Jay-Bee Realty Corp. v. Agricultural Insurance

50 N.E.2d 973, 320 Ill. App. 310, 1943 Ill. App. LEXIS 599
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 27, 1943
DocketGen. No. 42,529
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 50 N.E.2d 973 (Jay-Bee Realty Corp. v. Agricultural 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
Jay-Bee Realty Corp. v. Agricultural Insurance, 50 N.E.2d 973, 320 Ill. App. 310, 1943 Ill. App. LEXIS 599 (Ill. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Niemeyer

delivered the opinion of the court.

Defendants, 22 insurance companies, and Underwriters at Lloyd’s, England, hereinafter called Lloyd’s, appeal from a decree fixing and directing payment of their several liabilities totaling, with interest, $226,254.32, under 45 Michigan standard fire insurance policies covering a frame hotel building known as Golfmore Hotel, and the personal property therein; canceling a first mortgage on the hotel premises and contents and the note for $100,000 secured thereby, acquired by defendants after liability under the policies had accrued because of a fire in the hotel on November 20, 1939‘, and enjoining the sale, transfer or assignment of the mortgage and note or institution of any action at law or suit in chancery upon them.

The Golfmore Hotel property comprised a tract of approximately 137 acres, with a lake frontage of about 1,000 feet adjacent to the village of Grand Beach, Michigan. The building proper was of a frame construction with stucco walls, three stories with a high attic and a basement and contained approximately 150 guest rooms, with dining room, dancing facilities, bar, and other accommodations of a modern summer resort hotel. There was an auxiliary building known as the Pinewood Inn, which is not involved in this litigation. The hotel was open from Declaration Day until after Labor Day. It was built in 1923, was operated by the owners for several years, became involved in litigation and was in tbe hands of a receiver, Grand Eapids Trust Co., of Grand Eapids, Michigan, appointed by the Federal Court. In 1935 the property was sold to the receiver as the only bidder for approximately $145,000, being the amount of receiver’s expenses, etc. It was then closed. In February 1937 the Trust company contracted to sell it to Solomon E. Harrison for $175,000 and accrued taxes approximating $30,000. The purchase price was to be paid $50,000 in cash by September 1, 1937, and the balance to be secured by a first mortgage of $100,000 and a second mortgage of $25,000. The latter mortgage represented undisclosed commissions to be paid to Albert Mehlman, a partner of Harrison and owner of 50 per cent of the stock of Golfmore Properties, Inc., to which the contract of purchase was assigned. Mehlman’s interest having been disclosed, the second mortgage was surrendered and discharged in 1938 upon payment to the Trust company and others of various sums aggregating $18,900 in adjustment of the controversy and the elimination of Mehlman from the enterprise. In 1937 the hotel was furnished and certain improvements, including the building and equipping of the Casino and a dining room, and restuccoing of the exterior of the building were made at a cost of more than $50,000. .Harrison and Mehlman were unable or unwilling to meet their September 1937 obligations and open the hotel the following year. Albert E. Berger then be.came the financial backer. The Golfmore Properties, Inc., assigned the contract of purchase to him and he organized plaintiff and assigned the contract to it; payments were made and warranty deed to the property was delivered to plaintiff in the Fall of 1937 and the first and second mortgages executed and delivered. At the time of the fire Berger was secretary, treasurer, director, principal stockholder, principal creditor to the extent of $110,000 and managing head of plaintiff and all its affairs. In 1939 the hotel was a fully-equipped, modern summer resort hotel.

The fire practically destroyed the building. Only a few chimneys, the brick work inclosing the elevator, and a small portion of one of the walls remained standing; All the contents were destroyed. Immediate notice of the fire was given and proof of loss was filed within the 60 days specified in the policies. Although the question of incendiarism in the origin of the fire was raised in the pleadings, no evidence to support the charge was introduced on the trial.

Defendants interpose three defenses in bar of the action. (1) That the action is not cognizable in equity. Defendants contend that since our Civil Practice Act now permits a single action at law against all the defendants to recover the amount due from each, equity should not assume jurisdiction to avoid multiplicity of suits, and that our Supreme Court in Weininger v. Metropolitan Fire Ins. Co., 359 Ill. 584, erred in assuming that the computations" required in prorating the liability of the respective defendants is an accounting which .gives courts of equity jurisdiction. The Weininger case was instituted under the old Practice Act against sixteen defendants to recover upon nineteen fire insurance policies aggregating $25,000. As in the case at bar the policies there contained a provision for prorating the aggregate loss on the property in the proportion that the insurance written under each policy bore to the total insurance carried. The amount of the loss was contested in each case. In sustaining the equitable jurisdiction the Supreme Court (pp. 589, 590) said: “The liabilities of the defendants here by reason of the controverted issues as to the amount of loss and the pro raía features of the policies are interrelated and interdependent. There is involved herein, therefore, not only the question of multiplicity of suits, but, if there is a recovery by the complainants, the further fact that when the loss is determined some sort of accounting is necessarily required to fix and prorate the amounts for which the defendants are severally liable. We conclude that the case here presented is a proper one for the assumption of jurisdiction by a court of equity, not only upon the ground of avoiding a multiplicity of suits but also because an accounting is likewise involved. Milwaukee Mechanics’ Ins. Co. v. Ciaccio, 38 Fed. (2d) 153; American Central Ins. Co. v. Harmon Knitting Mills, 39 id. 21.” Jurisdiction to avoid multiplicity of suits has. long been exercised by courts of equity. This jurisdiction is not taken from equity by statutes permitting the joinder of many causes of action that formerly were not permitted to be joined in one action at law. 1 Story’s Eq. Jur. (14th Ed.), see. 104, citing Labadie v. Hewitt, 85 Ill. 341. In that case the court after the Legislature had provided for partition by petition, said: “It has been repeatedly held, that when the General Assembly gives a new remedy, by petition, under the statute, it in nowise affects the jurisdiction of the court of chancery; that the new remedy is cumulative; that the court of chancery may proceed under its original jurisdiction as though the cumulative remedy had not been given, unless limited or restricted by statute. The court of chancery has entertained and exercised jurisdiction in cases of partition from quite an ancient period. Courts of law were also invested with jurisdiction to adjudge and make partition, even before it became a source of equitable relief. After chancery assumed jurisdiction, the courts of law continued to make partition, without any change in their mode of procedure. But the practice in the British courts of law was inconvenient and cumbersome, and our General Assembly, to remedy the evil, gave a petition in lieu of the old writ of partition, and prescribed the practice thereunder. But it has never been supposed that, in doing so, they designed to take away the jurisdiction from the courts of chancery, or intended thereby, in any degree, to alter or amend the practice in that court.” In the later case of Chapman v. American Surety Co., 261 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.E.2d 973, 320 Ill. App. 310, 1943 Ill. App. LEXIS 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jay-bee-realty-corp-v-agricultural-insurance-illappct-1943.