First National Bank v. Starkey

268 Ill. 22
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 268 Ill. 22 (First National Bank v. Starkey) 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
First National Bank v. Starkey, 268 Ill. 22 (Ill. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was a bill -filed by appellant, the First National Bank of Lincoln, Illinois, against Charles A. Nicholson and Harry E. Starkey, executors of the last will and testament of Aaron B. Nicholson, deceased, in their capacity as executors, and also against Mary B.- Nicholson and Albert R. Nicholson, each in his individual capacity, to reach their distributive interests in the estate of said Aaron B. Nicholson. Charles A. Nicholson was also joined as a defendant in his individual capacity. Said Mary B., Albert R. and Charles A. Nicholson filed their answer to said bill, to which exceptions were filed by appellant. These exceptions were sustained, and said defendants thereupon obtained leave of court to file amended answers, the coming in of such amended answers to await the decision of this court with respect to the action of the chancellor in sustaining the executors’ demurrer. Said executors interposed a general and special demurrer to the bill, which, on a hearing, was sustained and the bill dismissed for want of equity. Appellant excepted and elected to stand by its bill and perfected an appeal to the Appellate Court. That court affirmed the decree of the circuit court and granted a certificate of importance to this court. This appeal followed.

The bill alleges that on November 2, 1912, appellant obtained a judgment by confession against Charles A. and Albert R. Nicholson for $2612.21; that on the 16th day of November, 1912, appellant, in a foreclosure proceeding, obtained a deficiency decree against Mary B. and Charles A. Nicholson for $6012.32, and execution issued on both judgments; that on October 3, 1912, Aaron B. Nicholson departed this life, testate, his will being duly probated in the county court of Logan county, by which he bequeathed his personal property, amounting to about $30,000, to Mary B. , Charles A. and Albert R. Nicholson and five other persons not parties to this suit, residuary legatees, share and share alike; that appellee Charles A. Nicholson is the husband of said Mary B. Nicholson and a brother of Albert R. Nicholson, and that the appellee Harry E. Starkey is a brother-in-law of Charles A. Nicholson; that. Charles A. Nicholson and Harry E. Starkey were named as executors of said will and letters testamentary have been issued to them as such by the said county court of Logan county, and they have since been acting as such executors, without bond. The bill further alleges that at' the time of said Aaron B. Nicholson’s death, according to the land records of Logan county, he was the owner in fee of certain real estate (describing it) located in said city of Lincoln; that appellant has been informed that said Aaron B. Nicholson, some time prior to his death, conveyed said premises by deed to Mary B. Nicholson, and that said Mary B. Nicholson, for the purpose of hindering, delaying and defrauding appellant in the collection of its judgment, has refused to file said deed for record, and the appellant does not know whether she took a life estate or a fee in said property and is unable to ascertain such fact; that said judgment debtors, Mary B. and Albert R. Nicholson, have no property of any kind or description, except their distributive shares coming to them as legatees under said will and other than any interest that said Mary B. Nicholson may have in said real estate; that said Mary B. and Albert R. Nicholson have stated that they propose to prevent the appellant from satisfying said judgment out of their respective distributive shares; that although the said appellant has applied to said executors for information as to the amount of said distributive shares under the terms of said will and as to when the executors would apply to the county court of Logan county for an order of distribution, said executors have refused to give appellant such information or any information with respect .to said matters; that appellant is without any remedy, under the laws of this State, to recover on said judgment except by these proceedings, and prays that said executors may be required to give notice to the appellant of the time when they shall apply to said county court for an order of distribution as to the estate of said Aaron B. Nicholson, and that they be required at such time to set up in their petition for distribution said judgment claims of appellant against Mary B. and Albert R. Nicholson and be required to pay to appellant so much of their distributive shares as may appear necessary to satisfy the amount of said judgments, and that appellees be restrained from paying to Mary B. and Albert R., either upon partial or final distribution, any part of said legacies until the further order of court. The bill also prays that said Mary B. Nicholson be required to make full discovery as to her interest in the real estate conveyed to her by said Aaron B. Nicholson in his lifetime.

One of the grounds urged in the demurrer was that the bill is multifarious. To lay down any rule universally applicable as to multifariousness, or to say what constitutes multifariousness as an abstract proposition, is, under the authorities, utterly impossible. (Story’s Eq. Pl.—10th ed.— sec. 530.) There is no settled and inflexible rule as to deciding whether a pleading is multifarious. The question is one which must be determined largely by the circumstances of each particular case. (14 Ency. of Pl. & Pr. 195.) Under recent decisions it is frequently held that the objection of multifariousness usually raises merely a question of convenience in conducting the suit, and calls for the decision of the court simply upon the question whether, in its discretion, the various causes set forth in the bill should be tried in a single suit or should be divided and tried in two or more suits, or whether a defendant who is a necessary party in respect to some matters covered by the bill is so connected with the other matters involved as to make him a proper party in respect to them. (Graves v. Corbin, 132 U. S. 571; North American Ins. Co. v. Yates, 214 id. 272; Story’s Eq. Pl.—10th ed.—sec. 271, note a.) In spite, however, of the absence of any general rule as to what constitutes multifariousness, it is generally held that there are certain principles and tests by which that defect may be discovered in any particular case. By multifariousness, says a noted author, is meant improperly joining in one bill distinct and independent matters and thereby confounding them. (Story’s Eq. Pl.—10th ed.—sec. 271.) This is one of the tests that is generally applied in all jurisdictions. Another test that is frequently applied is as to whether the causes of action united in the bill require separate briefs and decrees or separate defenses. Another test often employed is whether the bill, fairly~construed, shows a single object and seeks to enforce one common right. (14 Ency. of Pl. & Pr. 197.) Frequently the objection raised, though termed multifariousness, is, in fact, more properly a misjoinder; that is to say, the cases or claims united in the bill are of so different a character that the court will not permit them to be litigated in one record. It may be that the plaintiffs and defendants are parties to the whole of the transactions which form the subject of the suit, and nevertheless those transactions may be so dissimilar that the court will not allow them to be joined together but will require distinct records. But what is more familiarly understood by the term “multifariousness,” as applied to a bill, is where a party is able to say that he is brought as a defendant upon a record with a large portion of which he has no connection whatever.

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Bluebook (online)
268 Ill. 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-starkey-ill-1915.