McGrath v. Fahey

533 N.E.2d 806, 126 Ill. 2d 78, 127 Ill. Dec. 724, 1988 Ill. LEXIS 166
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1988
Docket66346
StatusPublished
Cited by397 cases

This text of 533 N.E.2d 806 (McGrath v. Fahey) 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
McGrath v. Fahey, 533 N.E.2d 806, 126 Ill. 2d 78, 127 Ill. Dec. 724, 1988 Ill. LEXIS 166 (Ill. 1988).

Opinion

JUSTICE CUNNINGHAM

delivered the opinion of the court:

In the circuit court of Cook County, plaintiff, Dr. Harold F. McGrath, filed a complaint against defendants, Robert P. Fahey and First Security Bank of Glendale Heights, now known as Du Page County Bank of Glendale Heights (First Security), alleging the intentional infliction of emotional distress. The circuit court dismissed the complaint for failure to state a cause of action, and plaintiff appealed. The appellate court reversed (163 Ill. App. 3d 584), stating that a jury could legitimately find defendants’ conduct so outrageous as to support the claim. Pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 315 (107 Ill. 2d R. 315), we allowed defendants’ petition for leave to appeal.

We herein set forth the factual allegations of the complaint. Prior to January 1982, plaintiff and Terrace Management, Inc. (Terrace), constructed and managed 16 six-unit rental apartment buildings. During or after January 1982, plaintiff and Terrace decided to sell the buildings, and their accountant introduced them to James Elliot, who was to attempt to arrange the realty sale. Elliot proposed a sale and financing agreement (realty contract) which was to involve multiple parties, including First Security (in which Elliot acquired a controlling interest in January 1982) and Manning Savings and Loan Association (Manning Savings). At all times relevant to the complaint, Manning Savings, Harold Ticktin (the president, a director and a member of the loan committee of Manning Savings), First Security, Elliot, and Kevin Kehoe (an officer of First Security) were together directly or indirectly engaged in a variety of joint or otherwise related business transactions.

Shortly after plaintiff’s accountant introduced Terrace and him to Elliot, Elliot, First Security, Manning Savings, Kehoe and Ticktin developed a scheme to defraud McGrath and Terrace in connection with the realty contract. The scheme to defraud (which allegedly caused plaintiff and Terrace to lose $4 million) was already the subject of separate litigation when the instant complaint was filed, and plaintiff appended portions of his counterclaim, cross-claim and third-party complaint in the other litigation to his complaint in the instant case.

Prior to learning of the scheme to defraud, plaintiff had placed 10 certificates of deposit (CD’s) with First Security totaling over $1 million. These CD’s were in the names of plaintiff and his wife in their capacities as trustees or fiduciaries under various pension, profit-sharing and trust accounts and in the name of the McGrath Clinic, S.C. None of these funds had any connection whatsoever with the realty contract.

Each of the CD’s matured in April 1983. However, when on May 18, 1983, plaintiff sought the partial withdrawal and partial reinvestment of these funds, he was told that no one was available with the authority to handle such transactions. The following day, plaintiff spoke by telephone with Robert P. Fahey, who was president of First Security and acting as an agent thereof. Fahey advised plaintiff that First Security would not permit any of the funds to be withdrawn because of problems that had developed in connection with the realty contract. Fa-hey said this despite plaintiff’s insistence that the CD’s had no connection with the realty contract and that the CD’s were primarily being held in trust for plaintiff’s children and employees.

On Friday, May 20, 1983, plaintiff contacted Wayne Kwiat, an attorney he had retained in connection with the realty contract, and informed Kwiat that First Security had refused to release the CD funds. On May 23, Kwiat, plaintiff and Dunn Click (an attorney with a private law firm acting as an agent of First Security) met. Plaintiff explained to Click that the CD’s were unrelated to the realty contract and were being wrongly withheld. Plaintiff also told Click that plaintiff’s father had died young from a heart attack, that heart problems ran in his family, that the CD dispute was making him extremely anxious, and that he was concerned about the effect that this anxiety would have on his health.

Click refused to discuss the CD’s, stating that he would discuss only problems that had emerged in the realty contract. Click did, however, make threats to plaintiff. Click stated that plaintiff must assign to First Security his interest in certain second mortgages held in connection with the realty contract because if plaintiff refused, First Security not only would refuse to release the CD funds but also would “financially ruin him and his medical practice.” Following this meeting, plaintiff became even more concerned about the CD’s, and he discussed with Kwiat the possibility of retaining a litigation attorney to handle the matter.

The following day, on May 24, 1983, plaintiff consulted attorney Edward Joyce and described the CD dispute and the anxiety he was experiencing relating to the dispute. Joyce attempted to resolve the matter immediately because plaintiff was becoming physically ill during the meeting. Joyce phoned Click and asked for assurance that the CD funds would be released, stating that First Security had no legal right to withhold the funds. Click refused to give any assurance. Joyce then dispatched by messenger a letter (signed by plaintiff and his wife) demanding that the CD funds be transferred to the Northern Trust Company of Chicago.

On May 25, a law partner of Click messengered a response letter to Joyce concerning the CD’s. The letter stated that an immediate release would not take place because First Security would first need “execution of the appropriate documentation and delivery of the original CD’s.”

That same day, plaintiff suffered a massive heart attack and underwent open-heart surgery. Later that afternoon, a law partner of Joyce telephoned Click and advised him of the heart attack. Joyce’s colleague emphasized that the signatures of plaintiff and his wife on Joyce’s May 24 letter were sufficient documentation to permit transfer of the CD funds. Click responded that the refusal to transfer funds had nothing to do with signatures or documentation. Click stated that First Security would not transfer the CD funds until plaintiff assigned to First Security certain second mortgages held in connection with the realty contract. Click also threatened to “tie up the funds for five years” if plaintiff did not assign his interest in the second mortgages.

On May 26, 1983, Joyce spoke with a law partner of Glick. Glick’s colleague agreed on behalf of First Security to transfer the CD funds, and the transfer was finally arranged.

After First Security transferred the CD funds as requested, a new problem developed with regard to three other First Security accounts, which accounts had no connection with the realty contract. First Security (through Fahey) refused to permit the transfer of any funds from a checking account owned by him and his wife, a checking account owned by Terrace, and an insured money market fund owned by a trust in which plaintiff had an interest. In particular, First Security refused to honor eight drafts drawn upon the three above-mentioned accounts, despite earlier assurances to the contrary and despite the sufficiency of the funds to cover the drafts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
533 N.E.2d 806, 126 Ill. 2d 78, 127 Ill. Dec. 724, 1988 Ill. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgrath-v-fahey-ill-1988.