Laughlin v. Chicago Railway Equipment Co.

182 Ill. App. 262, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 422
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 13, 1913
DocketGen. No. 17,943
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 182 Ill. App. 262 (Laughlin v. Chicago Railway Equipment Co.) 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
Laughlin v. Chicago Railway Equipment Co., 182 Ill. App. 262, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 422 (Ill. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

In Chicago Railway Equipment Co. v. National Hollow Brake Beam Co., 173 Ill. App. 595, we commented on the contributions to legal literature made by the warfare between the quondam friends and business associates, Edward B. Leigh and Henry D. Laughlin. The present appeal, and that numbered 17,831 in this court, (post, p. 280), which will be decided contemporaneously herewith, are additions to the score of causes arising therefrom which have been mooted in the Appellate and Supreme Courts of Illinois. In the opinion in the case alluded to we said that the underlying facts of the bitter controversy between the parties had often been set forth in the opinions to be found in the reports and that this rendered it unnecessary to repeat them in detail. The same may be said in the present case. We shall confine ourselves in this opinion as strictly as possible to the single incident of this continuous legal conflict which gives rise to this litigation.

December 8,1909, Henry D. Laughlin filed his bill in chancery in the Circuit Court of Cook county against the Chicago Railway Equipment Company and the American Trust and Savings Bank, in which he claimed to be the owner of one hundred and eighty-two bonds of five hundred dollars each, made and executed by the Chicago Railway Equipment Company as a part of six hundred such bonds, divided according to their due dates into series A, B, C, D, E, F, Gr, H, I, J, K, L and M. Among the further allegations of the bill were these:

The said six hundred bonds were secured by a deed of trust made and executed by the said Chicago Railway Equipment Company under date of June 29, 1898, to the American Trust and Savings Bank as Trustee. Said trust deed (which is made an exhibit to the bill) contains recitals of the negotiations between the Equipment Company and the complainant Laughlin (who is made a third party to the deed), leading to the execution of the bonds and the trust deed and showing the consideration therefor. The bonds were of date of July 1,1897, and bore interest at five per cent, per anrram from date to maturity and at seven per cent, thereafter. They were all payable to Henry D. Laughlin or bearer. The property conveyed in trust to secure them was certain real estate, some held in fee and some in leasehold, by the Equipment Company, certain machinery and implements, many letters patent of the United States and of Canada, and certain rights under patent applications, licenses or contracts. The series from A to L of the bonds described were all in any event due by their terms before the filing of the bill. Series M were on their face payable on or before July 1, 1910, but the trust deed contained the following provisions: “If default is made or suffered by said Chicago Railway Equipment Company in the payment of any one or more of said bonds or any one or more of said coupons ■ and such default shall continue for more than sixty days, then and in that event the whole of the principal represented by said bonds shall become immediately due and payable whether due according to the terms or tenor of the bonds or not, if so determined by the holder or holders of as many as one-third of the bonds then outstanding and unpaid, which may be accomplished by simply depositing the bonds with the trustee with written notice of the election of their holders to produce, immediately, maturity.

The right is reserved by said Chicago Railway Equipment Company to at any time pay off any one or more or all the 150 bonds comprising series K, L and M, and to that end it may deposit with the Trustee the amount of the bonds intended to be paid with the interest thereon to that date with interest for 30 days added, and may designate the numbers and series of the bonds to the payment of which the deposit is to be applied, and on receipt of the bonds the Trustee shall pay to their holder or holders the amount thereof with interest and shall cancel and return to the Company the bonds when paid. * * * The party of the first part * * * also covenants and agrees to pay off and discharge at maturity all of the bonds and interest coupons hereinbefore referred to and to do so at the Banking House of the Americati. Trust and Savings Bank in the City of Chicago.”

The condition of defeasance in the trust deed was that if the Equipment Company should promptly pay the bonds and coupons and keep the covenants of the trust deed and of a certain contract with Laughlin of the date of May 18, 1898, the conveyance should become null and void and the property conveyed by it should be released by the trustee at the cost of the Equipment Company. Otherwise the trust deed should remain in full force and effect and on the application of the legal holder or holders of as much as one-third of said bonds then still outstanding, it should be lawful for the trustee to take possession of all property conveyed, and to file and prosecute a foreclosure of the said mortgage trust deed, accounting as usual to the proper parties for the proceeds. The only other provision of the trust deed necessary to mention in connection with these allegations of the bill is the recital that the Equipment Company had executed and delivered the six hundred bonds to the American Trust and Savings Bank for the account of Henry D. Laughlin, but subject to the provisions of the contract between him pursuant to the terms of said contract.

The bill, after reciting the mortgage trust deed and referring to it as an exhibit, alleged the delivery of said bonds to the Trustee and the due recording of said trust deed and its delivery to and possession by the trustee. It then charged that the Equipment Company had defaulted on the covenants of the contract of May 1.8, 1898. in said trust deed mentioned, by reason of which default various sums had become due and payable to the complainant under the terms of the said trust deed; that of the one hundred eighty-two bonds of which the complainant was the owner, one hundred were of the series M, fifty of series K and thirty-two others, which the complainant was unable more precisely to identify, of the series from A to I, inclusive, and that the complainant had at all times remained and then was the owner of said bonds; that in January, 1899, he had performed all his obligations under the contract of May 18, 1898, and that thereupon the Equipment Company directed the Bank as trustee to release, surrender and turn over to him the bonds and coupons divested of any trust and of all restrictions as the sole and absolute property of him, the complainant, and that the said American Trust and Savings Bank did accordingly surrender and deliver said bonds and coupons to E. B.

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Related

Blount v. Chicago Railway Equipment Co.
242 Ill. App. 69 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1926)

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Bluebook (online)
182 Ill. App. 262, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laughlin-v-chicago-railway-equipment-co-illappct-1913.