Griffin v. Booth

50 Ill. App. 217, 1893 Ill. App. LEXIS 391
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 12, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 50 Ill. App. 217 (Griffin v. Booth) 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
Griffin v. Booth, 50 Ill. App. 217, 1893 Ill. App. LEXIS 391 (Ill. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court,

Waterman, J.

Some time in 1890, the Wight Fire Proofing Co. entered into a contract with one Charles C. Heisen to furnish and put in the fire proofing for a building he was erecting in Chicago, known as the Manhattan building, and the Wight Company contracted with appellant to furnish it the lire proofing material for that purpose.

On March 14, 1891, Griffin, being satisfied he was being unfairly dealt with, commenced an action of replevin against the company in the Circuit Court of Cook County, to recover possession of the material that had been shipped by him, and that had not yet been used in the building. The writ was served on the defendant and the sheriff delivered possession of the material to Griffin, but the latter failed to retain the actual physical possession or to keep a custodian in charge.

On March 17th, on a bill filed in the court below, the appellee was appointed receiver for the company. He found the employes of the company using the replevied material, and he thereupon took it into his possession, and used it in the construction of the building. After he had thus taken possession of it, and,while he was using it, on March 25th, he and Griffin agreed that Griffin’s right of possession and ownership should be adjudicated in the replevin suit, and that the receiver would hold a sufficient amount from the payments to be made by Heisen for work to be done by the receiver on the building, subject to the final determination of the court in the replevin suit, should it find he was entitled to the possession and ownership of said material.

At the time the receiver was appointed, there ivas unpaid and owing to Griffin, from the company, for material furnished for the Manhattan building, in all $6,356.09. There was a balance due the company from Heisen of $5,203.85; and the unused material furnished by Griffin, and which he replevied, amounted to $1,152.84.

On March 23d, Griffin served upon Heisen a mechanics’ lien notice.

Subsequently, and about the 20th of April, the receiver and Griffin’s attorney agreed that Griffin’s rights under the replevin suit might be submitted to and tried by the court in the receivership suit.

On the 23d of June, 1891, Heisen, Griffin and the receiver entered into an agreement in writing, containing the following:

“ This agreement witnesseth, that in consideration of the release by said Amos T. Griffin of said claim of lien upon the said Manhattan building, which is hereby done, the said O. 0. Heisen agrees to pay to the said Amos A. Griffin the sum of $5,203.85, which payment shall be in full of all demands due by said 0. 0. Heisen to the said Wight Fire Proofing Company, to March 17, 1891. This agreement, however, is to be without prejudice to the right claimed by said Amos T. Griffin, which is disputed by the receiver, to be paid in full out of the amounts in the hands of Harvey W. Booth, receiver, any balance of indebtedness owing to him by the Wight Fire Proofing Company for material furnished by him to said company to the same extent as if said lien had remained undischarged; the decision of which is left to the further order of the Circuit Court, under whose order said Harvey W. Booth is the duly appointed receiver of said Wight Fire Proofing Company, having been appointedMarch 17, 1891. '

Dated Chicago, Illinois, June 23,1891.

Harvey W. Booth, Receiver,

By Wm. R. Page, his attorney.

A. T. Griffin,

By Duncan & Gilbert, his attorneys.

C. 0. Heisen.”

In pursuance of this agreement, Heisen paid Griffin the sum of $5,203.85, leaving due him as the value of the materials, for the recovery of which the replevin suit had been instituted, the sum of $1,152.84.

For the purpose of securing the payment of this last mentioned sum, Griffin filed in the court below, his intervening petition, in which he set up his various dealings and agreements with the company and its receiver, and claimed the right to payment in full for the replevied material out of the moneys collected by the receiver from Heisen. The receiver answered the petition denying Griffin’s right to any preference over the general creditors of the company.

The master, to whom the petition was referred, made his report, finding that Griffin was entitled to be paid the sum of $1,152.84, from the funds in the hands of the receiver which came from Heisen on account of the Manhattan building. Exceptions being filed to this report by the receiver, the court, upon hearing, sustained them and entered an order dismissing the petition without prejudice to Griffin’s right to come in and receive a dividend upon his claim out of the estate in common with the other creditors of the company.

From this order Griffin prayed for and obtained the present appeal to this court.

By the agreement of June 23, 1891, appellant released his lien upon the Manhattan building. The reservation he therein made, was, not that the receiver should pay him in full out of the funds in his hands, if the court should be of the opinion that but for such release he could have established a lien upon the Manhattan building, but that he reserved his right to be paid in full by the receiver to the same extent as if his lien had remained undischarged; in other words, voluntarily releasing his lien, he declares that he does not thereby release his claim; that the receiver shall pay him in full, the same as if he had not released his lien.

A mechanics’ lien, if not followed up by proper proceedings in court, is lost by the afflux of time; if properly followed up by a suit thereon, it results in a decree that the party owing the lienor pay to him the amount of the lien, and that in default thereof the improved premises be sold for the amount of the liens thereon.

The judgment against the receiver, that appellant would, in a mechanics’ lien proceeding, have obtained against the receiver, would have been a simple allowance of his claim, to be paid pro rata with other claims, and an order for a sale of the improved property if such claim was not paid in full.

What appellant really seeks in this proceeding, is to transfer the lien he had and could have enforced against the Manhattan building, to the money the owner of such building has paid to his, appellant’s, debtor. The law makes no provision for such a hen. Appellant had and could have enforced a lien against the building, but there is no statute declaring that if a sub-contractor release his lien, the money paid by the owner to the original contractor shall be treated as a trust fund, received and held by such original contractor for the benefit of the sub-contractor.

If the owner, without regard to the claim of a sub-contractor, pay the original contractor in full, the remedy of the sub-contractor is to go and enforce his lien against the improved property, not to have the original contractor declared a trustee.

The receiver did not agree to hold in trust for appellant the money he received from the owner; nor did he receive it in trust, otherwise than equally for all the creditors of the Wight Fire Proofing Company.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Ill. App. 217, 1893 Ill. App. LEXIS 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffin-v-booth-illappct-1893.