Mann v. Hahn

11 N.E.2d 20, 292 Ill. App. 220, 1937 Ill. App. LEXIS 406
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 8, 1937
DocketGen. No. 39,586
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 N.E.2d 20 (Mann v. Hahn) 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
Mann v. Hahn, 11 N.E.2d 20, 292 Ill. App. 220, 1937 Ill. App. LEXIS 406 (Ill. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice O’Connor

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiffs filed their amended complaint in chancery praying that defendants account for the proceeds of a check for $5,000, together with any increment thereof. Defendant bank filed its answer, denying liability, the cause was referred to a master to take the testimony and to report his findings of fact. He took the evidence and made findings of fact but no recommendation. No objections were filed to his report. A decree was entered finding the equities in favor of the defendant bank, the suit was dismissed as to it and plaintiffs appeal. Defendant Hahn testified in the case but was not served with process; he entered no appearance and the court expressly found that no disposition was made of any claim plaintiffs might have against him.

The record discloses that plaintiff Oscar L. Mann and defendant John F. Hahn were friends of many years standing; Hahn had attended to a number of business matters for Mann; on September 24,1929, the parties entered into a written trust agreement whereby plaintiff Oscar L. Mann was to turn over and deliver to Hahn $5,000 in trust. Hahn was given broad power to invest the money in first mortgages, first mortgage bonds secured by mortgage on improved or unimproved real estate, or any stocks or mortgage bonds of any corporation in the United States, with power to vary the investment, and was empowered to deal with the $5,000 or any stocks or bonds as in Hahn’s discretion might seem advisable; and provision was made for the distribution of principal and interest of the fund.

October 4, 1929, the Chicago Title and Trust Company at Mann’s request drew its check for $5,000 to the order of Hahn as trustee and delivered it to Hahn; this was the $5,000 mentioned in the trust agreement. The next day Hahn as trustee indorsed the check and delivered it to Emil R. Zilman, cashier and treasurer of John P. Hahn, Inc., which company did a large volume of real estate business, and on the same day, October 5,1929, John F. Hahn, Inc., indorsed the check and deposited it in its account with defendant Commercial Trust & Savings Bank of Evanston. Hahn did not invest the $5,000 in any securities, as required by the terms of the trust agreement, but the money was checked out of the bank by John F. Hahn, Inc., in the regular course of its business.

In April, 1933, Hahn advised plaintiff Oscar L. Mann that he had not invested the $5,000, but that it had been deposited and the proceeds used as above stated. He then agreed that he would repay Mann the money and thereafter, from time to time, made payments, usually 10 or 15 dollars, in some instances larger amounts, aggregating $3,604.25.

A receipt was attached to and a part of the check for $5,000 and was signed by John F. Hahn, trustee, acknowledging receipt of the $5,000. It also contained the following: “Payment as directed to create a trust fund for the benefit of Oscar L. Mann, Lucinda Mann and Horace Hayden Mann.” The evidence further shows, and the decree found, that John F. Hahn was president of John F. Hahn, Inc., and was the owner of 90 per cent of the stock of that corporation, which was engaged in the real estate and mortgage business in Evanston; that defendant Commercial Trust & Savings Bank of Evanston was a banting corporation doing business in Evanston, and that John F. Hahn was a director and its president. John F. Hahn, Inc., had one or more accounts with defendant bank and did a large volume of business with it. When Hahn handed the $5,000 check in question to Zilman, as above stated, an account was opened in the books of the John F. Hahn, Inc., in the name of “Oscar L. Mann Trust Account,” which showed the receipt of the $5,000. The check was then indorsed and appears as one of the items of deposit made on that day in the bank.

October 5, 1929, John F. Hahn, Inc., made two deposits in defendant bank, one consisting of three items totaling $25,548.67; one of the items was the $5,000. The other deposit consisted of 18 items aggregating $55,108.30. The check which was drawn on the First National Bank of Chicago was paid in the regular course to defendant bank.

The decree further finds that neither Hahn nor John F. Hahn, Inc., ever purchased any mortgage or other security with the $5,000. Thereafter Hahn, Inc., went into bankruptcy and John F. Hahn as trustee filed a claim in the bankruptcy court for the $5,000. It was stipulated between the parties that Lucinda Mann first learned of the deposit of the check with defendant bank in January or February, 1936, and that Horace H. Mann was not informed of the facts prior to January 1, 1936. The decree further found that Hahn made payments to plaintiffs Oscar and Horace Mann at various times, and that such payments were received by them, “with the understanding that the payments were on account of the trust.”

Counsel for plaintiffs say in their brief, “The evidence taken by the master was not conflicting in any particular; and, his findings of fact being satisfactory to all the parties, and there being no conclusions of law, no objections were filed or exceptions taken to his report”; and that the record “presents only the question of the liability of the defendant bank, as a -matter of law, upon such facts.”

The legal proposition advanced by counsel for plaintiffs, upon which the liability of the bank is predicated, is that the bank was admonished by the terms of the check that it represented trust funds, and any disposition of the check or its proceeds indicating that the fund was being diverted from the trust, entails upon the depositary bank the duty of inquiring whether such disposition was a misapplication of the trust fund, ‘ ‘ and unless such inquiry is pursued, the depositary is liable as a participant in the conversion of the trust funds.” And the cases of Massachusetts Bonding & Indemnity Co. v. Standard Bank, 334 Ill. 494, Haase v. Denisch, 268 Ill. App. 281, and other authorities are cited. And counsel contend that defendant bank was informed by the text of the check that the $5,000 was a trust fund because it was payable to “John F. Hahn, as Trustee ’ ’ and also bore upon the face of the receipt attached to the check the following, “Payment as directed to create a trust fund for the benefit of Oscar L. Mann, Lucinda Mann and Horace Hayden Mann”; that the bank knew that Hahn was the president and a stockholder of John F. Hahn, Inc., and that these facts were sufficient to apprise defendant bank when the check was deposited that the trust funds were being diverted.

The Massachusetts Bonding Company case (334 Ill. 494) was a bill for an accounting brought against the Standard Bank for wrongfully paying checks drawn by Frank T. Joyner, as receiver, he having been appointed by the circuit court of Cook county. The court classifies the checks under four heads: (1) checks signed by Joyner individually and not as receiver; (2) checks drawn by Joyner as receiver but in which the bank was said to have benefited by reason of their payment; (3) checks in which the bank is said to have assisted Joyner in the misappropriation of the trust, fund. The checks classified in the third group were checks drawn by Joyner as receiver for which he received drafts payable to himself individually and some other checks which show that the fund was to be used for his personal use. In each of the three classes the bank was held liable.

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45 N.E.2d 291 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.E.2d 20, 292 Ill. App. 220, 1937 Ill. App. LEXIS 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mann-v-hahn-illappct-1937.