Hellberg v. Warner

48 N.E.2d 972, 319 Ill. App. 117, 1943 Ill. App. LEXIS 721
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 2, 1943
DocketGen. No. 42,486
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 48 N.E.2d 972 (Hellberg v. Warner) 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
Hellberg v. Warner, 48 N.E.2d 972, 319 Ill. App. 117, 1943 Ill. App. LEXIS 721 (Ill. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scanlan

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an interlocutory appeal by plaintiffs from an order entered staying all proceedings in the above cause during the military service of Franz L. Warner, and until sixty days thereafter under the provisions of the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Civil Relief Act of 1940. Plaintiffs (respondents) appeal.

Defendants filed the following verified petition in the aforesaid cause:

“The Petitioner, Gustave P. Warner, as the duly authorized agent of Franz L. Warner and for and on his behalf, and on behalf of Patrick L. Warner and himself, as Defendants, represents . . . :

“1. That this action for $10,000.00 is based on a claim of purported super-added liability of Mrs. Hildur Lindstrand Warner as holder and owner of one hundred shares of stock in the Union Bank of. Chicago, a defunct bank, and the fact that the Defendants were the devisees'of certain property of said Mrs. Warner.

“2. That in June, 1932, a complaint was filed in the Superior Court of Cook County to enforce stockholders’ liability against the stockholders, of the Union Bank of Chicago, amongst whom was Mrs. Warner, holder of one hundred shares. Mrs. Warner died in 1936, while said cause was pending. In November, 1936, the estate of said Mrs. Warner was opened [in the Probate court], an inventory filed and approved, listing the said one hundred shares she held at no value, and listing as assets mainly real estate. The Defendants were devisees under the will of Mrs. Warner of her said estate, which was closed in November, 1940. No claim was filed by the creditors of the Union Bank of Chicago or the Plaintiffs in this action in said estate, though proper publication for claims was duly made by the administrator. In June, 1940, a decree was entered in the stockholders’ liability suit and said decree included Mrs. Warner. In March, 1941, the said stockholders’ liability decree was amended, striking Mrs. Warner’s name out of the decree and joining the Defendants herein in that action .... In July, 1941, Defendants herein were dismissed from said action . . . without prejudice. The present action was filed July, 1941.

“3. That the action in the above entitled cause is for $10,000.00 and based on the claim of purported super-added liability of Mrs. Warner for holding one hundred shares of stock in the Union Bank of Chicago, a defunct bank, and the fact that the Defendants, including Franz L. Warner, were devisees of certain property of the deceased; that the present action is based upon certain sections of the Statute of Frauds in conjunction with the claim of super-added liability of Mrs. Warner..

“4. That the above cause was referred to a Master in Chancery; that a number of hearings have been had before said Master . . . but have not been concluded.

“5. That Franz L. Warner has been inducted into the armed services of the United States of America and he is presently a person in military service in the Navy of the United States of America.

“6. That the object of the Plaintiffs in this cause is to secure a personal decree against the Defendants, including Franz L. Warner, for $10,000.00 and to reach by levy or otherwise certain real estate and the rents, issues, and profits thereof, devised to the Defendants under the last will and testament of said Mrs. Warner.

“7. That the conduct of the defense by the Defendants, and especially the Defendant Franz L. Warner, will be and is materially affected by reason of his said induction into military service for the reasons that he will be and is unable to appear and testify in this cause in connection with an accounting for rents, issues and profits of the said properties, and to show that he has changed his position together Avith the other Defendants by incurring obligations in connection with said property inherited; • that one of the defenses to the Complaint herein is a denial of profits out of rents since the Defendants have operated the properties which have descended to them as aforesaid, and another defense is one of laches by reason of failure by the Plaintiffs or the creditors of the Union Bank of Chicago to file suit in apt time, as a result of Avhich Defendants have changed their position by virtue of making themselves personally liable on mortgages of the property and in other ways.”

Petitioner prays in behalf of said Franz L. Warner and all the defendants that pursuant to the provisions of the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Civil Relief Act of 1940, the above action be stayed during the period of the military service of Franz L. Warner and until sixty days thereafter; and that the plaintiffs be enjoined and restrained from proceeding in any way in the above entitled cause until further order of the court.

Respondents filed a verified answer to the petition, in Avhich they admit the nature of the action against the petitioners, the death of the ancestor, the provisions of the will of the deceased, and that the personal property of the deceased was insufficient to pay her debts; that the deceased left íavo parcels of real estate that came into defendants’ possession on her death; that respondents’ claim is based upon section 10 of the Frauds and Perjury Act; that the will of the deceased Avas fraudulent and void as to plaintiffs ’ demands and that the personal estate being insufficient to pay her debts defendants, as her legatees, are liable under section 12 of the Act to the full amount of the parcels of real estate and for rents and profits on the same; that respondents believe that petitioners have purposely delayed and hindered the proceedings before the master until petitioner Franz L. Warner was actually inducted into the military service in order that they might have an excuse for a continuance; that petitioners might easily have presented their evidence before the master many months before the filing of the petition; that the conduct of the defense would not be materially affected by the induction of Franz L. Warner into military service; that respondents offered to stipulate that if he were to appear before the master he would testify to any material facts that he would state in an affidavit; that the interest of Franz L. Warner will be fully protected by the attorney and the other two petitioners and that the cause should not be delayed as to Franz L. Warner because of his induction into military service; that the case should not be delayed as to Gustave P. Warner and Patrick L. Warner, who are not in military service.

Petitioners filed a verified reply to the answer, in which they deny that they have been guilty of dilatory tactics in the hearing before the master and state “that Franz L. Warner, the defendant who is now in military service, prepared the accounting of rents and profits of the buildings herein involved, has personal knowledge of many of the items in dispute, and is qualified to testify thereto, and would have adduced testimony thereto had he not been called into the military service”; further state that the action of plaintiffs against defendants under the law is a joint action and not joint and several; that plaintiffs cannot be harmed by any stay of proceedings because the action is lis pendens as to the real estate involved and defendants could not sell the same except subject to the purported claims of plaintiffs.

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Bluebook (online)
48 N.E.2d 972, 319 Ill. App. 117, 1943 Ill. App. LEXIS 721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hellberg-v-warner-illappct-1943.