Hill v. Gruell

42 Ill. App. 411, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 283
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 3, 1891
StatusPublished

This text of 42 Ill. App. 411 (Hill v. Gruell) 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
Hill v. Gruell, 42 Ill. App. 411, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 283 (Ill. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Pleasants, J.

The bill herein was filed by appellee on the 26th of January, 1889, against appellants together with John M. Earl and the Eagle Packet Company, a corporation organized under the laws of Missouri. It was taken as confessed as against Earl for want of an answer, and the decree does not go directly against the Packet Company. They did not join in the appeal.-

The case made by the pleadings and proofs is briefly this: In July, 1873, the Eagle Packet Company was incorporated under the laws of Illinois, with its principal office at Quincy, for the purpose, among others, of erecting freight houses and buildings and equipping steam boats and barges for use in navigation on the Mississippi river, and did build or acquire certain steam boats, barges and freight'ho uses for that purpose. Appellants and Earl were the directors and principal stockholders. Williams was president, Hill was secretary and treasurer, and Henry Leyhe, superintendent. In June, 1877, Samuel Grucll, being indebted to the company in about the sum of §1,500, to secure its payment assigned and delivered to Earl, as agent of the company, a quantity of cord wood and fence posts, the value of which largely exceeded that indebtedness together with the liens upon the property and expenses of handling it, and provided by the instrument of assignment that the proceeds remaining after reimbursing the company for those liens and expenses and paying said indebtedness, should be paid over to the assignor. These proceeds were all paid over by Earl as the property was sold, to Hill, the treasurer of the company. Of the terms of this assignment-, and the proceedings under it, all the appellants were at the time fully apprised. In April, 1878, the officers of the company were directed by vote of the stockholders to sell and transfer to the Eagle Packet Company, of St. Louis, which was incorporated «n the 7th of that month under the laws of Missouri, all its boats, barges and freight houses for §13,000, which they accordingly did, and thus, to that extent, dissolved the Illinois company. We copy from the abstract of the amended answer of these appellants sworn to, the following:

“ And they further say, that at the time of the dissolution of the Eagle Packet Cortipany of Illinois, the property of said company consisted of the steamers Spread Eagle and Little Eagle, Ho. 2, and two wharf boats, one at Quincy, Illinois, and one at St. Louis, Mo., and three warehouses, one at Keokuk, Iowa, and one at Grafton, Illinois, and one at Alton, Illinois; all of which property was sold and transferred, to the Eagle Packet Company of St. Louis, said property being valued at §13,000.

“ Fourth. These defendants, Henry Leyhe, William Leyhe, Grandison W. Hill and John E. Williams, say that all of said property of the Eagle Packet Company, of Illinois, was disposed of for the consideration of §13,000 to the Eagle Packet Company, of Missouri, as above set forth; that the names of the stockholders of said Eagle Packet Company, of Illinois, before and at the time of the dissolution of the said company, were C. Albers, who was the owner and held

18£ shares, par value, $ 1,875
J. E. Williams, 120 shares, par value, 12,000
Henry Leyhe,-120 shares, par value, 12,000
William Leyhe, 129 shares, par value, 12,000
Grandison W. Hill, 120 shares, par value, 12,000
C. Eagle, 81 shares, par value, 875
J. M. Earl, 72| shares, par value, 7,250
Hat. Morehead, 65 shares, par value, 6,500
E. E. Hill, 5 shares, par value, 500
Total number, 650 shares, and amt. capital stock, $65,000
“And the following were the stockholders in the Eagle Packet Company, of Missouri, on or about April 18, 1878:
C. Albers, 7-£ shares, par value, § 375
J. E. Williams, 48 shares, par value, 2,400
Henry Leyhe, 48 shares, par value, 2,400
William Leyhe, 48 shares, par value, 2,400
G. W. Hill, 48 shares, par value, 2,400
C. Hagle, 3£- shares, par value, 175
J. M. Earl, 29 shares, par value, 1,450
Hat. Morehead, 26 shares, par value, 1,300
E. E. Hill, 2 shares, par value, 100
Total, 260 shares. Amt. capital stock, $13,000

“ All of said persons above named being the stockholders of said Eagle Packet Company, of Missouri.

“ And that all the property or assets and effects of the Eagle Packet Company, of Illinois, was, on or about the 18th day of April, 1878, transferred to the Eagle Packet Company of Missouri, the stockholders being identically the same in both companies.”

To the October term, 1879, of the Adams County Circuit Court, Samuel Gruell filed his bill in equity against Earl and the Illinois Company for a statement of the account and enforcement of the trust in his favor, created by the assignment; and pending the suit, on the 20th of October, 1881, for value received, assigned all his interest in the claim and in whatever decree or judgment he might recover, to Joseph M. Gruell, the appellee here.

For reasons not particularly shown, that litigation was protracted until the March term, 1888, when a final decree was rendered for the complainant, for $1,419.25; in which decree it was further ordered that in default of its payment within thirty days a fieri facias execution be issued to enforce it. Default was made and execution issued; the first directed to Adams County, on June 13, 1888, which was returned by order of the plaintiff’s attorney, August 31st, and an alias to Madison, on September 3d, and returned “ demand made and no property found to make all or any part thereof,” December 28, 1888.

Thereupon this bill was filed, setting forth the facts above stated, to charge the defendants as trustees for complainant, to the extent of his claim, of the property of the Eagle Packet Company, of Illinois, which they obtained in the manner above stated, and appropriated to their own use, with notice of that claim. And upon final hearing on the pleadings and proofs, the court rendered a personal decree against appellants and Earl, in favor of complainant, for the sum of $1,762, being the amount of the former decree, with interest thereon at the rate of six per cent per annum and the costs.

The principal objections urged to it are based on what we think a misapprehension of the character of the bill. As a creditor’s bill, or in the nature of such, it is said the return of the execution on the first decree to Adams county, “ by order of the plaintiff’s attorneys,” is not sufficient to support it. Gaule v. Wohler, 12 Ill. App. 594. As a proceeding under the statute, Sec. 25, Chap.

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Bluebook (online)
42 Ill. App. 411, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-gruell-illappct-1891.