Flanagan v. First National Bank

30 N.E.2d 786, 307 Ill. App. 495, 1940 Ill. App. LEXIS 731
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 23, 1940
DocketGen. No. 41,328
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 30 N.E.2d 786 (Flanagan v. First National Bank) 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
Flanagan v. First National Bank, 30 N.E.2d 786, 307 Ill. App. 495, 1940 Ill. App. LEXIS 731 (Ill. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

Mr. Justice MoSurelt

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiffs are representative creditors of the Madison Square State Bank, which was closed by the auditor of public accounts on June 15; 1932; they brought a suit to enforce a stockholders’ liability and February 11, 1937, had a decree against the First Trust and Savings Bank, trustee, for $10,000; June 22, 1939, the present suit was filed by the same plaintiffs tó enforce the collection of this decree from defendant, the First National Bank of Chicago; answer was filed by the defendant bank and upon hearing of the complaint and answer and a stipulation as to certain facts, the trial court ordered plaintiffs’ suit dismissed for want of equity and they appeal.

The facts as shown by the pleadings and the stipulation are that January, 1927, the First Trust and Savings Bank entered into a trust agreement with Morris Metcoff whereby it agreed to hold 100 shares of his stock of the Madison Square State Bank in trust; February, 1929, the First Trust and Savings Bank consolidated with the Union Trust Company; the consolidated institution was named First Union Trust and Savings Bank, and this institution succeeded the First Trust and Savings Bank as trustee of the Metcoff trust; in July, 1933, this First Union Trust and Savings Bank consolidated with the First National Bank of Chicago. In September, 1932, prior to the consolidation with the defendant bank, Metcoff terminated the trust agreement by an instrument in writing and withdrew from the trust all properties then held in trust by the First Union Trust and Savings Bank.

Plaintiffs contend that the decree entered in the stockholders’ suit February 11, 1937, for $10,000 against the First Trust and Savings Bank, trustee, means that bank is personally liable and when the defendant First National Bank received all of the assets of the First Union Trust and Savings Bank it became personally responsible for the stockholders’ liability of the First Union Trust and Savings Bank.

To this defendant replies that no individual or personal liability was imposed upon the First Trust and Savings Bank by the decree of February 11, 1937; that this decree found, “that the total liability herein of each defendant stockholder is placed immediately under the name of said defendant stockholder in brackets, all as is hereinafter in this paragraph set forth:

“Name

“First Trust and Savings Bank, Trustee under agreement with Morris Metcoff, dated January 22, 1927. (Certificate No. 648 issued to First Union Trust and Savings Bank, Trustee.)

“($10,000.00).”

and the decree ordered that this be paid to the receiver of the Madison Square Bank.

“(2) By the said First Trust and Savings Bank, Trustee under Agreement with Morris Metcoff, etc., as the holder of One Hundred (100) shares of said stock, the sum of Ten Thousand Dollars ($10,000.-00)____”

When we examine the trust agreement of Metcoff with the First Trust and Savings Bank, trustee, we find that none of the stock was purchased by the trustee in the exercise of its trust powers; that Metcoff controlled the acts of the trustee with reference to voting the stock; that it was never registered on the books of the Madison Square State Bank except in the name of “First Trust and Savings Bank, Trustee, under Agreement with Morris Metcoff.” Likewise, the agreement expressly provided that the trustee should incur no liability through its holding of any securities thereunder.

Approximately five years after the formation of the trust Metcoff terminated it and withdrew all the assets held thereunder, as he had power to do under the trust agreement. Since that time neither the First Trust nor any of its successors has held any of the assets in the trust.

The summons in the stockholders’ suit was served upon the “First Trust and Savings Bank, Trustee under Agreement with Morris Metcoff,” and the trustee bank filed its appearance so describing itself, and as we have noted, the decree was against that defendant as “Trustee under Agreement with Morris Metcoff.”

Whether a judgment against a trust company as trustee can be considered as a liability of the trustee, personally, was considered in the case of Bankers Trust Co. of Muskegon v. Forsyth, 266 Mich. 517, 520. There a complaint was filed to secure an accounting and a termination of a trust which the plaintiff was serving as trustee; certain defendants had unsatisfied judgments rendered against the Bankers Trust Co., as trustee. The opinion said the court was not concerned with whether the controversy which resulted in these respective adjudications was such that the trust company might have been held personally or individually liable. “Such a claim was not asserted and of course such a liability was not adjudicated.” The opinion noted the citation of cases where the trustee executed a contract in its representative character. The court said “Such authorities are not in point in the instant case which does not involve the construction of a contract or the question of possible liability thereon in one capacity or another. Instead, we here have two claims each of which has been prosecuted to final judgment as being a liability of the plaintiff herein in its trust capacity only. Having been so adjudicated, the judgments entered in the respective suits cannot be changed in this equitable proceeding so as to render the trust company directly or individually liable thereon. ’ ’ The court held that the trustee could not be-charged with these judgments in its individual capacity.

A case involving the same question is Bates v. Atlantic Nat. Bank of Jacksonville, 101 F. (2d) 278, where a decree had been entered against the defendant bank as trustee; the superintendent of banking instituted suit seeking to impose individual liability based upon this decree. The opinion noted that although judgments at law against one as trustee have been held to be personal judgments, it was otherwise in a court of equity.

Plaintiffs cite Wahl v. Schmidt, 307 Ill. 331, and quote at some length from this opinion as holding to the contrary. We do not so read this. There the fundamental question was as to the liability for the death of Elizabeth Frankowicz, an employee in a building in possession of Schmidt where the water tank collapsed, inflicting injuries from which she died; the litigation involved numerous questions, one of which was whether Schmidt, individually or as trustee, was liable for damages caused by this accident. The court found that the accident occurred after Schmidt had ceased to be trustee and held that, looking at the record of Klonowski, administrator of the estate of Frankowicz (the deceased woman) v. Schmidt, it was apparent that the only cause of action stated was against Schmidt, personally. O'Connor v. Rathje, 298 Ill. App. 489, cited by plaintiffs, holds contrary to their contention. There a suit was brought against Rathje, individually and as successor trustee, for damages; subsequently Rathje individually was dismissed; he answered in the name of Rathje, “successor trustee” and judgment in that style was entered against him; on appeal plaintiff contended the words “successor trustee” were merely surplusage and that the judgment was against Rathje individually.

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Bluebook (online)
30 N.E.2d 786, 307 Ill. App. 495, 1940 Ill. App. LEXIS 731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flanagan-v-first-national-bank-illappct-1940.