Ladd v. Judson

71 Ill. App. 283, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 22
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 13, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 71 Ill. App. 283 (Ladd v. Judson) 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
Ladd v. Judson, 71 Ill. App. 283, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 22 (Ill. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Burroughs

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Appellants filed in the. Circuit Court of Montgomery County, Illinois, on September 15, 1896, their bill in chancery against appellees, alleging that there was due and owing appellants from appellees the sum of $981.11, and interest, being the balance due on a judgment recovered by them, on September 24,1895, in the Circuit Court of Josephine County, Oregon, that court having jurisdiction of appellees, by service of process on them; and that it was a court of competent jurisdiction; that' said judgment still remains in full force and effect. Said bill also alleges that appellees T. P. and Jennie II. Judson are residents of Oregon, and have been for more than ten years; that appellants are unable to make the said amount of said judgment from said appellees last named, in the State of Oregon, because they have no property or effects, which could be levied upon, or which could be reached in any proceeding in law or in equity in that State. That one Solomon Harkey, the father of appellee, Jennie H. Judson, died testate in Hillsboro, Montgomery county, Illinois, about April 20,1892, owning, when he died, a large amount of real estate in said Montgomery county; that said Harkey left a last will and testament, in which he devised all his real and personal estate to appellee Alexander A. Cress, one of the defendants to said bill, in which will the testator authorized and empowered said Cress to sell the real estate testator owned, and convert it into money, and divide the money so received equally among his (testator’s) children, naming them, among which children he names appellee Jennie H. Judson as one, as will more fully appear from said will, which is attached to said bill; that there is now remaining in the hands of appellee Cress, as trustee under said will, and undisposed of, 820 acres of the real estate devised by said will, and to be sold by said trustee, and the proceeds divided among testator’s said children; that the appellees T. P. and Jennie H. Judson are insolvent and non-residents of Illinois; that there is no way in law by which the property rights and interests held by said Alexander A. Cress, in trust for said Jennie H. Judson, under the said will, can be reached; and that there is no other property of any kind in the State of Illinois, owned by appellees, which can be reached by attachment or otherwise, to satisfy said balance of said judgment. The bill also alleges generally, upon information and belief, that appellee Cress, as trustee under said will, has control of notes, accounts, cboses in action, etc., which he holds in trust for appellees T. P. and Jennie H. Judson, under the the terms and conditions of said will, and prays discovery.

The bill alleges, further, that said T. P. and Jennie H. Judson have refused to pay the said amount due the complainants, or to apply thereon the equitable interest which is held in trust for them by said Cress, all of which is contrary to equity and good conscience; and that by reason of said Judsons being non-residents of the State of Illinois, and keeping themselves out of the jurisdiction of the courts of Illinois, appellants have been unable to obtain judgment in Illinois against them. The bill prays that appellee Cress may be required to inform the court as to the amount and value of all the property interest and effects held by him in trust for the use of T. P. and Jennie H. Judson, whereby appellants’ said debt could be satisfied, and that the said Judsons may be decreed to pay appellants said amount due them, as aforesaid; and that appellee Cress, the trustee under said will, may be. required, if on hearing he is found to hold real estate for the use of the said Judsons, to sell or dispose of it, or so much of it as may be found necessary to satisfy appellants’ said debt; and that appellees may be declared to have a lien upon all property held or owned by said Cress in which the said Judsons are interested; and for such other and further relief as to the court may seem proper.

Copy of will of Solomon Harkey is attached to the bill. This gives to his wife certain interest during her natural life. Item 4is as follows: “ I will and devisé to my executor or executors, hereinafter named or described, all my real estate, including all that devised to my wife for life, but subject to that devise for life to her, in trust for the following purposes or objects: First. That he may sell said real estate arid convert the same into money, and as I don’t wish my said real estate sacrificed, I hereby authorize and empower my executor or executors to sell the whole or any part or any parcel thereof and convey the same when sold, on such terms and at such times as he may deem for the best interest of my estate. He is expressly authorized to use his discretion in selling any and all real estate and make the sales thereof privately or publicly as shall seem to him best for my estate. Secondly. The rents and profits of said estate, except so much thereof as shall be necessary to make such repairs, as are needful to keep the improved parts of said real estate from deteriorating in value and pay the taxes on my entire real estate, including that in which my wife has a life estate, together with proceeds of said real estate, shall be divided into seven equal parts; that is, after the costs and expenses of my said real estate have been paid, and one-seventh part thereof shall be paid as follows: To my sons, William P. Harkey, Jacob M. Harkey and Solomon S. Harkey; and one-seventh part to my daughters, Sarah 0. Wilton and Jennie H. Judson; one-seventh part to my grandaughter, Martha J. Blackburn; one-seventh part thereof to the children of my deceased son or the survivors of them, viz., Ida Harkey and Ella Lee Harkey, one-seventh part thereof.”

Said will names the said Alexander A. Cress as the sole executor thereof.

Appellee Alexander A. Cress interposed a demurrer to said bill, and for cause of demurrer says appellants have stated no such case as entitles them in a court of equity to any relief or discovery from him; and for special cause of demurrer, he says: It does not appear from said bill that appellants have recovered a judgment at law on their said claim against said T. P. and Jennie H. Judson or either of them, in the State of Illinois, as by law appellants were required to do before filing said bill. And prays to be dismissed with costs. The Circuit Court sustained said demurrer, and appellants elected to stand by their bill; thereupon the court dismissed the bill, and taxed the costs to appellants. Appellants, bring this case to this court by appeal; assigning the dismissal of said bill on said demurrer as error.

Appellants insist, first: That a creditor may maintain a creditor’s bill before obtaining a judgment at law, when his claim has some equitable element in it, such as a trust or the like. Second. That when a creditor’s claim must be satisfied, if at all, out of a fund which is accessible only by the aid of a court of chancery, application may be made in the first instance to a court of chancery, which will not require that the claim should be first established in a court of law.

Appellants concede that in this State the general rule is that a creditor’s bill can not be sustained if the creditor has not first obtained a judgment in this State and had execution issued and returned no property found.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 Ill. App. 283, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ladd-v-judson-illappct-1897.