F. E. Royston & Co. v. John Spry Lumber Co.

85 Ill. App. 223, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 893
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 12, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 85 Ill. App. 223 (F. E. Royston & Co. v. John Spry Lumber Co.) 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
F. E. Royston & Co. v. John Spry Lumber Co., 85 Ill. App. 223, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 893 (Ill. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

Prior to the entry of the judgments herein recited, Joseph W. Gregg, Daniel H. Gregg and Arthur A. Chapell were partners, as Gregg Brothers & Chapell, in the business of merchants at the village of Triumph in La Salle county. On December 2, 1897, judgments were entered against said firm, and executions issued and placed in the hands of the sheriff of said county in favor of the following named plaintiffs, for the amounts and in the order named, viz.: Elgin National Bank, $802.55; C. E. Chapell, $2,858.98; A. E. Wheeler, $120; John Pritzloff Hardware Co., $492; Mentí ota Hational Bank, $275.73; F. E. Royston & Co., $557. On December 3, 1897, Madden & Goedtner recovered a judgment against said firm for $1,658.20, and had execution issued and delivered to the sheriff. He levied the first of these executions upon the tangible firm property, which was all personalty, and advertised it to be sold December 17, 1897. Prior in date to said judgments and executions was an execution from the Circuit Court of McHenry County, in favor of Edward Morton, against a former firm of Gregg & Lamson, for $322.25, which was also levied upon the interest of J. W. Gregg in said firm property. On December 6, 1897, John Spry Lumber Company (hereinafter called the Lumber Company) obtained two judgments against Gregg Brothers & Ghapell, in the Circuit Court of La Salle County, one for $2,000, and the other for $640.81, and had executions issued thereon and placed in the hands of the sheriff, who by its direction retained the former but returned the latter nulla bona. Thereupon the Lumber Company filed a general creditor’s bill against said debtor firm and Madden & Goedtner, based upon its said judgment for $640.81, execution upon which had been returned nulla bona. The main object of the original bill was to obtain a receiver and get control of the book accounts and bills receivable, some interest in which had already passed to Madden & Goedtner. A receiver was appointed and a part of said book accounts and bills receivable passed to his possession and were collected and distributed in a manner not here in controversy. The receivership did not relate to the property previously levied upon by the sheriff, nor affect his sale thereof. On December 15, 1897, the Lumber Company filed an amended bill attacking the judgments of Morton, C. E. Ghapell and Madden & Goedtner, and charging that C. E. Ghapell was a member óf the firm of Gregg Brothers & Ghapell, and that A. A. Ghapell was only the representative and agent of C. E. Ghapell in said firm. The prior judgment and execution creditors were made defendants. On December 16,1897, the Lumber Company obtained an injunction staying a sale by the sheriff under the Morton execution, and directing that after sale under the other executions the sheriff retain the proceeds as a fund in lieu of the property levied upon, and subject to all the rights of the parties as they might thereafter be determined. The bill was afterward again amended. It was answered by most of the defendants, and F. E. Royston & Co. filed a cross-bill, which was answered. The court heard the proofs, and on March 8, 1899, entered a decree. Of its many details only those need be stated which affect the matters of which complaint is here made in argument. The decree found that the judgment in favor of C. E. Chapell was by confession upon three judgment notes; one dated November 5, 1896, for $1,000, with interest at six per cent; one dated January 15, 1897, for $500, with interest at seven per cent; and one dated March 10, 1897, for $1,000, with interest at six per cent—the first and last each with an attorney fee; that interest had been paid on said several notes to July 15, 1897; and that said note of November 5, 1896, was not signed by the firm but by the several members thereof individually, and was not given for a firm debt. The decree provided that C. E. Chapell should only be paid the amount due on his second and third notes on December 2, 1897 (thus cutting out not only the first note but also interest on any part of said judgment after that date, and the attorney’s fees), and found that the executions of A. E. Wheeler and the John Pritzloff Hardware Company, and a balance renraining unpaid upon the execution of the Mendota National Bank, were entitled to be next paid, and that the Lumber Company was entitled to the balance of the fund in the hands of the sheriff prior to the other executions intervening between the executions of-. O. E. Chapell and the Lumber Company. It ordered the payment in full of the Wheeler and Hardware Co. executions and $141.72 on the Mendota Bank execution, and the payment to the Lumber Company of $985.68 on its $2,000 execution, being the balance, apparently, of the fund. The purpose seems to have been to pay those executions which would have been paid from the fund in the hands of the sheriff if O. E. Chapell’s execution had not been reduced, and then to pay the rest of the fund to the Lumber Company, thus giving the latter all the benefit of the reduction of 0. E. Chapell’s execution. The Lumber Company’s judgment of $640.81 was by the decree ordered paid out of the equitable assets in the hands of the receiver to the extent they would reach it after discharging prior liens upon said equitable assets. The decree directed that out of the reduced amount to be paid C. E. Chapell the sheriff pay the costs arising out of the issues litigated between the Lumber Company and 0. E. Chapell. The amount in the hands of the sheriff was insufficient to reach the execution of E. E. Eoyston & Co. by the distribution ordered, while if said several executions following that of C. E. Chapell had been paid in the order in which they reached the sheriff and were levied, Eoyston & Co. would have been paid in full as the result of the reduction of C. E. Chapell’s execution. Eoyston & Co. and the Lumber Company each prayed appeals and filed appeal bonds. Eoyston & Co. filed the present record, and the Lumbér Company and C. E. Chapell respectively assigned cross-errors thereon. C. E. Chapell complains because his execution was reduced and because he was deprived of interest and attorney fees and made to pay the costs. The Lumber Company complains because the C. E. Chapell execution was not wholly set aside. Eoyston & Co. complain because the Lumber Company was given priority over executions which were liens prior to its execution. These complaints present the main questions argued here.

Arthur A. Chapell 'was -the son of C. E. Chapell, and somewhat wild and inclined to spend money improperly. C. E. Chapell was instrumental in getting Gregg Brothers to take his son into partnership, but it is clear from the proofs (including a bill of sale to A. A. Chapell) that C. E. Chapell was not himself a member of the firm. The note to C. E. Chapell for $1,000, dated November 5, 1896, and signed by the several members of the firm, was for money which went into the firm business. According to the testimony of J. W. and D. H. Gregg it was money O. E. Chapell loaned to his son A. A. Chapell to be put into the firm as his son’s share .of the capital. The Greggs testified they signed the note at the request of C. E. Chapell, in order to make A. A- Chapell feel under obligations to them, but with a private understanding they would not be called upon to pay it. F. J. Hatheway testified A. A. Chapell told him he considered the $1,000 note a personal debt of his own to his father. On the other hand C. E. Chapell and A. A. Chapell testified that it was agreed by A. A. Chapell and the Greggs, before this $1,000 was loaned, that the firm should be responsible to C. E.

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Bluebook (online)
85 Ill. App. 223, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 893, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/f-e-royston-co-v-john-spry-lumber-co-illappct-1899.