Hinsey v. Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias

138 Ill. App. 248, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 733
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 13, 1908
DocketGen. No. 13,136
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 138 Ill. App. 248 (Hinsey v. Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias) 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
Hinsey v. Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias, 138 Ill. App. 248, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 733 (Ill. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Holdom

delivered the opinion of the court.

We shall confine our review and discussion in this opinion to the facts and the law only, as they affect the interests of the defendants Hinsey, Sipperly and Brooks, plaintiffs in error here, and the defendant, Elmer L. Parker, appellant in case Ben. No. 13,193, consolidated for hearing with this writ of error.

Counsel for defendant Hinsey prefaces his statement of facts with this observation: “There is but little conflict in the evidence of this case. The facts which we submit are controlling and not controverted. ’ ’

We are convinced from an examination of the record that the pertinent facts controlling the rights of the parties are not, when divested of the refinements of distinction indulged in argument, open to serious controversy.

This evidence fully sustains the findings of the decree, which is the foundation upon which the right to maintain it must be predicated, that all the transactions were entered into by Sipperly, Stolte and Hinsey for their own benefit, and that they were jointly interested in the real estate, and that the money was drawn from the funds of the Board of Control and advanced for the purchase of all the real estate in question, for the joint benefit of Hinsey, Sipperly and Stolte, and that such payments were a fraudulent conversion of the funds of the Board of Control.

In the light of the overwhelming proof of the glaring fraud of these persons, the argument of counsel for Hinsey that ‘ ‘ Mr. Hinsey * * * objects to a decree which finds that he has been guilty even of a constructive fraud, even though such decree might result in his financial advantage,” is hypocritical and disingenuous. On the contrary, so far from Hinsey and his co-conspirators being' guilty of a constructive fraud, they are condemned by the record as guilty of intentional and deliberate fraud upon complainant in their dealings with the real estate in question and with the funds of complainant which paid for it.

To support the charges of fraud we find in this record that the moneys of complainant were, in violation of its constitution and by-laws, used in the purchase of the real estate under the delusive representation that they were loans made upon ample real estate security. We have searched this record in vain in an attempt to find where any of the parties to this conspiracy furnished one dollar of money, obtained from any source independent of complainant, for the initial purchase of any parcel of real estate. The transactions here challenged were initiated by Erastus Sipperly negotiating for the purchase from the Illinois Trust & Savings Bank of the master’s certificate for the sum of $7,352.25. Hinsey and Stolte, President and Secretary of the Board of Control, April 4, 1895, drew a check for $8,000 in their official capacity, which money was used in the purchase of the certificate and in payment of taxes accruing during the period of redemption. The master’s certificate was assigned by the bank'and delivered to the Board of Control. At this time William Garnett, Jr., was the record owner of the equity of redemption, and on October 31, 1895, for the consideration of $900, conveyed such interest to Wallace D. Millard. This purchase was financed by Hinsey and Stolte, in their official capacity, drawing a warrant against the funds of complainant in the First National Bank of Chicago for $1,000, $900 of which was used to pay Garnett. The Board of Control, thereupon, through Hinsey and Stolte, assigned the master’s certificate to Millard, who surrendered the certificate to the master on March 28, 1896, and received in return a master’s deed conveying the property set forth in the certificate. At this time Hinsey was general claim agent for the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad Company, and Millard was employed in a subordinate capacity, under Hinsey, at a small salary. He was a friend of Hinsey’s, without property or means save only his salary. He was simply used as a conduit through which to pass the title to the land.

On April 1, 1896, Millard quit-claimed to the defendant Elmer L. Parker all of the property described in the master’s deed. Parker was a claim agent of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad, who worked under the direction and authority of Hinsey, the head of the department. Parker paid no money or other valuable consideration, or any consideration, for the conveyance to him, and Millard made the conveyance at the direction of Hinsey. On April 6, 1896, Parker made a trust deed to secure $9,000 to Charles T. Allyn as trustee and to the defendant Stolte as successor in trust. This trust deed, being ostensibly made to secure payment of the advances made from the funds of complainant for the whole of the property conveyed by Millard to Parker, conveyed only a portion of such property, leaving the title to a material and valuable portion of it vested in Parker, free of all encumbrance.

The defendant Erastus Sipperly then negotiated with Charles F. Swigart for the purchase of block 13 in Swigart’s Subdivision, etc., for the sum of $8,500, Swigart and his wife conveying the property to the defendant Parker by deed dated April 11, 1896. This purchase was paid for with the funds of the complainant, by Hinsey and Stolte officially drawing a warrant for the sum of $10,000 in favor of one F. E. Baldwin, who was a clerk in the employ of Sipperly, of no financial responsibility. Eight thousand, five hundred dollars of this warrant was paid to Swigart for the land and the remainder used in payment of taxes and other charges on the real estate.

In May, 1896, Parker subdivided the land purchased from Swigart, together with the land conveyed to Parker by Millard, and omitted from the trust deed securing the $9,000 to Allyn, trustee, naming it “Erastus Sipperly’s Subdivision.” This subdivision was divided into four blocks, the lots in the blocks aggregating eighty. Parker, on May 25, 1896, executed a trust deed to Charles T. Allyn, as trustee, and defendant Stolte, successor in trust, to secure the $10,000 'of complainant’s money used in the purchase of the Swigart property conveying the property in Erastus Sipperly’s Subdivision with the exception of thirty lots. The title to these thirty lots remained in Parker unencumbered, not having been included in either of the trust deeds.

These manipulations with the funds of the complainant in these several real estate transactions were confined to Hinsey and Stolte, and were by them concealed from the other members of the Board of Control, and the fact that Hinsey, Stolte and Sipperly were interested in these transactions was studiously and designedly kept from the other members of the Board of Control. In all these transactions Hinsey and Stolte, only, represented the Board of Control.

The Endowment Bank was authorized to loan money only when there were surplus funds on hand, from which loans could be made; yet the record shows that when the $8,000 was withdrawn, the bank account was overdrawn in excess of $42,000; when the $1,000 was withdrawn, the deficit was more than $11,000, and more than $19,000 when the $10,000 was withdrawn from its bank account. All of this money was extracted upon the pretenses of loaning upon the security of the real estate for which the several sums of money were in fact used to pay the whole purchase price.

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Bluebook (online)
138 Ill. App. 248, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 733, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hinsey-v-supreme-lodge-knights-of-pythias-illappct-1908.