Eichelkraut v. Tracey

273 Ill. App. 545, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 932
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 19, 1934
DocketGen. No. 8,688
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 273 Ill. App. 545 (Eichelkraut v. Tracey) 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
Eichelkraut v. Tracey, 273 Ill. App. 545, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 932 (Ill. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dove

delivered the opinion of the court.

On September 30, 1931, The National City Bank of Ottawa suspended business and subsequently Urban Tracey, plaintiff in error, was appointed receiver thereof. On January 4, 1932, as such receiver, he filed in the circuit court of LaSalle county, at the direction of the comptroller of the currency, his petition praying for an order authorizing him to sell certain bonds of the bank, some of which had been pledged in the trust department of the bank and others deposited with the auditor of public accounts of this State. A hearing was had upon" this petition and the prayer thereof granted. Subsequently and upon notice to the receiver, leave was granted Charles H. Eichelkraut and William Eichelkraut, partners, doing a general contracting business as Eichelkraut Brothers, to intervene and file a cross petition and their cross petition was filed and subsequently amended. To this cross petition Urban Tracey, the receiver, and Oscar Nelson, auditor of public accounts of the State of Illinois, were made parties defendant. Separate answers were filed by each defendant, to which replications were filed and the cause set for hearing. Thereafter, but before a hearing was had upon the merits of the cross petition, the receiver filed his petition in the circuit court, by which he sought to remove the cause to the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. The circuit court denied the prayer of this petition, and the receiver then caused a transcript of the record to be filed in the United States District Court, but that court remanded the cause to the circuit court of LaSalle county. Subsequently, a hearing was had upon the cross petition, and a decree rendered, granting defendants in error the relief sought in the cross petition and the record is brought to this court for review by writ of error.

The cross petition, as amended, alleged that in April, 1931, Eichelkraut Brothers entered into a contract with the Ottawa Building Corporation, by which they undertook to reconstruct the Gayety Theater in Ottawa, and were to receive therefor $28,420; that this contract price was to be deposited by the Ottawa Building Corporation in The National City Bank of Ottawa, and was there to remain intact as a trust fund until the final completion of the contract and until E. P. Rupert, the architect, furnished a certificate showing its completion in accordance with the reconstruction plans and specifications, and that upon the furnishing of such certificate, the bank should thereupon pay to Eichelkraut Brothers said contract price.

The cross petition further alleged that the Ottawa Building Corporation deposited said sum with said bank in trust and that the same was so received by the bank, as evidenced by the following instrument directed to Willard S. Gay and Dorothy Mills Gay, owners of the real estate upon which the theater was to be reconstructed, viz.:

‘ ‘ Ottawa, Illinois, May 12, 1931.

“To Willard S. Gay and Dorothy Mills Gay:

“As Cashier of the National City Bank of Ottawa, Illinois, the undersigned hereby certifies that there is on deposit at this time a certain trust account in the National City Bank of Ottawa, Illinois, known as the ‘National City Bank, Trustee, Ottawa Building Corporation,’ in the sum of Twenty-eight thousand four hundred twenty Dollars ($28,420.00), which has been deposited in said trust account to guarantee the rebuilding of the burned building on the real estate known as Lot One (1) and the North Sixty (N. 60) feet of Lot Two (2), in Block Eighty-five (85), in the State’s Addition to the City of Ottawa, in the County of La Salle and State of Illinois.

“I further certify that said sum of Twenty-eight thousand four hundred twenty Dollars ($28,420.00) will remain intact in such trust fund until the final completion of the remodeling, reconstruction or rebuilding of said structure, as per the terms of a certain lease agreement recorded on February 5, 1931, in the Recorder’s Office of said La Salle County, Illinois, in Book 687 of records, page 308, and as is more fully set out in detail in a contract now on file with said National City Bank in connection with said trust account, and which said contract is executed by Charles Eichelkraut and William Eichelkraut, doing business as Eichelkraut Brothers, of the one part, and the Ottawa Building Corporation, of the other part, and until E. P. Rupert, the architect of said building, or his successor, shall have furnished a certificate showing the final completion of said structure, in accordance with the provisions of the contract therefor. Upon the furnishing of said certificate by said architect, the said National City Bank, of Ottawa, Illinios, will pay to- said Eichelkraut Brothers the said sum of Twenty-eight Thousand Four Hundred Twenty Dollars ($28,420.00).

“S. R. Lewis,

“Cashier, National City Bank”

The cross petition further alleged that petitioners complied with their contract in every particular, and received a certificate from the architect on September 29,1931, and by and with the consent of Willard S. Gay and Dorothy Mills Gay, the bank paid petitioners $18,714.25 by crediting that amount upon notes of petitioners which the bank then held, and that there remains in said account the sum of $9,705.75; that on November 7, 1931, petitioners delivered to the receiver a final certificate from the architect, together with a written instrument executed by Willard S. Gay and Dorothy Mills Gay, by which they consented to the payment of this balance to petitioners.

The cross petition further alleged that the National City Bank was a national bank and qualified under the laws of the United States to act as trustee and in other fiduciary capacities and so acting, it did segregate from time to time from the general assets of the bank, certain bonds and securities as required by law. The petition charges, however, that the bank did not segregate any of its assets in order to protect and secure the money so held by it on deposit as trustee for petitioners. The cross petition further alleged that under the laws of this State, said bank also qualified to carry on a general trust business, and that at the time it suspended business it had on deposit with the auditor of public accounts bonds in the principal sum of $50,000, issued by the sanitary district of Chicago, which were held by the auditor for the benefit of petitioners and other trust creditors. The cross petition prayed that these bonds be sold for the benefit of petitioners and other trust creditors and the proceeds applied toward the payment of their respective claims.

The answer of the auditor of public accounts admits that he has in his possession and control, as auditor, bonds in the principal sum of $50,000 held by him to secure the trust creditors of the bank, but he neither admits nor denies the other allegations' of the cross petition.

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273 Ill. App. 545, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 932, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eichelkraut-v-tracey-illappct-1934.