Evangelical Slovak Women's Union v. Papanek

132 N.E.2d 20, 8 Ill. App. 2d 298
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 27, 1956
DocketGen. 46,618
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 132 N.E.2d 20 (Evangelical Slovak Women's Union v. Papanek) 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
Evangelical Slovak Women's Union v. Papanek, 132 N.E.2d 20, 8 Ill. App. 2d 298 (Ill. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

PRESIDING JUSTICE FRIEND

delivered the opinion of the conrt.

Evangelical Slovak Women’s Union, a corporation, filed proceedings in the Superior Court for the foreclosure of a trust deed. Pursuant to a master’s sale on August 23, 1934, the court on October 4, 1934 entered a deficiency decree against defendants Marie J. and William P. McLoughlin, her husband, in the amount of $6528.72. No execution ever issued. On January 13, 1953, some nineteen years later, plaintiff assigned the deficiency decree to Herman Brown who resided in the state of Michigan. The assignment was filed in the office of the clerk of the Superior Court on April 17, 1953.

Thereafter, on April 28, 1953, Brown, the assignee, brought suit at law against Marie J. McLoughlin in the Superior Court of Cook County for some $12,000, representing the amonnt of the decree plus accrued interest. On May 11,1954 defendant filed in the instant proceedings a verified petition to set aside the deficiency decree on the ground that she had not been served with summons. Her husband had died prior thereto. The merits of this defense are not an issne in this appeal. In her petition she also challenged the validity of the assignment for the following principal reasons: (a) the consideration paid by Brown was purely nominal; (b) the assignment was not executed under the corporate seal of Evangelical Slovak Women’s Union, or by authority of its directors; and (c) the assignment failed to state the amonnt of interest allegedly due on the decree.

June 9, 1954 Brown filed his verified answer to this petition, denying the allegations thereof relating to the alleged insufficiency of the assignment and stating that it was valid as against the defendant. The matter was then referred to a master in chancery who heard all the testimony as to the merits of the defense, and was then directed by the chancellor to file a preliminary report covering only the legal sufficiency of the assignment. The master filed such report on October 13,1954 finding that (a) the assignment was not a corporate assignment and was not executed pursuant to the authority or direction of the directors or under the corporate seal; (b) the acknowledgment of the assignment was void because the testimony of the notary showed that two of the officers who executed it did not appear before her; (c) there was no testimony to show who were the officers of the assignor, or whether they signed or delivered the assignment, or whether the assignee paid any consideration therefor; (d) the assignment was not executed as the corporate act of the assignor but by the assignors thereof in their individual capacities; and (e) the answer of the assignee failed to set forth under oath that he was the actual bona fide owner of the decree, or when and how he acquired it.

The only testimony taken by the master which is material to this appeal is that of the notary, Elizabeth Andrisek. After defendant had rested her case in chief, she called this witness in rebuttal. The assignee objected on the specific ground that her testimony was not proper in rebuttal, but the objection was overruled. This witness testified that she acknowledged the assignment as a notary public, but that the document was given to her for acknowledgment by Mrs. B. Spacek, who signed as secretary of the assignor; that she took the acknowledgment outside of the presence of Tanja B. Sturman and Zuzanna Benedek, who signed as president and treasurer of the assignor, but that she was familiar with the signatures of these persons. On cross-examination the assignee asked her to state if the signatures of these persons appeared on the document. General objection was made by defendant and sustained by the master. The assignee then offered to prove by this witness that the signatures on this document were the true signatures of Tanja B. Sturman and Zuzanna Benedek.

The assignee filed detailed objections to each and every adverse finding of the master, most of which were overruled. The decree appealed from was entered November 26, 1954. It sustained certain of the exceptions taken by the assignee to the master’s report, holding that the master should have found that acknowledgment of the assignment was unnecessary; that the acknowledgment was surplusage only; that the corporate seal was not required; that no consideration was required; that the question of consideration could not be raised by the defendant; and that the Civil Practice Act did not require the assignee to set forth in his answer to the petition to vacate the decree how he acquired title thereto. In these respects the decree is contrary to the basic conclusions of the master.

However, the court found that the assignment was executed by Tanja B. Sturman and Zuzanna Benedek in their individual capacities and not as officers of the assigning corporation; that the assignee did not prove that they were the officers of the assignor when the assignment was executed or that they executed the assignment as such officers; that the assignment does not indicate that it was executed by the authority of the assignor, a significant consideration in view of the fact that the assignor was not in the business of selling judgments; and that the officers had no implied power to assign the judgment. The decree found that the burden rested upon the assignee to make proof of the corporate authority, and accordingly that the assignee had no right to resist the petition of the defendant to vacate the deficiency decree. The master was therefore directed to proceed to file a subsequent report upon the merits of the petition to vacate the decree. That phase of the case is still pending in the Superior Court.

At the outset of her brief defendant argues that the decree appealed from “was an interim decree based on an interim master’s report”; that it was not final and therefore not appealable. Although no motion was made to dismiss the appeal, defendant suggests that the court should do so of its own motion. Walters v. Mercantile Nat. Bank of Chicago, 380 Ill. 477, and Reichwein v. McCarthy, 300 Ill. App. 237, are cited in support of this contention. Both these decisions are readily distinguishable. In the Walters case the Circuit Court entered a decree construing only one provision of a will, leaving the remaining important questions of construction undisposed of, and the rights of various parties undetermined. The Supreme Court dismissed the appeal with the observation that section 50 of the Civil Practice Act [Ill. Rev. Stats. 1955, ch. 110, § 50; Jones Ill. Stats. Ann. 104.050] does not have the effect of authorizing a court to construe a will by piecemeal and to enter separate decrees, at different times, leaving the construction of all other matters to future litigation and determination. In the Reichwein case the special issue as to whether or not plaintiff had the right to institute foreclosure proceedings was presented for determination; the decree of the trial court found that plaintiff had such right. The Appellate Court dismissed an appeal from the decree, holding that it did not dispose of any of the questions that the court would be obliged to consider in the foreclosure, nor did it adjudicate the rights of the parties. The decree in the instant proceeding determined Brown’s rights and has in effect finally eliminated him from the proceedings; it decided that he has no rights in this cause, denied him the right “to participate in any way in the hearing on the petition of said defendant, Marie J.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 N.E.2d 20, 8 Ill. App. 2d 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evangelical-slovak-womens-union-v-papanek-illappct-1956.