Hughes v. Link Belt Machinery Co.

95 Ill. App. 323, 1900 Ill. App. LEXIS 465
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 4, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 95 Ill. App. 323 (Hughes v. Link Belt Machinery Co.) 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
Hughes v. Link Belt Machinery Co., 95 Ill. App. 323, 1900 Ill. App. LEXIS 465 (Ill. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Freeman

delivered the opinion of the court.

It was decided upon the former appeal that the lease in question expressly gave the present appellant “a lien upon all the property of the lessee for rent which should remain due and unpaid,” and that the receiver took the property subject to the sa-me terms and conditions upon which it was held by his insolvent, and became bound to pay the rent named in the lease. Link Belt Machinery Co. v. Hughes, 174 Ill. 155 (162). It is not denied that the receiver was appointed and directed to carry on the business of manufacturing artificial coal at the instance and request of appellee and upon the representations made in the bill of complaint, the Eggette Company by its officers consenting thereto. Such was evidently the fact. It is now contended by appellant that no reasonable and proper ground for the appointment of a receiver existed, that no proper case for- such appointment was presented, and that therefore appellee has made itself liable for the balance of the rental due appellant for the receiver’s occupancy of the latter’s premises.

The original bill stated that appellee had been unable to collect a judgment of SG15.05 against the Eggette Company. We think it sufficiently appears that it was not the intention and that no real effort was made to collect by execution. The judgment by confession was entered, the execution placed in the sheriff’s hands, demand made, the writ returned unsatisfied, and the bill in question tiled, all upon one and the same day. The demand was made upon Dana, treasurer of the Eggette Company, and also of the Link Belt Machinery Company, appellee herein, and he was at once appointed receiver on the application of the latter and with the consent of the former company. As treasurer of the Eggette Company he was familiar with its affairs and should have known and did know, as he admits, that there was ample personal property available with which to satisfy the execution. It is now said in behalf of appellee that if, as was held upon the former appeal (Link Belt Machinery Company v. Hughes, supra), appellant, as landlord, had a lien upon all this property, a levy would have been useless. But it can scarcely be seriously contended that such inchoate lien for indebtedness not due and which might never become due if the rent continued to be paid — a lien which there had then been no necessity and no effort to assert, could have protected this property from appellee’s execution. The purpose of requiring the issue and return of an execution as a foundation for a creditor’s bill is, that it may be made to appear that a court of law is incompetent to reach the property of the defendant in execution. A court of equity will not lend its aid where there is an adequate remedy at law, and to establish the incompetencv of a court of law it must be proved, not only that there was a judgment at law and an execution, but that the latter “ has' been returned by the proper officer unsatisfied, by reason of his inability to find property whereon to levy.” Durand & Co. v. Gray et al., 129 Ill. 9 (17); Stirlen v. Jewett, 165 Ill. 410 (415). The evidence is apparently conclusive that the execution in question was returned unsatisfied for some reason other than inability to find property upon which to levy.

Mor does the evidence sustain the further statement that the Eggette Company had wholly ceased doing business. It was doubtless embarrassed, but had not yet given up the effort to successfully manufacture its product. Dana testifies that said company was running machinery, but “ not doing much business — experimenting.”

The truth seems to be that other creditors were threatening to attach the property, as Dana testifies, and that appellee, having an interest of some $7,000 or $8,000 as a stockholder acquired for machinery furnished the Eggette Company, became alarmed. It was then decided that it was best, as the witness states, to “ place the. entire property in the hands of a receiver to protect the creditors.”

In reply to the charge of fraud and collusion the same vutness states that the bill was brought for the benefit of all the creditors. This is doubtless true to the extent that if the experiments had succeeded, and under the receiver’s management the Eggette Company had become prosperous and able to thereafter conduct a profitable business, it might have been able to pay its debts and make its stock valuable. Nevertheless the immediate purpose of the bill was to hinder and delay the other creditors. It is said by appellee’s counsel that the bill sets up numerous grounds for the appointment of the receiver, “ among which was the fact that the large plant had only just been completed, and that all parties believed if the creditors could be held off a short time and the plant put in operation, the receiver could pay them all in full; and as evidence of this belief, appellant advanced the receiver $1,558.13 for operating expenses, which he never got back.” It is thus, conceded that the purpose of the bill was to maintain the plant in operation in spite of appellant or other creditors. That there was collusion, in the sense that the course pursued was agreed upon beforehand between appellee and the Eggette Company, is apparent from the admitted facts and from the course of procedure adopted. It is urged in behalf of appellee that this agreement is no evidence of fraud; that a failing debtor may consent to the entry of a judgment against him with entire propriety. This is true, doubtless, but the alleged collusion here was not merely as to the entry of the judgment by confession, but its entry as a part of a general scheme by which the judgment was to be used as a pretext to obtain possession of the plant of the Eggette Company in defiance of other creditors, obtain the use, inter alia, of the premises of appellant, and prevent him from exercising his rights under the lease and enforcing his lien for rent as it became due. It is alleged in appellee’s answer to the petition under consideration, that appellant acquiesced in the appointment of the receiver. The evidence fails, however, to show any such acquiescence equivalent to a waiver of any of appellant’s rights. The latter states that he was never consulted and never assented to or ratified the proceedings in controversy, and we think the' record bears out his statement. We aré compelled to conclude that the purpose of the entry of judgment, return of execution and the creditor’s bill, so called, was to place the property of the Eggette Company in the hands of a receiver and under the protection of the court in order to prevent creditors, including appellant, from reaching it by the usual legal means. There was no actual controversy between appellee and the Eggette Company, and while there may have been, as appellee asserts, no actual intention to defraud any one, nevertheless the intention was to delay creditors, and the result has been that appellant has been deprived of possession of his property for a considerable period of time, has lost a considerable portion of his rent, was prevented from terminating the lease and re-renting, and has been obliged to contest through three courts against the opposition of appellee, in order to maintain his claim to the lien to which, by the terms of his original contract, he was entitled. The procedure by which this was accomplished was improperly instituted without warrant. Stirlen v. Jewett, 165 Ill. 410.

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Bluebook (online)
95 Ill. App. 323, 1900 Ill. App. LEXIS 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-link-belt-machinery-co-illappct-1901.