Frye v. President of Illinois

10 Ill. 332
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1848
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Ill. 332 (Frye v. President of Illinois) 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
Frye v. President of Illinois, 10 Ill. 332 (Ill. 1848).

Opinion

The Opinion of the Court was delivered by

Trumbull, J.

The defendants in error, who were complainants in the Court below, filed their bill against the plaintiffs in error and John Shaw for the purpose of setting aside as fraudulent, various conveyances by which Frye claimed certain real estate which Shaw had mortgaged to the complainants, and to subject the same to the payment of the amounts due complainants upon their said mortgages, alleging the insolvency of Shaw, &c.

The bill was taken pro confesso, against Frye at the return term of the process, and a decree entered, “that unless he pay the amounts due the complainants respectively on their mortgages and notes set forth in their bill, on or before the first day of the next term of this Court, that he be foreclosed of and from all equity of redemption of, and to said mortgaged premises.”

Shaw, at the time of the entry of this decree, had not'been brought into Court, but shortly after and before the next term he filed his answer admitting, substantially, the allegations of the bill. Frye appeared at the next term and made application to file his answer, accompanied with affidavits in support of his motion to set aside the decree pro confesso of the previous term, but the Court denied the motion and entered a final decree setting forth that Frye had failed to comply with the interlocutory decree passed against him, setting aside the various conveyances to Frye, and directing the mortgaged premises to be sold to satisfy the complainants respectively, in case the defendant Shaw did not discharge said indebtedness within five days from the entry of the decree.

Frye alone brings the cause to this Court, and has assigned numerous errors for the reversal of the decree.

The first which we deem it essential to notice is, that there is no allegation in the bill that the insurance companies suing as complainants were incorporated, or that they had any authority to maintain suits, or to take the notes and mortgage which constitute the foundation of their claims.

The Union and Missouri Insurance companies having sued ' as corporations, no other allegation that they were incorporated was necessary, (4 Blackf. 267,) and the plaintiff in error having suffered the bill to be taken as confessed against him, has thereby admitted that the said companies were incorporated, and also their capacity to sue. But although the right of a corporation to maintain suits and to exercise such other powers as are necessary and essential to its existence, and to carry out the objects of its creation will be presumed, unless denied or put in issue, yet when chartered companies seek to enforce in Equity, rights which do not ordinarily and necessarily belong to such corporations, it becomes necessary that they set forth and prove their authority to do the particular thing. McIntire v. Preston, (ante 48.)

The bill alleges that John Shaw “executed to the Union Insurance Company his note for $1500, to the Missouri Insurance Company his note for $1500, the notes to said insurance companies being given for money borrowed of them by said Shaw,” which were secured by mortgages', &c., but it contains no allegation of the power of said insurance companies under their charter to loan money upon mortgage security or otherwise, nor can we intend that the power to loan money is .necessary to the existence and transaction of ordinary business of insurance companies. The Court cannot, therefore, presume that the Union and Missouri Insurance Companies of St. Louis had such power, unless it is shown to exist by their Acts of incorporation, or necessarily or incidentally to arise from the exercise of some of the powers granted.

The fact that the bill was taken for confessed cannot help the case, because the defendant, by failing to answer, admits only such allegations as are contained in the bill, and the complainants would have been permitted to prove, had an answer been filed ; and as the complainants would not have been allowed to prove any substantive facts not alleged in the bill in case an answer had been put in, they cannot insist that any such are admitted for want of an answer. 2 Bibb, 123.

So far as one of the complainants, the Bank of Illinois, is concerned, we might well assume that'it had the power to loan money, even if not bound to take notice of its charter as a public Act, because such a power is essential to the transaction of the. ordinary business of banks; but no such intendment can be made in favor of insurance companies. That such companies have the power to make insurances, to give credit for premiums and therefore to take notes, might be .intended as essential to the advantageous management of their business, (2 Cowen, 699;) but the allegations in this bill expressly negative the idea that the notes and mortgage in this case were taken in the transaction of the usual business of. insurance companies. The bill is, therefore, defective for want of the proper allegations to show that the Union and Missouri Insurance companies were authorized by their charters to make the loans to Shaw.

Another objection has also been taken to the bill, which is, that M’Donald, before whom some of the deeds alleged to’ be fraudulent were acknowledged, should have been made a party. We cannot see the propriety of making him a. party to the suit. He has no interest in it, and to have made him a party for the purpose of requiring him to answer, where if the allegations of the bill be true, such answer must tend to his own infamy, would not be allowable. It is also objected that the charter of the Bank of Illinois having expired during the pendency of the suit, no decree could be rendered in its favor. There was no necessity for making the Bank a party to the suit. It purports to sue for the use of Smith and Dunlap, the assignees, and as Equity always looks to the real party in interest, and allows such party to institute suits in his own name, notwithstanding the legal title may be in another, it would have been more in accordance with Chancery proceedings if the suit bad originally been instituted in the name of the persons for whose use it purports to have been brought.

The rule as to parties is wholly different in Chancery from what it is at Law. In Equity, a party in interest may always institute a suit in his own name, while at Law he alone can sue in whom is vested the legal title. As the hill will have to be amended, and the charter of the Bank has expired, it would be advisable to insert the names of the persons for whose use the Bank sues, as one of the parties complainants, instead of attempting to maintain a suit for their benefit in the name of the Bank. It may also be proper to remark, that as one object of the bill is to set aside a deed from Frye to Smith, the latter should also be made a party to the suit.

So far as the bill has been objected to on the ground of multifariousness, we do not consider the objection tenable. Although the bill relates to various transactions, yet they are all in reference to the same subject matter, and so intimately connected that they may well be determined in one suit.

The plaintiff in error also insists that it was erroneous to enter a decree pro confesso against him, determining the merits of the case so far as he was concerned, before Shaw, the debtor, was before the Court.

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Related

Hawkins v. Johnson
3 Blackf. 46 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1832)
Harris v. Muskingum Manufacturing Co.
4 Blackf. 267 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1837)

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ill. 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frye-v-president-of-illinois-ill-1848.