Lochenmeyer v. Fogarty

112 Ill. 572
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 112 Ill. 572 (Lochenmeyer v. Fogarty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lochenmeyer v. Fogarty, 112 Ill. 572 (Ill. 1884).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill in equity, brought by William Fogarty, against appellants, and Ezekiel French, to require appellants to pay certain notes which were given by them, payable to Jacob Hammon, guardian of Edward Applegate, and also to compel French to account for certain moneys belonging to the ward, alleged to have been received by him as executor of the estate of Jacob Hammon, deceased. On the hearing, the court rendered a decree against appellants, as prayed for in the bill, but dismissed the bill as to French.

The facts out of which this litigation arose are substantially as follows: On the 18th day of April, 1864, Jacob Hammon was appointed guardian of Edward Applegate by the county court of Logan county. The minor owned a certain tract of land in Logan county, which the guardian sold, under a decree of court, February 15, 1875, which authorized the sale. The land brought at the sale $2414.30. A part was sold to John Cutlip for $152.40, who paid in cash $52.40, and gave his promissory note for $100, payable to Jacob Hammon, guardian, due in one year. The balance of the land was sold to John L. Lochenmeyer for $2261.90. He paid down $762.48, and gave his two promissory notes, for $749.71 each, due in one and two years, with ten per cent interest. George Stoll signed the notes as surety, and a mortgage was also given on the premises to secure the payment of the purchase money. At the sale, the money and notes passed into the hands of Edmund Lynch, who was the attorney of the guardian in obtaining a decree to sell the land. Jacob Hammon died November 30, 1875, testate, and Ezekiel French was named as executor in his will, and qualified as such. On or about the 14th day of February, 1876, Cutlip called on Lynch, and satisfied the note he had given Hammon, guardian of Applegate. On the same day, Lochenmeyer and Stoll went to Lynch’s office and took up the two notes of $749.71 each, and gave in their jdace smaller notes for the full amount of the indebtedness, all payable to the order of Lynch. These notes were indorsed and sold by Lynch before maturity, and after they became due they were all paid by the makers. On the 22d of December, 1875, an order was made in the county court of Logan county appointing Lynch guardian of Edward Applegate, upon filing bond in a certain amount, with certain persons named in the order, as sureties. No bond was, however, filed until June 11,1877, when Lynch filed a bond, with complainant as surety, and entered upon the discharge of his duties as guardian. Under the advice of Lynch, French, as executor of the estate of Hammon, filed a report in the county court, charging himself with the entire proceeds of the sale of the minor’s land. Lynch then recovered a judgment against French, executor, for the amount, receipted the judgment, and charged himself, as guardian, with the amount. No money was, however, paid over by Lynch to French, or from French to Lynch, but Lynch had squandered the money long before French qualified as executor of Hammon’s estate. Subsequently, failing to give additional security on his bond, as he was ordered to do by the county court, Lynch was removed, and Joseph Beam ivas appointed guardian of the minor. Beam sued Lynch and Fogarty on their official bond, to recover the money Lynch had reported as coming into his hands as guardian of Apple-gate, and which had been squandered by Lynch, and such proceedings were had that Fogarty, the surety of Lynch, was compelled to pay Beam the money Lynch had received belonging to Applegate. Fogarty, having paid the amount, filed this bill to be subrogated to all the rights of Beam and Applegate, against appellants and French.

It is a fact concerning which there is no controversy, that Lochenmeyer took up the two notes which were given for the land secured by mortgage, and gave his own notes, signed by himself and Stoll, payable to the order of Lynch, which he subsequently paid to the persons who had purchased the notes of Lynch. But the question arises, whether this constituted a payment of the indebtedness for which notes had been given payable to Jacob Hammon, guardian of Edward Applegate. It will be remembered that these notes 'were lifted on February 14, 1876, and that Lynch did not become guardian of the minor until June 11, 1877. He did not at this time act, or even profess to act, in the capacity of guardian. It is apparent, from the evidence, that he had no right, title or interest whatever in the notes. He had them in his possession when Hammon died, and after his death continued to hold the notes as mere custodian. It is a plain proposition, if the notes had been paid to a person authorized to receive payment, the indebtedness would have been extinguished. It is also equally plain that payment of a note to a person who has no authority to receive the money does not extinguish the debt. Here, Hammon, the guardian, died, leaving the notes in the possession of Lynch. It nowhere appears that Hammon, while living, had authorized Lynch to collect; but if he had, that authority was revoked by his death, and Lynch could not then collect or convert the notes to his own private use. ■ He had authority, merely, after Hammon’s death, to hold the notes in his possession until some person authorized should call upon him for them. Appellants are in no position to claim that they paid the notes innocently or in good faith. They knew that the- notes were given for land that belonged to the minor. They also knew that the notes were payable to the guardian, that he was dead, and that the money which the notes represented was trust funds, and knowing these facts, they had no right to take up the notes from Lynch by giving others payable to his order, nor can they claim any rights by virtue of such a transaction. It may be a hardship that these parties are required to pay their notes a second time; but who is to blame ? They knew, or by the exercise of the least precaution might have known, when they obtained the notes of Lynch, that he had no authority to surrender them; and if they saw proper to deal with him, they acted at their own peril.

But it is urged that when the notes were taken up, Lynch was attorney for French, who was executor of Hammon’s estate, and as the legal title to the notes was in French, the act of Lynch was authorized. This position is not tenable. Lynch, in his evidence, does not pretend that in the surrender of the notes and mortgage he was acting as attorney of French, and French testified that he never had the notes in his possession; that he supposed Lynch held them as attorney of Hammon; that he never gave Lynch any instructions in regard to the notes. There is, therefore, no foundation in the evidence for the position. But if he had been acting as attorney of French, he could only have received payment in money. An attorney, in the absence of special authority, has no right to give up his client’s notes for paper payable to himself. The law may be regarded as well settled that an attorney has no authority to receive anything but money in payment of his client’s debt. 2 Parsons on Notes and Bills, 614, note c; Nolan v. Jackson, 16 Ill. 272.

If, then, the transaction between appellants and Lynch did not discharge the debt which belonged to the minor, Apple-gate, which we have seen it did not, it follows that Beam, who succeeded Lynch as guardian, had the right to proceed and collect of appellants the original debt. He also had the right to compel payment from Fogarty, who was surety on the bond of Lynch. Here were two remedies open to Beam.

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Bluebook (online)
112 Ill. 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lochenmeyer-v-fogarty-ill-1884.