Jenkins v. International Bank

111 Ill. 462
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 111 Ill. 462 (Jenkins v. International Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jenkins v. International Bank, 111 Ill. 462 (Ill. 1884).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sheldon

delivered the opinion of the Court:

It is insisted the circuit court erred in holding the former adjudication in the Wilshire suit a bar to any further account as to what was in issue therein. The issues tendered by the bank to Walker, and by Walker to the bank, were precisely the same in that suit brought by Wilshire as they are in the case at bar. The main object in each suit was and is to ascertain the amount due from Walker to the bank. That was litigated and determined in the Wilshire suit, and we think the sum there found to be due must stand, and be taken as the amount then due, without being subject to be overhauled in this present suit. As was said in Briscoe v. Lloyd, 64 Ill. 33, litigation must have a termination, and when a matter has been in issue and the parties before the court, and an opportunity afforded to assert their rights, they must be held concluded from afterwards litigating them in another proceeding. We do not understand appellant’s counsel as making question that the decree in the Wilshire suit would not, under the general rule, be a bar to any further accounting, or be binding as to the amount due, upon the principle of res judicata, but he seeks to avoid the effect of such former adjudication by the United States Statute of Limitations, and by the fact that the decree in the Wilshire suit is erroneous, and, as alleged, unjust and inequitable.

Section 5057 of the Revised Statutes of the United States provides, that “no suit, either at law or in equity, shall be maintainable in any court between an assignee in bankruptcy and a person claiming an adverse interest touching any property or rights of property transferable to or vested in such assignee, unless brought within two years from the time when the cause of action accrued for or against such assignee.” To make that statute applicable this view is presented: that as the supplemental bill filed in this cause by the bank on November 26, 1883, setting up the decree in the Wilshire suit, prayed that it might be taken as a bar to any further proceeding by Jenkins under his cross-bill herein, and also that it might .be taken as a sufficient adjudication of the amount due the bank, upon the evidence of indebtedness set out in the original bill, the decree was used in the court below for a two-fold purpose: First, as a plea in bar of the accounting; and second, as the cause of action in a supplemental bill taking the place of the cause of action set out in the original bill. It is this latter purpose, and the relief the party prays under it, which it is claimed entitles the assignee to set up in bar of that relief the statute. The decree in the Wilshire case having been rendered February 28, 1878, the deed to the assignee in bankruptcy made July 31, 1878, and the said supplemental bill having been filed November 26, 1883, it was more than two years thereafter.

We do not appreciate the distinction which would thus be taken in respect of a double purpose of the supplemental bill, — one purpose, as a plea in bar of the accounting, in which regard appellant’s counsel says he does not apply the .statute to the decree as ras judicata, but that to its other purpose, as a substantive cause of action, as it is claimed to be, for the amount found due by the Wilshire decree, the Statute of Limitations does apply. Although the supplemental bill does in form set up the decree in the Wilshire suit in a double aspect, — first, as in bar of the cross-bill of Walker, and any further proceedings under it, and second, that such decree may be declared a sufficient adjudication of the amount due from Walker to the bank, — there was no ground for any such distinction. The bill of the bank prayed for establishing the amount of indebtedness due the bank from Walker, and an account would have had to have been taken under that, and Walker’s answer setting up the payment of usurious interest. Walker’s cross-bill did pray for an accounting, but the cross-bill was not needed for that, — its only necessity was to obtain the affirmative relief of having surrender of the collaterals made to him. The barring of any further accounting would necessarily he to take the sum found by the Wilshire decree to be the amount due; and taking the Wilshire decree as fixing the amount due, would necessarily bar any further accounting previous thereto. We do not see any substantial distinction between the debarring of any further accounting and the taking of the Wilshire decree as conclusive of the amount due. We see no two-fold purpose in reality of the supplemental bill, but view it as having the single object of setting up the Wilshire decree as a former adjudication of the subject matter of the present suit. We regard the supplemental bill as essentially in the nature of a plea in bar to any further accounting in this suit, — that a party can not be called upon to account twice. It is analogous in operation to the plea of a former adjudication in bar of a pending suit upon the same subject. With respect to a matter of defence which arises after the cause is at issue, it is laid down that the defendant can not avail himself of the defence by plea or answer, but must make the same the subject of a cross-bill. (Story’s Equity Pleading, sec. 393.) And so when the. complainant in a bill would assert such matter of defence to a cross-hill, the proper mode we take to be by a supplemental bill.

The notes of Walker to the bank were introduced in evidence here, and there was no necessity of resort to the Wilshire decree as fixing the amount due the bank, the Wilshire decree being for just the amount of the notes. But it is said the notes were merged in the Wilshire decree, and no longer existed as a cause of action, — that the only cause of action afterward was upon the decree, and all right had to be asserted upon it as the cause of action, and hence the necessity of the supplemental bill making the decree the cause of action, and that against that, as the cause of action, the statute has run. We do not consider the supplemental bill as introducing a new cause of action. The indebtedness is the same. The evidence of it at the time of filing the original bill in this case consisted in notes from Walker to the bank. The notes have since, as said, become merged in the Wilshire decree. There has been, then, a change in the evidence of the indebtedness, — from notes to a decree upon them; that is all. The collaterals sought to be foreclosed by sale of them were pledged for the payment of the indebtedness. A decree upon the notes, and the running of the Statute of Limitations against the decree, is not any payment of the indebtedness. The simple effect is, that the statute is a bar to a suit upon the decree. The collaterals may be held until the indebtedness is paid according to the terms of the pledge. We do not consider that there has been any new suit brought upon the decree, but that there is, under the supplemental bill, but assertion of the right to claim the benefit of the Wilshire decree as res judicata, and that the Statute of Limitations set up is not a bar to that right.

It is next asserted that the Wilshire decree is erroneous, inequitable and unjust on its face, and under the circumstances of the case one to which the circuit court should not have given effect. There was error in the Wilshire decree.

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Bluebook (online)
111 Ill. 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenkins-v-international-bank-ill-1884.