Kimbell Trust & Savings Bank v. Olsen

239 Ill. App. 609, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 204
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 2, 1926
DocketGen. No. 30,370
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 239 Ill. App. 609 (Kimbell Trust & Savings Bank v. Olsen) 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
Kimbell Trust & Savings Bank v. Olsen, 239 Ill. App. 609, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 204 (Ill. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Mb. Justice McSueely

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by defendants, Arlington Heights State Bank and George Max Adam, from a decree entered upon a bill of interpleader. The Kimbell Trust So Savings Bank by its bill alleged that it was in possession of funds amounting to $10,421.26, which had theretofore been deposited with it by W. 0. Olsen to the credit of his checking account; that on February 28, 1923, Olsen drew his check upon the complainant for this sum, which check complainant certified; that George Max Adam had the check in his possession and claimed to be the lawful holder and owner thereof; that Olsen had served complainant with written notice stopping payment and stating that the check had been obtained by Adam by fraud. Complainant averred that it was willing to pay the money to such person as would be lawfully entitled to the same. Defendant Olsen answered, admitting the allegations of the bill and alleging that Adam had obtained the check through misrepresentations. Adam answered that Olsen drew the check; that it was certified by complainant bank and delivered by the bank’s vice president to him, Adam, for a good and valuable consideration, namely, as part of the sale price of certain real estate sold by Adam to W. O. Olsen; that on the day he received the cheek, February 28, 1923, he indorsed and delivered the same for a good and valuable consideration to the Arlington Heights State Bank of Arlington Heights, Illinois,, wMeh ever since was and still is the bona fide holder of the check. By amendment the Arlington Heights. State Bank was made a defendant and answered, claiming that it received the check on February 28, 1923, from Adam for a valuable consideration without knowledge on its part of any infirmity in the check or defect in the title of Adam, and that it thereby became the holder in due course and was and still is entitled to the payment of the check.

The cause was referred to a master in chancery, who heard evidence and reported (1) that the bill of complaint was properly filed as a bill of interpleader; and (2) that the Arlington Heights State Bank was entitled to the proceeds of the check. The Arlington Heights State Bank filed exceptions to the report in so far as it related to the right of complainant to maintain its bill of interpleader; and the defendant Olsen filed exceptions to the report in so far as it related to the recommendation as to who was entitled to the fund. Upon hearing the chancellor overruled all exceptions to the report and found that complainant was entitled to maintain its bill of interpleader, ordered the payment of the amount of the check into the hands of the clerk, with dismissal of complainant out of the suit, and ordered the clerk to/ pay $5,000 to the defendant Olsen and the balance to the Arlington Heights State Bank.

Was complainant entitled to maintain its bill of interpleader?

February 9, 1923, defendant Adam made a written contract with defendant W. 0. Olsen, agreeing to convey to the latter certain improved premises in Chicago, and the parties thereafter met to close the sale. After adjusting incumbrances, rents, insurance premiums, etc., there was due Adam $10,421.26. As Adam did not then have with him a canceled interest coupon which Olsen wished to have delivered to' him, the delivery of the deed and the balance of the purchase money was postponed until the next day, February 28. On this day Adam went to the complainant bank and delivered to E. H. Olsen, vice president of the bank, the canceled interest coupon note and the deed to the premises, and E. H. Olsen gave Adam the check in question for $10,421.26, drawn by W. 0. Olsen upon the complainant bank, payable to E. H. Olsen, whn indorsed it to the order of Adam. The complainant bank . certified the check. W. 0. Olsen testified that he had this, done on February 28, 1923. E. H. Olsen testified that W. 0. Olsen gave the check to him on February 27, when it was uncertified; that the check was. returned to W. 0. Olsen, but that the second time he gave it to E. H. Olsen it was certified. Adam testified that he received the check on February 28, and that he and E. H. Olsen went to the cashier of complainant bank and had the check certified. It is! a reasonable inference that it was the wish and suggestion of both Olsen, the drawer, and Adam, the payee, that it be certified.

On the evening of the same day Adam indorsed the check and delivered it to the cashier of the Arlington Heights State Bank in pursuance of arrangements he had made with this bank, whereby it agreed to guarantee a letter of credit for $5,000, to apply part of the proceeds of the check on the payment of a note held by it against Adam, to' use part to cover an overdraft in Adam’s checking account, and also to take up another note. When the Arlington Heights State Bank received the check it made a deposit slip for same, and both check and slip were placed on a spindle, as it was customary the next morning to make entries on the books of all deposits coming in the evening before. The following day, March 1, the Arlington Heights State Bank received a telephone message from the attorney for W. O. Olsen stating that payment of the check had been stopped on the ground that it had been procured by Adam through misrepresentation and fraud, and a similar message was shortly thereafter received from the Kimbell Trust & Savings Bank.

The equitable remedy of interpleader depends upon and requires the existence of the four following elements :

“First, the same thing, debt or duty must be claimed by both or all the parties against whom the relief is demanded; second, all the adverse titles or claims must be dependent on or be derived from a common source; third, the person asking the relief — the plaintiff — must not have nor claim any interest in the subject matter; fourth, he must have incurred no independent liability to either of the claimants, — that is, he must stand perfectly indifferent between them, in the position, merely, .of stakeholder.” Morrill v. Manhattan Life Ins. Co., 183 Ill. 260, 267; Platte Valley State Bamk v. National Live Stock Bank, 155 Ill. 250; Rauch v. Fort Dearborn Nat. Bank of Chicago, 223 Ill. 507.

It is contended that the complainant cannot maintain its bill for the reason that by certifying the check it incurred an independent liability to pay it. The complainant replies that, where a bank certifies a check at the request of the drawer, before delivery to the payee, the bank thereby does not agree to pay the check but only that the amount thereof will be forthcoming when the check is presented by one lawfully entitled thereto, citing Bathgate v. Exchange Bank of Chula, 199 Mo. App. 583; City of Brunswick v. People’s Sav. Bamk, 194 Mo. App. 360, 190 S. W. 60. In both these cases the right to maintain a bill of inter-pleader under the circumstances is based upon a special provision of the Missouri statute. Illinois has no such statute, and these cases are not applicable.

We hold that complainant is not entitled to maintain its bill of interpleader. If, as we have said, the evidence justified the conclusion that the certification was procured by Adam, the payee, it is immaterial, legally, whether the drawer also requested that it be certified. The act of the payee or holder in requesting certification amounts to an election on his part to relieve the drawer from liability and to accept the bank instead.

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Bluebook (online)
239 Ill. App. 609, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kimbell-trust-savings-bank-v-olsen-illappct-1926.