John B. Colegrove & Co. State Bank v. Gaupp

192 N.E. 570, 357 Ill. 499, 1934 Ill. LEXIS 766
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 17, 1934
DocketNo. 22175. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 192 N.E. 570 (John B. Colegrove & Co. State Bank v. Gaupp) 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
John B. Colegrove & Co. State Bank v. Gaupp, 192 N.E. 570, 357 Ill. 499, 1934 Ill. LEXIS 766 (Ill. 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Herrick

delivered the opinion of the court:

The circuit court of Christian county entered a decree in a chancery proceeding had in that court allowing the sum of $7700 as a preferred claim in favor of Amelia Gaupp, the plaintiff in error, (hereinafter called the claimant,) and against Robert G. Earley, the defendant in error herein, as receiver of the John B. Colegrove & Co. State Bank, against the funds of that bank at the time it ceased doing business. The receiver prosecuted an appeal to the Appellate Court for the Third District, and that court reversed the decree without remanding the cause. The record comes here for review upon a writ of certiorari granted upon the application of Amelia Gaupp.

The pleadings are quite extensive and in their chronological order the substance thereof is fully stated in the opinion of the Appellate Court. (Colegrove & Co. State Bank v. Gaupp, 271 Ill. App. 51.) It was stipulated in the circuit court that all technical objections to the pleadings were waived, and it will not be necessary to state the pleadings here other than that the cross-bill of Amelia Gaupp contained a prayer for general relief.

The issues submitted to the trial court were stipulated to be: (1) Whether the John B. Colegrove & Co. State Bank became a trustee for Amelia Gaupp in the sum of $7000; (2) whether Amelia Gaupp was the sole owner of the trust fund; and (3) whether Amelia Gaupp is a preferred creditor to the amount of such fund against the bank in receivership.

The John B. Colegrove & Co. Bank was a partnership doing business as a private bank in Taylorville for several years prior to 1920. John B. Colegrove was its president. The John B. Colegrove & Co. State Bank (hereafter called the State bank) was incorporated under the banking laws of this State, opened for business on January 3, 1921, and continued in business until October 10, 1931. On the succeeding day it failed to open its doors. Later a receiver was appointed for such bank by the Auditor of Public Accounts. Colegrove was president of the latter bank during all the time it operated as a bank. Martin B. Miller was the father of the claimant. Christine Miller, wife of Martin B., is the step-mother of the claimant. On March 8, 1916, a family contract was made between Miller, his wife and four of his children. By the terms of the contract, so far as they relate to the claimant, she became the owner by deed from her father, in which deed her step-mother joined, of 70 acres of farm land in Christian county, with a covenant on Mrs. Gaupp’s part to pay to her father and step-mother, and the survivor of them, an annuity of $225, which annuity in March, 1920, by mutual consent of the parties was increased to $250. Mrs. Gaupp complied with all the provisions of the contract on her part to be performed. The 70-acre tract was sold in 1919 for $14,000. Apparently by the mutual agreement of Mrs. Gaupp and her father the proceeds of the sale of the farm were paid to him. He in turn paid $7000 to her and retained $7000. Out of the funds reserved by Miller he in 1919 loaned $3000 to John B. Colegrove, for which Colegrove gave his personal note payable to Miller. On March 1, 1920, Miller delivered $4000 to Colegrove. Colegrove testified, and he is not contradicted, that he was to hold the $7000 in “escrow” and to pay the interest to Miller during his lifetime; that on receipt of the $4000 Colegrove issued a certificate of the private bank to Miller, which represented the $3000 and $4000 loaned by Miller. The evidence further shows that the several sums of $3000 and $4000 were deposited to the personal account of Colegrove in- such private bank and that he used the money to pay on an indebtedness he owed that bank.

On November 7, 1923, Miller made his will. Colegrove wrote the will. The second paragraph is as follows:

“Second — I give and bequeath to Amelia Gaupp the sum of seven thousand ($7000) dollars, and being one half of the money out of the proceeds of the sale of 70 acres of land which said fund is now held in trust for her by the said John B. Colegrove & Co. State Bank of Taylor-ville, Illinois, which with three thousand dollars ($3000) already paid to her and four thousand ($4000) more which was paid to her on March 1, 1920, shall be in total of fourteen thousand dollars ($14,000) shall be in full of her share of my estate, but the income of the same to the amount of two hundred fifty dollars ($250) per annum is reserved for my use during my lifetime and after my death for the use of my wife, Christine Miller, during her lifetime.”

On the same day Colegrove wrote and delivered to Miller a declaration of trust, as follows:

“Taylorville, III., November 7, 1923.
“Received of Martin B. Miller and Christine Miller, his wife, the sum of $7000 which is placed in escrow and which is to be held in trust by me for the use of Martin B. Miller, Christine Miller and Mrs. Amelia Gaupp, and on the death of Martin B. Miller and Christine Miller or the survivor of them said sum to be delivered over to Mrs. Amelia Gaupp, (wife of John Gaupp) of Springfield, Illinois. And while said sum is held in trust it is agreed that the taxes and assessments that may be levied against the same shall be paid by Mrs. Amelia Gaupp, and it is also agreed that the use of said money and the income derived therefrom is reserved by Martin B. Miller and Christine Miller or the survivor of them. And it is also agreed that in case Mrs. Amelia Gaupp should die before the said Martin B. Miller and Christine Miller or the survivor of them, then the whole amount of same shall revert to the said Martin B. Miller to dispose of as he may see fit. And also it is agreed that in case the said Martin B. Miller or his wife, Christine Miller, should find it necessary to use any part of the principal of said amount at any time, that he or she may draw any part or all of the same for their use. Interest to be paid at the rate of five per cent per annum.
John B. Colegrove & Co. State Bank,
By John B. Colegrove, President.”

This declaration of trust supplanted the certificate for $7000 issued by the private bank and represented the same money. This instrument was found in a box of the deceased after his death. The litigation by which it is sought to bind the State bank as a trustee of the funds involved centers about this declaration of trust. The claim is made for the principal sum of $7000 and two years’ interest accrued thereon.

Martin B. Miller died January 15, 1924. His will was admitted to probate, his estate duly administered and the administration later closed on February 3, 1928. The $7000 trust fund mentioned in the declaration of trust ' never came into the possession of Miller’s executor. Interest was paid on the $7000 to Christine Miller from September 7, 1924, until and including November 7, 1927, by the State bank. Thereafter no interest was paid. Cole-grove had entire charge of these transactions. The evidence conclusively established the fact that there was no entry or writing on the records of the State bank disclosing the existence of the trust. With the exception of Cole-grove no officer had notice of the existence of the trust until in 1929.

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Bluebook (online)
192 N.E. 570, 357 Ill. 499, 1934 Ill. LEXIS 766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-b-colegrove-co-state-bank-v-gaupp-ill-1934.