Fitchburg Steam Engine Co. v. Potter

71 N.E. 933, 211 Ill. 138, 1904 Ill. LEXIS 3272
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 71 N.E. 933 (Fitchburg Steam Engine Co. v. Potter) 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
Fitchburg Steam Engine Co. v. Potter, 71 N.E. 933, 211 Ill. 138, 1904 Ill. LEXIS 3272 (Ill. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

The Appellate Court for the First District reversed the decree of the superior court of Cook county foreclosing two trust deeds on the property of the Chicago Beach Hotel Company, and declaring the priorities of holders of obligations of the hotel company secured by said trust deeds, and granting other relief, and remanded the cause, with directions to enter a final decree as specified in the judgment of reversal. The Fitchburg Steam Engine Company prosecuted an appeal from that branch of the decree in which it was interested, and F. K. Whittemore, Samuel A. Tolman and the Commercial Loan and Trust Company brought the record in review in this court by means of a writ of error which they procured to be issued out of this court for that purpose. The causes were consolidated and presented in this court as one case.

On January 5, 1893, the Chicago Beach Hotel Company, a corporation, issued two hundred and fifty bonds of the company, each for the sum of $1000, payable on the first day of January, 1901, bearing interest at six percentum per annum, and to secure the payment of the bonds executed and acknowledged a trust deed to the Northern Trust Company of Chicago, as trustee, whereby it mortgaged the unexpired portion of a lease for the term of ninety years of a certain piece or parcel of property, being part of the fractional north-west quarter of section 12, town 38, north, range 14, east of the third principal meridian, which was more particularly described by metes and bounds in the trust deed. Eight of these bonds were not disposed of by the hotel company. The hotel building was completed and furnished at an expense which largely exceeded the amount realized from the sale of the bonds, and the company became indebted to a number of firms and corporations. Among other of such creditors the hotel company became indebted to the' Fitchburg Steam Engine Company for certain boilers which were installed in the hotel building, and the appellant steam engine company claimed a lien under the mechanic’s lien laws of the State.

On the 24th day of August, 1893, in pursuance of a plan for retiring the bonds secured by the before mentioned trust deed and to secure funds to adjust its other obligations, the hotel company executed its bonds in the total sum of $400,000 and executed a second trust deed, whereby it mortgaged the same real estate described in the first trust deed, and. also the furniture and fixtures of the hotel, to secure the payment of the last mentioned bonds, and also executed a chattel mortgage on the fixtures and furniture of the hotel as like indemnity for the said last series of bonds. Bonds secured by this second trust deed were exchanged for all of the bonds which were secured by the first trust deed, except such of said bonds of the first issue as were held by the plaintiffs in error and by the defendants in error Gormley, Potter, Hately, Witters and Mulliken. The affairs of the hotel company were not prosperous, and the company subsequently became involved in further indebtedness, failed to pay the ground rent upon the lease, interest upon its bonded indebtedness, the demand of the appellant engine company, and other claims and demands against it.

On the 12th day of January, 1899, the Equitable Trust Company, as trustee in the second trustfodeed executed by the hotel company, and Edwin A. Potter, James H. Gormley and John 0. Hately, the owners of ten of the first series of bonds issued by the hotel company, filed in the superior court of Cook county this their bill in chancery against the hotel company, the Fitchburg Steam Engine Company, F. K. Whittemore, Samuel A. Tolman, Pearl C. Witters, E. W. Mulliken and the Commercial Loan and Trust Company, owners and holders of certain of the bonds of the hotel company of the first series, for a decree directing an accounting to be had and taken; “that an accounting may be taken of the number and amount of said first and second bonds, and the respective over-due coupons thereto, outstanding under said two trust deeds, and of the interest due upon the same, and of the amount of said first bonds outstanding for value and not pledged or deposited to secure the said second bonds, and of the amount of the said first bonds outstanding for value and pledged or deposited to secure said second bonds; that the said trust deed or mortgage securing said first bonds may be found to constitute a first lien on all of the property of said hotel company for the payment of the said §250,000 first bond's and the coupons thereto; that the said hotel company may be decreed to pay to your orators, said complainant bondholders, said sum, to-wit, §40,000, advanced and paid, as aforesaid, for ground rent, insurance and taxes, and that the same may be decreed to be a first and prior lien on the premises herein described and the improvements thereon, and that said hotel company may be decreed to pay the amount so found due qn said first bonds not pledged or deposited, and such part of the amount so found due on said first bonds pledged or deposited, as aforesaid, as may be necessary to pay the amount so found due on said outstanding second bonds, with costs, expenses, solicitors’ and trustee’s fees and the allowances (as herein alleged proper) to be fixed by the court;” and for foreclosure of the two trust deeds executed by the hotel company, and for other relief.

Answers were filed to the bill and replications to the answers, and the cause was referred to master in chancery Barber to take the proof and report the same, together with his conclusions of law and fact. The contention of complainants in the bill was, that such of the bonds of the hotel company of the first series as had been delivered by the holder to the Equitable Trust Company and bonds of the second series received therefor, were not surrendered to be canceled but to be held by the trust company as unsnrrendered and unpaid, and as collateral security for the bonds of the hotel company of the second series which had been delivered in exchange for said bonds of the first series, and that they were entitled to a decree foreclosing the first trust deed given to secure the principal and all accruing interest on the first series of bonds as a first lien on the property of the hotel company. The contention of the defendants to the bill was, that such bonds of the first series were surrendered to the trust company to be canceled and were paid by the acceptance of bonds of the hotel company of the second series, and that the lien of the first trust deed executed by the hotel company had thereby become extinguished, except as to the bonds of the first series that had not been surrendered to the Equitable Trust Company.

The master in chancery, on the 5th day of July, 1901, reported the proofs introduced before him by the respective parties, and presented what purported to be his findings of the facts established by the proofs and his conclusions as to the principles of law applicable to such facts and governing the case, together with the recommendation that a decree be entered in accordance with the contentions of the complainants in the bill. Objections to the findings and conclusions set forth in the report, which had been interposed before the master and overruled, were also presented by the master, and the same objections were filed and renewed as exceptions to the report in the superior court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 N.E. 933, 211 Ill. 138, 1904 Ill. LEXIS 3272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitchburg-steam-engine-co-v-potter-ill-1904.