Illinois Tunnel Co. ex rel. Farrell v. General Accident Fire & Life Insurance

219 Ill. App. 251, 1920 Ill. App. LEXIS 146
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 6, 1920
DocketGen. No. 25,220
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 219 Ill. App. 251 (Illinois Tunnel Co. ex rel. Farrell v. General Accident Fire & Life Insurance) 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
Illinois Tunnel Co. ex rel. Farrell v. General Accident Fire & Life Insurance, 219 Ill. App. 251, 1920 Ill. App. LEXIS 146 (Ill. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Thomson

delivered the opinion of the court.

By this appeal the defendant insurance company seeks to reverse a judgment recovered against it by the plaintiff in the sum of $9,800 in a trial by the court without a jury.

The claim sued upon arose from the following facts: The plaintiff was covered by a policy of insurance issued by the defendant, in and by which the defendant agreed to indemnify the plaintiff against loss from liability for damages on account of injuries suffered by any of its employees. This was an annual policy which expired August 30, 1908. The defendant issued a similar policy to the plaintiff, covering the year ending August 30, 1909. Within the period covered by the first policy, an accident occurred to one Farrell, an employee of the plaintiff, which was of the kind covered by the terms of the policy. Within the period covered by the second policy, an accident occurred to one Gildea, another employee of the plaintiff, which was also covered by the terms of the policy. Due notice was given the defendant of these accidents and the defendant took charge of the cases and investigated them. In due time suits were begun by these two employees against the plaintiff here, in which they sought to recover for the damages they claimed to have suffered as a result of the accidents referred to. The defendant insurance company conducted the defense of both cases. Farrell obtained a judgment for $20,000 against. the Illinois Tunnel Company and Crildea obtained a judgment for $3,000. Both cases were appealed to this court where the judgments were affirmed. Petitions for writs of certiorari were filed in the Supreme Court in each case and both were denied. The petition in the Farrell case was denied April 18, 1913, and the petition in the Oildea case was denied June 16, 1914. Executions were taken out in both cases and returned nulla bona.

After these cases had been begun against the Illinois Tunnel Company, the latter went into the hands of a receiver, upon the filing of a bill to foreclose a trust deed on its property securing its bonds in the sum of $30,000,000. Decree was duly entered in the foreclosure suit and at the master’s sale, on April 5, 1912, the property of the Illinois Tunnel Company was bought in for $5,000,000 by a committee representing the bondholders.

The judgments at law were not paid -by the Illinois Tunnel Company. It ceased to do business and all its property and assets were sold under the foreclosure proceedings referred to.

The Illinois Tunnel Company was an operating company. After its organization, a holding company called the Chicago Subway Company had been organized, to hold the securities of the Tunnel Company and other affiliated companies. After the foreclosure of the property of the Illinois Tunnel Company, that of the Subway Company was also foreclosed. After the purchase of the property of the Illinois Tunnel Company by the bondholders’ committee, a new operating company, called the Chicago Tunnel Company, was organized, to which the assets and property of the Illinois Tunnel Company were transferred by the committee and thereafter a new holding company, called the Chicago Utilities Company, was organized, which acquired the stock of the Chicago Tunnel Company and certain other companies.

One of the assets of the Illinois Tunnel Company, purchased by the bondholders’ committee and turned over to the Chicago Tunnel Company, was the franchise known as the Automatic telephone franchise. In 1916 the Chicago Utilities Company made a contract to sell this franchise to the American Telegraph and Telephone Company. The attorneys for Farrell and Grildea had filed an intervening petition in the foreclosure proceedings against the Illinois Tunnel Company, seeking to subject the assets of the company to the payment of their judgments, but they were not successful. The Illinois Tunnel Company had obligations in excess of $40,000,000 in addition to the $5,000,-000 for which their property was sold at the master’s sale in the foreclosure proceedings, all of which obligations came in ahead of these damage claim judgments.

In April, 1916, the Farrell and Grildea judgments were settled and satisfied in the following manner: The parties in interest in the Chicago Utilities Company feared that the American Telegraph and Telephone Company, which was buying the Automatic telephone franchise, might consider the judgments a cloud on the title of the Chicago Tunnel Company, which then held the franchise, and counsel for the Utilities Company were of the opinion that the safest thing to do was to get the judgments out of the way. Accordingly, counsel for the Utilities Company proposed to counsel for the judgment creditors that the company would pay them $10,000 and turn over the two policies of insurance in satisfaction of their judgments. Each of the policies in question contained certain special agreements, clause 7 of which read as follows:

“No action shall lie against the corporation (insurance company) as respects any loss under this policy unless it shall be brought by the assured himself to reimburse him for loss actually sustained and paid by him in satisfaction of a judgment within 60 days from the date of such judgment and after trial of the issue. ,
“No such action shall lie unless brought within the period within which a claimant might sue the assured for damages unless at the experity of such period there is such an action pending against the assured; in which case an action may be brought against the corporation by the assured within 60 days after final judgment has been rendered and satisfied as above.”

In reply to the proposition made by the Utilities Company, through its counsel, to counsel for the judgment creditors, the latter stated that G-ildea would accept payment of his judgment in full and Farrell would accept the cash offered together with an assignment of the policies, which he regarded as a valuable asset, on condition that the payments be made by the Illinois Tunnel Company out of its own funds, pointing out that “recovery cannot be had upon these policies, unless the Illinois Tunnel Company sustains an actual loss, in making the payments on the judgments, and in order to sustain such loss, it is necessary that the Ulinois Tunnel Company should make these payments out of its own funds” To meet the conditions imposed on the settlement by counsel for the judgment creditors, Mr. Tracy, the president of the Illinois Tunnel Company, and- also of the Chicago Tunnel Company and the Chicago Utilities Company, testified that it was agreed that the Utilities Company, as holder of the mortgage of the Illinois Tunnel Company, should advance the $10,000 “for the protection of its interests and title.” At this time the Illinois Tunnel Company was maintaining its corporate existence but it had ceased to do business and had no assets of any kind nor any bank account. The Utilities Company was not indebted to the Illinois Tunnel Company in any way. There was no action of the Board of Directors of the Utilities Company authorizing this settlement but after the settlement was concluded the board passed a' resolution approving and confirming it, which resolution recited that it was “to the best interests of this company, as holder of the mortgage on Chicago Tunnel Company’s property' that settlement should be made,” wherefore the settlement was ratified, approved and confirmed.

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Bluebook (online)
219 Ill. App. 251, 1920 Ill. App. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-tunnel-co-ex-rel-farrell-v-general-accident-fire-life-illappct-1920.