Hummel v. Alwart

270 Ill. App. 497, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 544
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 8, 1933
DocketGen. No. 36,510
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 270 Ill. App. 497 (Hummel v. Alwart) 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
Hummel v. Alwart, 270 Ill. App. 497, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 544 (Ill. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Mr. Justice O’Connor

delivered the opinion of the court.

Fred E. Hummel, as receiver of the Motor Transit Mutual Insurance Company, filed his bill in the circuit court of Cook county seeking to have an $18,000 note, secured by a mortgage on Wisconsin real estate, restored as part of the assets of the insurance company of which he was appointed receiver by the United States district court of the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. The case was referred to a master who took the evidence, made up his report, and recommended a decree in accordance with the prayer of the bill. Exceptions to the report were sustained by the chancellor, the bill dismissed for want of equity, and complainant prosecutes this appeal.

The record discloses that the Motor Transit Mutual Insurance Company was incorporated under the laws of this State to conduct a mutual insurance business; that shortly thereafter another corporation known as the Transit Underwriting Corporation was organized under the laws of this State, whose sole purpose apparently was to conduct and operate the business of the insurance company, and a contract to that effect was entered into between the two corporations. Both corporations occupied the same office in Chicago, and the managing company proceeded to procure motor bus companies and others to take out policies of insurance in the insurance company. So that the insurance company could obtain a license to permit it to engage in the business for which it was incorporated, it was necessary that it procure some assets, as required by the statute, and for this purpose the defendants Paul J. Alwart and Katherine S. Alwart, his wife, on August 1, 1925, made their promissory note for $18,000 payable to the order of Edward T. Smith, due five years after date, with interest at six per cent payable semiannually. The payment of the note was secured by a mortgage given by the makers of the note on real estate in Barron county, Wisconsin. This note and mortgage were given by Alwart to the managing corporation to be turned over to the insurance company, and the note and trust deed were placed in a safety deposit box in Chicago, which conld be opened only in the presence of Alwart or his lawyer, and Rice or Claypool (both being connected with the managing company) and an executive officer of the insurance company. This note and mortgage remained in the safety deposit box for about four years. About the time the managing company turned over to the insurance company the $18,000 note and mortgage and other securities that went to-make up the surplus as a prerequisite to the obtaining by the insurance company of a license to issue insurance policies,- the insurance company gave its “surplus note” for $75,000 to the managing company. The note drew interest at eight per cent per annum, payable semiannually, and contained the following: “which principal and interest shall be repaid only out of the surplus earnings of the corporation at such times and in such amounts as shall be determined by the Board of Directors of the corporation, and shall not otherwise be a liability or claim against the corporation or any of its assets.”

The insurance company had issued a number of policies but apparently made no money after the year 1926, and beginning about 1929 or earlier was in a bad financial way. The defendant Edward T. Smith was a brother-in-law of Alwart’s and employed by him. The defendant Wagner was an employee of defendant Alwart, who was engaged in the coal business. May 6, 1929, defendant Alwart caused Smith and his wife to execute their promissory note for $18,000, payable five years after date to the order of Wagner, with interest at six per cent per annum. On the same date Alwart and his wife deeded the Wisconsin property to Smith and at the same time Smith released the mortgage Alwart had given him on the same property. Smith and his wife on the same date gave a mortgage to Wagner to secure the payment of the last mentioned note. Shortly thereafter Alwart, together with two or more persons who had the right to open the safety deposit box in which the Alwart note and mortgage were kept, opened the box, and the Alwart note and mortgage were delivered to him, and the $18,000 note made by Smith and the mortgage were placed in the box in lieu thereof. There were other transfers, back and forth, of the Wisconsin property but we think it of no importance to detail the evidence on this point because it is clear and undisputed that the property at all times belonged to the defendant Alwart, and that the various transfers, releasing of mortgage, etc., were merely colorable. Neither Wagner nor Smith ever had any interest in the property. Smith never received anything for the note. Alwart himself frankly testified, in referring to the Wisconsin property, “I own all the furniture and everything there. There is no debts on it. So far as the record title is concerned, there is no encumbrance on it, never was, it was always mine. As a matter of fact, those mortgages from Smith to Wagner and these various conveyances, were all without consideration, I did not receive any money. . . . I procured all these various papers to be executed for my convenience. . . . Neither Smith nor Wagner nor Crane had anything to do with drawing up those papers. . . . Crane paid nothing to me for the deed to him, and I paid nothing back to Crane for the deed back to myself. ’ ’

It further appears from the evidence that when Alwart delivered the $18,000 note and mortgage made by himself and wife to the managing company to be turned over by it to the insurance company, he was given stock in the managing corporation and a receipt for the note and mortgage. The receipt recited that the managing company had also received from Alwart a bond of a safe deposit company for $1,000, and provided that the note, mortgage and bond were to be put in the safety deposit box in Chicago, which was to be accessible only to certain designated persons, above mentioned, and that the note, mortgage and bond were to be loaned to the insurance company “for the purpose of creating- admitted assets in accordance with sub-section 8 of Section 9 governing the organization of Mutual Insurance Company in Illinois”; and further, that the insurance company should pay six per cent on the face value of the securities to the underwriting company, and the underwriting company agreed, upon receipt of the interest from the insurance company, to turn the same over to Alwart and that “As a part of the consideration of the loan of said Securities” the managing company was to deliver a certain number of certificates of its stock to Alwart. The receipt further provided that Alwart might withdraw the securities at any time thereafter upon condition that he- notify the managing company in writing that he desired his securities returned, provided, however, that he might not demand more than 25 per cent of them within 90 days, “it being the intention hereof that all of said securities shall on demand, as aforesaid, be returned within one year from the time of the demand, ’ ’ etc. It further provided that if" the securities were returned then Alwart should return a proportionate share of the stock which had been given him in the managing company for the securities; and that, “By mutual arrangement between the parties other securities may be substituted by the Loaner (Alwart) for those above mentioned.”

November 16, 1929, complainant was appointed receiver of the insurance company by the United States district court in an equity proceeding. He was authorized and directed, among other things, to collect the assets of the insurance company.

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32 P.2d 505 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
270 Ill. App. 497, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hummel-v-alwart-illappct-1933.