Harris v. Buder

62 N.E.2d 131, 326 Ill. App. 471, 1945 Ill. App. LEXIS 368
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 7, 1945
DocketTerm No. 45F8
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 62 N.E.2d 131 (Harris v. Buder) 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
Harris v. Buder, 62 N.E.2d 131, 326 Ill. App. 471, 1945 Ill. App. LEXIS 368 (Ill. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Culbertson

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court of Alexander county, in favor of appellee, Ella T. Buder, executrix of the estate of E. A. Buder, deceased (hereinafter called defendant), in an action for contribution which was originally brought by the appellant, J. L. Harris (hereinafter called plaintiff) as against E. A. Buder, as defendant. After the action was instituted E. A. Buder died and his executrix, Ella T. Buder, was substituted as defendant. The complaint upon which the proceedings were had alleged the execution and delivery of eight promissory notes upon which the defendant, E. A. Buder, and the plaintiff, J. L. Harris, were either makers or indorsers, and the Cairo-Alexander County Bank was the payee. In the complaint it is alleged that the bank referred to was insolvent and a receiver had been appointed therefor, and that a demand was made by the receiver of the bank and litigation threatened to enforce payment of the notes, and the plaintiff, J. L. Harris, paid the sum of $31,756.11 to the receiver upon the notes referred to. It was then alleged in the complaint that defendant, E. A. Buder, became indóbted to the plaintiff in the sum of $6,481.02 for his proportionate share of the money so paid on the notes. As a result of amended pleadings interest was claimed on such amount, and a number of affirmative defenses were set up by defendant in her answer and amendments thereto.

It was disclosed on the trial of the matter in the court below that the plaintiff, on January 21, 1937, paid the $31,756.11 on the notes as a result of proceedings by which the plaintiff Harris petitioned the circuit court (in a separate proceeding) asking that a set-off of the notes against his moneys in the bank be approved by the court. An order was entered to that effect on January 21, 1937.

The notes involved in this proceeding were executed at various dates, beginning March 16,1928, and ending February 9, 1930. Each note expressly stated that there was to be no priority as between indorsers and there was a waiver of demand, presentment, etc. All of the notes were signed by E. A. Buder, the original defendant, J. L. Harris, C. V. Neff, and David S. Lansden, either as makers or indorsers, and a W. B. Thistlewood signed as a maker or indorser on all but one of the notes. All of the persons named were at the time of the execution of the notes,' stockholders and directors of the Cairo-Alexander County Bank. At the time of the execution of the notes in 1930 the bank had, among its assets, certain paper which the State bank examiner found objectionable and classified as “slow and doubtful.” As a means of removing the objectionable assets which the bank examiner would not approve, the individual directors referred to, executed the eight notes involved in this proceeding and left such notes to replace the objectionable paper, which was then removed. Interest payments were made on the notes at various times from the date, of their execution, until 1931 and 1932, although there was some question as to whether any particular defendant made such payments, or whether the original defendants, E. A. Buder, made any such payments.

C. V. Neff, one of the signers of the notes, died on August 14, 1931. A claim was filed in the 0. V. Neff estate within the statutory period by the Cairo-Alexander County Bank, in the amount of $70,388.55, and the notes involved in this proceeding were a part of that claim. After the claim had been filed the bank was declared insolvent and a receiver was appointed on November 7,1933. No action had been taken in the matter of the claim against the Neff estate until June of 1942, five years after the plaintiff had made the payment through the set-off as against his accounts in the bank, as herein stated. On June 24 of 1942, a claim was allowed as against the Neff estate for an amount ($56,572.96), which was considerably less than the amount of the claim as filed. That claim against the Neff estate so allowed, has not been paid.

In January of 1937, as has been previously indicated, the plaintiff paid $31,756.11 in discharge of the eight notes involved in this proceeding, through the set-off of money which plaintiff had on deposit with the bank at the time it went into receivership, and pursuant to an order of the circuit court. The pro rata share of the original defendant, Buder, of the debt so paid, for which the plaintiff is seeking eontribution on the basis of the evidence produced in the court below, is the sum of $6,481.02, plus legal interest from the date of payment by the plaintiff. Upon trial of this cause by the court, without intervention of a jury, judgment was entered for the defendant. To sustain the judgment in her favor defendant has set up and argued, and presented on appeal, a number of defenses to which we shall give consideration in the course of this opinion.

The right to contribution arises by reason of a compulsory payment by a joint obligor of more than Ms share of a common- obligation (Harvey v. Drew, 82 Ill. 606; Schaefer v. Dippel, 250 Ill. App. 184), and the measure of contribution is the excess which the plaintiff paid over Ms own share of the obligation, plus interest from the date of payment (McCormick v. Unity Co., 239 Ill. 306; McMillan v. James, 105 Ill. 194).

There is sufficient evidence to establish the pro rata amount of contribution for which the defendant in the instant case is obliged to pay to the plaintiff. The serious questions arising on this appeal, result from the issues raised by defendant, as a basis for the denial of the right to contribution. We shall consider such issues separately in the interest of clarity.

It is, apparently, primarily contended by plaintiff that there was want of consideration for the notes which were given, and that the plaintiff was under no legal obligation to pay the notes because the bank, as payee, could not have sued plaintiff on the notes and recovered. A number of cases were cited by the defendant for the purposes of establishing lack of consideration, but such cases do not deal with factual situations such as were present in the instant case. In this case the makers of the notes were directors and stockholders of the bank. They were financially, interested in the bank and the notes which were given to replace objectionable assets were, therefore, supi ported by valid consideration (Central Republic Trust Co. v. Evans, 378 Ill. 58; Tegtmeyer v. Nordlund, 259 Ill. App. 247; Hinsdale State Bank v. Lytle, 262 Ill. App. 151). The cases emphasize that anything which tends to make the bank stronger or keep it going, or preserve its solvency, was a benefit to the stockholders and rests on good consideration. If, in the instant case, the signatory parties to the notes had not been directors and stockholders, the notes might have lacked consideration. The fact that they were given by stockholders and directors was sufficient consideration for the notes and they were legal obligations upon which the bank could have sued and recovered from the defendant.

It is similarly contended that the notes were never intended to be obligations on the part of the original defendant, Buder. In support of this contention the defendant contends that there had been a conditional delivery of the notes, and that the understanding was that they were not to be collected. We do not find that contention supported by the record.

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Bluebook (online)
62 N.E.2d 131, 326 Ill. App. 471, 1945 Ill. App. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-buder-illappct-1945.