Fort Dearborn National Bank v. Wyman

80 Ill. App. 150
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 15, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 80 Ill. App. 150 (Fort Dearborn National Bank v. Wyman) 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
Fort Dearborn National Bank v. Wyman, 80 Ill. App. 150 (Ill. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Windes

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiffs in error claim there was error in giving Wyman the relief awarded by the decree, and that the court should have dismissed his bill for want of equity.

The Fort Dearborn Bank having appropriated the fund On deposit wtith it due to the Helena Bank, by crediting on its books the amount of such fund to the latter bank, before notice of the issuance and delivery to Wyman of the check by the Helena Bank, Wyman acquired no rights, either legal or equitable, which he can enforce to the prejudice of the Fort Dearborn Bank. Niblack v. Park Nat. Bank, 169 Ill. 517; Gage Hotel Co. v. Union Nat. Bank, 171 Ill. 531; Laclede Bank v. Schuler, 120 U. S. 511.

This is conceded by counsel for defendant in error in his brief, and that would appear to have been the theory of his bill, though the decree goes further and requires the securities to be delivered to the Montana receiver by the Fort Dearborn Bank.

It is contended by counsel for Wyman that by the delivery of the check to him for value on September 1,1896, he acquired an “ interest in ” the fund of $20,523.67, deposited with the Fort Dearborn Bank to the credit of the Helena Bank, which, upon the well recognized equitable principle of marshaling assets or securities, entitles him to relief in equity, and that the decree entered does not abridge the rights of the former as against the latter bank.

We can not assent to that part of the contention that the rights of the Fort Dearborn Bank are not abridged by the decree, and the majority of the court (not including the writer) are of opinion that the proposition as a whole is untenable. In 3 Pomeroy’s Eq. Juris., Sec. 1414, after stating the rule as to marshaling securities, the author gives the following, among other, exceptions : “ The paramount incumbrancer shall not be delayed or inconvenienced in the collection of his debt, for it would be unreasonable that he should suffer because some one else has taken imperfect security; and the rights of third parties shall not be prejudiced.”

Mr. Beach, in Modern Eq. Juris., after stating the rule as to marshaling, says, Sec. 782: “It will not be applied so as to delay the prior creditor or prevent him from realizing his whole debt, or -where it would, for any reason, work injustice to such creditor.”

Both authors cite numerous authorities which fully sustain them.

The Fort Dearborn Bank, therefore, clearly had the right as against Wyman to retain its securities until its debt was paid, and it should not have been required to deliver them to a foreign receiver to take beyond the jurisdiction of the Superior Court, even for purposes of collection, there being no claim that the Fort Dearborn Bank was of doubtful solvency, or that Wyman’s rights would be in any way endangered by its retaining and collecting the collaterals.

The majority of the court is further of opinion that the principle of marshaling assets is not applicable in this case for the reason that before notice of the claim of Wyman, and before the bill was filed, the Fort Dearborn Bank, as it had a perfect right to do, appropriated the fund on deposit with it to the credit of the Helena Bank, thus leaving in its possession only one fund, to wit, the collateral securities on which Wyman had not and has not claimed any lien. This conclusion is based upon the theory that in order to give a court of equity jurisdiction to marshal assets, there must be at least two' funds in existence when the bill is filed, on both of which one of the parties has a claim or lien, and the other party has a claim or lien on one only of the funds, or that the party having the claim or lien on both the funds wrongfully appropriated the fund on which alone the other party had a claim or lien. Generally the cases in which the doctrine of marshaling assets is discussed in the books, are cases where there are in existence, at the time the jurisdiction of equity is invoked, two or more funds or properties in which the parties claim an interest as stated. The text writers, in discussing the same subject, seem to contemplate the existence of two or more funds so situated in order that the doctrine may be invoked.

In Turner v. Flinn, 67 Ala. 531, it was held that where a senior mortgagee of two properties bad so far foreclosed his mortgage as to sell all of the property which was also included in a junior mortgage, and had applied the proceeds before the junior mortgagee filed his bill asking a marshaling of the securities, there was nothing left on which the doctrine of marshaling could operate; that no two funds were left to be marshaled; that there was no fund on which each mortgagee had a lien, and therefore that no relief could be granted the junior mortgagee. The court also held that had the junior mortgagee filed his bill before the sale and application of the proceeds by the senior mortgagee, he would have been entitled to relief. This is the only case directly deciding the question, which has come to our notice, and the majority of the court are of opinion that Wyman is not entitled to any relief, and that the decree should be and is reversed, with directions to dismiss the bill for want of equity, at the cost of defendant in error.

While the writer agrees that the decree should be reversed, because it deprives the Fort Dearborn Bank of the right to realize on its securities, he can not assent to the proposition that there is no equity in the bill, and what is now presented is the personal view of the writer. While it is true that, as a general rule, before the doctrine of marshaling assets will be applied there must be two funds or properties, on both of which one party has a claim or lien, and the other party has a claim or' lien on one only of such funds or properties, I think that it does not follow necessarily, that the fund on which both the claims or liens originally rested, must, in a strict sense, be in existence at the moment of time when the aid of equity is invoked.

It is well established in Illinois that, as between the drawer and payee of a bank check given for value upon a fund in bank, the check operates as an equitable assignment to the payee of the sum of money named in the check. It transfers to the payee the right of the depositor to the money on deposit to the amount of the check, if that amount is then in bank. Bickford v. First Nat. Bank, 42 Ill. 240; Ridgely Nat. Bank v. Patton, 109 Ill. 479; Nat. Bank of Amer. v. Ind. Bkg. Co., 114 Ill. 483; Gage Hotel Co. v. Union Nat. Bank, 171 Ill. 531; 1 Beach’s Mod. Eq. Juris., Secs. 333 to 335.

It would follow that when Wyman received the check, the Helena Bank had no equitable interest remaining in the fund on deposit with the Fort Dearborn Bank, except in the balance of the fund after deducting the amount of the check, and Wyman had an equitable interest in that fund to the extent of his check. The Fort Dearborn Bank was not bound to Wyman until he presented the check for payment, or at least until it had notice of the check. The Helena Bank might have subsequently given another check, which, if presented before Wyman’s check, would have cut him off, but that question does not arise.

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Related

Laclede Bank v. Schuler
120 U.S. 511 (Supreme Court, 1887)
Ingalls and Stockman v. . Morgan
10 N.Y. 178 (New York Court of Appeals, 1854)
Campbell v. Carter
14 Ill. 286 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1853)
Ridgely National Bank v. Patton & Hamilton
109 Ill. 479 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1884)
National Bank of America v. Indiana Banking Co.
2 N.E. 401 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1885)
Niblack v. Park National Bank
39 L.R.A. 159 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1897)
Gage Hotel Co. v. Union National Bank
39 L.R.A. 479 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1898)

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80 Ill. App. 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fort-dearborn-national-bank-v-wyman-illappct-1898.