Feltenstein v. Stein

45 N.E. 502, 157 Ill. 19
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 45 N.E. 502 (Feltenstein v. Stein) 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
Feltenstein v. Stein, 45 N.E. 502, 157 Ill. 19 (Ill. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is a contest between appellants claiming to be judgment creditors of one Weissenbach, an insolvent debtor, and appellee as assignee under a general assignment for the benefit of creditors, made by said debtor. The question is, whether the judgments are entitled to liens upon the debtor’s property superior to the rights of the assignee, or whether the latter took the property free of any liens, created by said judgments.

The facts in relation to the entry of the judgments are as follows: During Saturday, June 3, 1893, and until late in the afternoon of that day, appellants and Weissenbach had been in conference in relation to the indebtedness of the latter to the former, and he had executed to them judgment notes. One of these notes for §5000.00 was without valid consideration, and was finally withdrawn without the entry of judgment thereon. On Sunday, June 4,1893, and in the early part of Sunday evening, Weissenbach was in consultation with some of his friends and creditors with a view of raising money, so that he could continue his business, which was conducted at two stores, one on Milwaukee avenue and one on Halsted street in Chicago, at each of which places h'e had a stock of goods and merchandise. The negotiations fell through.

One of the attorneys of appellants, and one or more of his clerks, and one or more of the appellants, were in the office of said attorneys before and. after midnight on Sunday, June 4, 1893. There, the declarations and cognovits were prepared for entering judgments on the judgment notes. Stevens, a deputy sheriff, had been found at 11 o’clock in the evening, and, at 12:30 A. M. on June 5, 1893, he and said attorney, and a brother of the attorney, went to the Brevoort House in Chicago, and there the attorney awakened from his sleep a judge of the circuit court of Cook county, who had retired to his bed. The narrs. and cognovits in six cases were then and there presented to said judge, and he signed his name to an endorsement upon the papers in each case in the words and figures following: “Enter judgment herein for........dollars.” In the meantime, one of appellants and a clerk of said attorney had taken a carriage and gone after one of the deputies of the clerk of the circuit court. The deputy clerk arrived at the court house at about 8 or 10 minutes before 2 o’clock on the morning of Monday, June 5, 1893, and lighted the gas, and placed some of the books within reach. About 2, or a few minutes thereafter, the attorney came in with the papers containing the judge’s endorsement, and with executions already prepared, except the signatures and numbers. The deputy clerk marked the papers filed as of June 5, 1893; wrote the general numbers of the cases in the execution docket, but nothing else, not the title of the cases, nor the amounts of the judgments; put the general, execution and fee-book numbers on the executions and signed and sealed them ; and then went with said attorney to the waiting place of the deputy sheriff in the neighborhood of the court house, aud there delivered the executions to him. The judgments were not written up upon the judgment record at that time, nor until after 8 o’clock in the forenoon of that day. The deputy sheriff returned to the sheriff’s office in the court house and stamped the first of the executions as having been received at 2:80 A. M. on June 5, 1893, and each of the others as received one moment later than the pi-eceding one.

The facts in regard to the execution of the assignment are as follows: Weissenbach feeling uneasy about the judgment notes he had signed, and fearing that some advantage had been taken of him, particularly as one of the notes for $5000.00 represented no actual indebtedness, consulted an attorney on Sunday evening, and went a second time to the house of the latter between 12 and 1 o’clock on the morning of June 5, 1893, in company with a friend named Herman. The three came down to the attorney’s office, and, on the way down, Weissenbach told the attorney, that he had on that evening executed a bill of sale of the Halsted street stock to a creditor named Rosenberg, to whom he owed $9000.00. After they reached the attorney’s office, about one o’clock, or shortly thereafter, the attorney advised Weissenbach to make a general assignment for the benefit of his creditors, and he reluctantly consented to do so. A deed of assignment was then drawn and signed by Weissenbach; and the attorney-placed his seal upon the blank certificate of acknowledgment. He and Weissenbach and Herman then went to a drug store distant less than a block from the court house, where John S. McConnell was in charge. The matter was explained to McConnell, and he consented to act as assignee. His name was inserted in the deed of assignment, and he signed a written acceptance of the trust, endorsed upon the deed. The deed and acceptance were acknowledged before the attorney as notary, who filled out the certificate to that effect. The deed was then and there formally delivered by Weissenbach, the assignor, to McConnell, the assignee, at the hour of two o’clock and sixteen or seventeen minutes on the morning of June 5, 1893. The evidence is clear and undisputed, that it was not later than 2:18 A. M. At the same time the attorney said to Weissenbach, “Deliver the keys and possession of the store to Mr. McConnell” (meaning the store on Milwaukee avenue). Thereupon Weissenbach delivered the keys of said store to McConnell with the remark : “You now have possession of the store.” Weissenbach had locked the store on Saturday evening, and taken the keys with him, and it does not appear that the store was open on Sunday. Weissenbach and his attorney and Herman and McConnell then went to the court house; and the attorney, seeing a light in the sheriff’s office, went in and found Stevens plhcing his stamp upon the last one of the executions, and asked him if he had executions against Weissenbach, and was told by the deputy sheriff that the executions had been delivered to him at 2:30 o’clock, and replied to that statement, that the delivery was twelve minutes too late, as an assignee had been appointed twelve minutes before 2:30 o’clock. The attorney and McConnell and Weissenbach and Herman then jumped into a carriage in front of the court house, and drove to the store on Milwaukee avenue, and there McConnell took possession at once, and posted the following sign on the door: “This store is in possession of John S. McConnell, assignee.” The deed of assignment was filed in the recorder’s office of Cook county at 6:45 o’clock on the morning of June 5,1893, and with the clerk of the county court at 8:30 o’clock on that morning.

When the deputy sheriff was told that an assignment had been made before the delivery of the executions to him, he at once communicated the fact to the attorney of appellants, and told the latter that he could not make a. levy if an assignee had been appointed, as he had received no indemnifying bond. But the deputy sheriff and said attorney and one of appellants went at once to the Halsted street store to make a levy, and found it in the possession of Rosenberg, and then to the store on Milwaukee avenue, and found McConnell in possession there.

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.E. 502, 157 Ill. 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feltenstein-v-stein-ill-1895.