Klages v. Kohl

127 Ill. App. 70, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 332
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 22, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 127 Ill. App. 70 (Klages v. Kohl) 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
Klages v. Kohl, 127 Ill. App. 70, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 332 (Ill. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Justioe Creighton

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a claim filed in the County Court of Madison County, by appellee against the estate of Henry Klages, deceased, to recover a balance due on a deposit of money made by appellee in the Mullanphy Savings Bank of St. Louis, in the State- of Missouri. From the judgment of the County Court an appeal was prosecuted to the Circuit Court, where the case was tried de novo, jury being waived. The trial resulted in a finding and judgment in favor of appellee for the sum of §1,773.75.

The Mullanphy Savings Bank was a corporation organized under and existing by virtue of the laws of the State of Missouri, and did business in the city of St. Louis, in that state. From January 1, 1891, to March 1, 1897, Henry Klages was a stockholder and director of said bank, and for a period of five years immediately prior to March 1, 1897, he was a member of the discount committee, which was the managing committee of the bank. Appellee was a citizen of the State of Illinois, residing at Venice, across the river from the city of St. Louis, and at some time prior to March 1, 1897, deposited money in the Mullanphy Savings Bank, to the amount of $3,158.20. On the last-named date the bank, being then insolvent, failed, owing appellee the sum mentioned.

The receiver of the bank paid him dividends from the assets, reducing the principal amount due him to the sum of $1,262.27. After the failure of the bank Henry Klages remained a citizen of the State of Missouri and continued to reside in the city of St. Louis until August 3, 1902, when he died, leaving appellant, his widow, an interest in his estate. At the time of his death he had personal property in Madison county, Illinois, where an administrator was duly appointed August 11, 1902, and on April 11, 1903, appellee filed his claim against the estate.

Appellee’s claim is based on a statute of the State of Missouri, as follows:

“ Sec. 1295. No president, director, manager, cashier or other officer or agent of any bank or banking institution organized and doing business under the provisions of this article, or of any laws of this state, shall receive or assent to the reception of deposits, or create or assent to-the creation of any debts by such bank or banking institution, after he shall have knowledge of the fact that it is insolvent or in failing circumstances. Every person violating the provisions of this section shall be individually responsible for such deposits so received and all debts so contracted. * * *»
“ Sec. 1296. In all suits brought for the recovery of the amount of any deposits received or debts so created, all officers, agents or managers of any such banking institutions charged with having so assented to the reception of such deposit, or the creation of such debt, may be joined as defendants or proceeded against severally, and the fact that such banking institution was so insolvent or in failing circumstances .at the time of the reception of the deposit charged to have been so received, or the creation of the debt charged to have been so created shall beprima facie evidence of such knowledge and assent to such deposit of creation of such debt on the part of such officer, agent or manager so charged therewith.”
“Sec. 1297. This article shall extend to whom:
“This article shall extend to and may be enforced by and against the executors and administrators of such deceased officers, agents and managers.”

A number of interesting questions are raised upon this record and elaborately discussed by counsel, in their respective briefs, but as wé view the case only two of them need be discussed here. These are as to the Statute of Limitations, and the sufficiency of the evidence to support the findings and judgment of the trial court.

As the Statute of Limitations applies only to the remedy and not the right, the statute in force in the state where the action is brought applies. In this case, however, that rule is of no importance, since the Statute of Limitations of the two states is substantially the same, with respect to the subject-matter of this action. The character of the liability is the controlling question as to this branch of the case.

Counsel for appellee contends that the liability “is a contract liability,” evidenced in writing, and therefore the action might be commenced at any time within ten years after the cause of action accrued.

Counsel for appellant contends that the liability “is a penal liability,” and therefore must be commenced within two years after the cause of action accrued.

The liability accrued in a foreign ..state and is based on a statute of that state. This statute must receive the same interpretation in the courts of this state, in this case, as is given it in the courts of its own state. We must look there for the law that determines the true character of the liability in question, and we find that in the year 1899, the precise question was decided, in a case based on the same sections of the statute as the case at bar. Eads v. Orcut, 79 Mo. App. 511. The court in that case says: This action “was brought by plaintiff as a depositor against the defendants as officers of the Citizens’ Bank of Jamesport to "recover the amount of deposits made by him between March 15th and July 13, 1893, when the bank was known to defendants to be insolvent or in failing circumstances. The statute is as follows:” (here the statute is quoted in the opinion word for word the same as the statute in evidence in this case and above quoted by us.) After discussing many authorities, substantially the same ones cited pro and con by counsel in this case, the court says: “But, while the statutes construed in some of these cases are in some respects similar to our statute, yet it will be found on an investigation that they are based on the idea of a contractual liability arising from the fact that the membership of the corporation, in connection with the statute respecting such membership, made the obligation substantially contractual. But when the statute imposed a liability upon the corporation officer which was not his, as a consequence of doing a forbidden act, it is a penalty, in a local sense, notwithstanding it may afford a remedy to the party complaining.” * * * “Our statute prohibits receiving deposits, or contracting debts, when the bank ‘is insolvent or in failing circumstances’ and provides that any officer ‘violating the provisions of this section shall be individually responsible for such deposits so received and all such debts so contracted.’ This clearly, though providing a remedy for the creditor and in that respect remedial, inflicts punishment on the officer for his transgression by making him pay for the debt of the corporation, which he did not owe. It will be observed that the statute is but a legislative compliance with the constitution of the state and that the language of each is in the imperative, commanding what shall not be done and prescribing 'onerous consequences. We are satisfied that the civil liability thus put upon the officers is a penalty.”

In that same case the court further says: “In holding the statute to be penal we are aware of what may be said to be the results which logically follow such construction.

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Bluebook (online)
127 Ill. App. 70, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klages-v-kohl-illappct-1906.