Kerner v. Thompson

282 Ill. App. 403, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 662
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 20, 1935
DocketGen. No. 37,774
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 282 Ill. App. 403 (Kerner v. Thompson) 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
Kerner v. Thompson, 282 Ill. App. 403, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 662 (Ill. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hebel

delivered the opinion of the court.

It appears from" the record in this court that the plaintiff, Otto Kernel, as attorney general of the State of Illinois, is here on appeal from a certain portion of a decree entered "by the chancellor in a bill filed by the attorney general for an accounting of funds received by the defendants. The action is, as we have stated, one in chancery instituted by the attorney general of the State of Illinois against William Hale Thompson, the Waterway and Flood Control Association of the Mississippi Valley, a corporation, and others to protect and preserve a certain fund of money donated in 1927 for the use and benefit of flood sufferers in the Mississippi Valley, and to require Thompson to account for and restore as a charitable trust the portion of the fund not used for the original purpose.

The case was heard by the court upon the complaint as amended, the answer as amended, the replication of the plaintiff, and upon a stipulation of facts read into the record and set out in full in the decree. No point has been raised on the pleadings.

It appears from the facts in the record that following the great flood in the Mississippi Valley in April, 1927, the defendant, William Hale Thompson, then mayor of the City of Chicago, by proclamation and appeals to the public, received from the public as- donations for the relief of the flood sufferers the sum of $139,772.47. Of this sum the defendant, Thompson, paid for the relief of flood sufferers the sum of $35,846.51, to which allowance by the court in the accounting no objection was made.

On December 16, 1930, the defendants organized an Illinois corporation known as the Waterway and Flood Control Association of the Mississippi Valley, and shortly thereafter the fund was transferred to this corporation. Out of the fund so transferred, a total of $72,794.79 was disbursed for the purposes appearing in the decree entered by the court, and it is from this portion of the decree that plaintiff complains the court erred in allowing such deductions.

At the final hearing of the canse all defendants were dismissed out of the case except Thompson, the Waterway and Flood Control Association of the Mississippi Valley, a corporation, and the First National Bank of Chicago.

The plaintiff’s theory in this case is that under the cy pres doctrine of construction the total sum of $103,925.96 on hand after relief had been given to the flood sufferers in 1927, should have been applied to a purpose as nearly as possible to the charitable purpose for which the monies were originally donated, and that the use and application of the sum of $72,794.79 was not a cy pres use and application. To this theory the defendant answers that the use and application of said sum of $72,794.79 by said Thompson was a proper use under the cy .pres doctrine.

The defendants filed their motion to dismiss this appeal upon the ground that there was entered in the above entitled cause a final decree which found that the defendant, William Hale Thompson, as trustee of the fund “. . . did not act improperly or beyond his authority as such trustee in the use or application of the sum of $72,794.79,” and decreed that the use and application of the sum of $72,794.79 made by the defendant be approved and affirmed; and further ordered :

“That the defendants, William Hale Thompson and The Waterway and Flood Control Association of the Mississippi Valley, a corporation, be and they each are hereby directed to transfer and set over within ten (10) days from the date of this decree to the custody and control of the American National Red Cross, a corporation, as trustee, the said fund or sum of $31,131.17 ... to be used by said American National Red Cross for the relief of those who may be caused suffering in the future by reason of any floods which may occur in the Mississippi-Valley, or for a purpose, as closely related to the original purpose as may be, and in default of the defendants, or either of them, joining in or directing the transfer and setting-over of said fund in the sum of $31,131.17, to said American National Red Cross, then the defendant, The First National Bank of Chicago, upon the expiration of ten (10) days from the date of this decree, shall be and it is hereby ordered and directed to transfer said sum of $31,131.17 ... to said American National Bed Cross, a corporation, as trustee.”

It further appears from the suggestions in support of defendants’ motion that the defendants complied with the provisions of the decree requiring them to turn over the sum of $31,131.17 to the American National Bed Cross, in accordance with the prayer of the bill and the terms of the decree. The fact that the money was paid is not denied by the plaintiff in this proceeding.

The plaintiff as attorney general of the State of Illinois filed a counter-suggestion to the motion to dismiss the appeal upon the ground that the suit was not a suit for the interest or benefit of the plaintiff, but to restore the funds of a public charitable trust, and that the plaintiff received no benefit personally whatever from this decree, but merely acted in bringing and prosecuting said suit in performance, of his official duty, and contends that the findings and decretal orders are severable for the following reasons:

“ (a) That the court finds that the defendant and appellee, William Hale Thompson, out of. the funds collected by him applied to the purposes of the trust the sum of $35,846.51;

“'(b) That of the fund collected said defendant and appellee applied the sum of $72,794.79 to various objects and purposes, the application of which was approved by the court, but which plaintiff contends under this appeal was improperly applied,” and calls this court’s attention to this part of the decree:

“It Is Further Ordered, Adjudged ahd Decreed that the payment of' said sum of $31,131.17 to the American National Bed Cross, a corporation, shall be without prejudice to the right of said complainant, Otto Kerner, as Attorney Gfeneral of the State of Illinois, to appeal from any part or portion of this decree. ’ ’

' In the consideration of this motion, as no objection has been made to this procedure, we will consider the motion in the nature of a plea of the defendants of a release of errors, and will consider the suggestions and counter-suggestions upon the question as to whether or not the plea of release of errors sets up a good defense which would justify this court in dismissing the proceedings.

One of the contentions urged by the defendants is that the plaintiff having accepted the benefits of the decree and received from the defendants the amount found to be due upon an accounting cannot prosecute a writ of error or take an appeal to reverse the decree entered in the above entitled cause.

The rule that one who accepts the benefits of a decree cannot prosecute a writ of error to reverse it has been passed upon by the Supreme Court of this State, and in a case entitled Kellner v. Schmidt, 237 Ill. App. 428, we follow this rule in its application to the facts in that particular case, and we there said:

‘ ‘ That one who has accepted the benefits of a decree cannot afterwards prosecute a writ of error to reverse it has been frequently passed on by the Supreme Court of this State. (Thomas v.

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2 N.E.2d 846 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
282 Ill. App. 403, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kerner-v-thompson-illappct-1935.