at five per cent, from July 11, 1908, to October 27, 1909, and costs of the Circuit Court amounting to $10, the total amount allowed her being $2,139.15.

On November 30,1909, the assignee was ruled to file an account showing the condition of the estate, which was afterwards done.

On May 10, 1910, the appellee, Kate Becker, was given leave to file objections and exceptions to the petition filed by the assignee December 5, 1902, also to the report of the assignee filed April 9,1903, and to the report filed December 8, 1909, the last being made conformably to the order of November 30,1909.

On December 3,1910, an order was entered upon the objections and exceptions, the court finding that sufficient funds of the estate came into the hands of the assignee to pay all costs and expenses of administration, and all preferred claims allowed, as well as the claim of the petitioner, Kate Becker; that after notice to the assignee of the existence of the claim of Kate Beelcer-, and while sufficient estate funds were in his hands to pay all costs of administration and all preferred claims and the claim of Kate Becker as allowed, assignee procured the court to make the order of distribution of December 5, 1902, without notice to Kate Becker, and thereafter assignee made distribution of the funds of the estate in his hands, pursuant to said order, leaving the claim of Kate Becker unpaid; and it was ordered, adjudged and decreed that said order of distribution, in so far as it affected the rights of Kate Becker in the matter of payment of her claim as allowed, be vacated and set aside; that the exceptions taken by Kate Becker to assignee’s reports of April 9, 1903 and December 18, 1909, be sustained, and that the assignee pay to Kate Becker out of the -funds which had theretofore come into his hands, as assignee, the amount of her claim as allowed.

Exception was taken by the assignee to this order, and thereafter an appeal perfected to this court.

It has been held that the order was a final one and properly the subject of an appeal. Becker v. Eames, 257 Ill. 389.

The record discloses the fact that on the 20th of August, 1902, the assignee, appellant, Eames, received from the master in chancery a deed in a foreclosure' suit against the property, part of which was occupied by the appellee as tenant, under a certificate of sale which had been assigned by the Boyal Trust Company to Eames, assignee. It appears that the estate of the Calumet State Bank, the insolvent, had a five-sixths interest, and the Lemont State Bank a one-sixth interest in the property. During the period in which Fames so held it and was collecting rents, on July 21,1902, the appellee was injured by falling from the back porch of the building.

On the 23rd of October, 1902, the assignee, together with the receiver of the Lemont State Bank, petitioned the County Court for leave to sell the property, and it was ordered sold. The money was received by the assignee about November 21, 1902.

Mr. Errant, at one time attorney for appellee, testified that he was called into the matter in August, 1902, about a month after the accident; that he interviewed Mr. Arnold, one of the attorneys for the assignee, about the claim several times during the months of September, October and November of that year; that Arnold told him during one of these interviews in November that he did not think there was any liability ; that there was no money on hand to speak of at that time, but that this property was there; that the assignee was trying to sell it, and that as soon as it was sold there would be some money on hand and that he would then take up the question of settling; that the witness asked Arnold whether he should file a claim or petition, and that Arnold said that would not be.necessary as the witness would be kept posted with reference to things as they occurred and when it was necessary witness would be given plenty of notice, but as the property was still unsold and as there was no money on hand action was unnecessary, although he did not want anything done that would perhaps interfere with the sale of the property.

Joseph P. Eames, the son of Melville C. Eames, who was at that time associated with Mr. Arnold as attorney for the appellee, testified that he was present at all of the interviews between Errant and Arnold; that Arnold told Errant that he had heard something of the case through the witness and the assignee; that he did not see how there was any liability; that there was some conversation about the law of the case and the exact facts; that Mr. Arnold did not say to Mr, Errant, “We haven’t any money to speak of now. We are trying to dispose of the South Englewood property and as soon as we sell the property, we can take up the matter of settlement”; that Errant never asked Arnold or the witness whether he should file a claim, and that neither Arnold nor himself ever said that they did not want anything done that would interfere with the sale of the property by filing the claim; that the witness and Arnold interviewed the judge of the County -Court in his chambers between November 21 and December 4, 1902, stating that there was money on hand sufficient to declare a dividend; that it had just been received on the sale of the property; that Errant had called upon Arnold with reference to Mrs.

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Related

Becker v. Eames
100 N.E. 998 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 Ill. App. 138, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 988, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eames-v-becker-illappct-1914.