McKinstry v. Price

263 Ill. 626
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1914
StatusPublished

This text of 263 Ill. 626 (McKinstry v. Price) 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
McKinstry v. Price, 263 Ill. 626 (Ill. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court

Appellants, three of whom are grand-daughters of John Bennett, deceased, and daughters of George M. Bennett, „ executor and trustee under the will of John Bennett, and the husbands of the two who are married, filed their bill to the May term, 1912, of the Kankakee county circuit court, asking for the rescission of a- sale of real estate by George M. Bennett, as trustee, to Arthur E. Price and Edward C. Curtis, on July 30, 1908, who, together with George M. Bennett, were made parties defendant. Other parties were made defendants to the bill but no relief was asked as to them. The bill sets out, in substance, the will of John Bennett, deceased, which will be more fully referred to hereafter, and alleged that in the year 1906 George M. Bennett became heavily indebted to the Grant Park National Bank, of which appellee Curtis was a stockholder and the cashier; that at the suggestion of Curtis a number of persons gave the bank their accommodation notes to take the place of Bennett’s notes, and Bennett gave said persons his notes in equal amounts; that among such persons giving such accommodation notes for Bennett were appellee Arthur Price and his brother, David Price; that each of them gave their notes to the bank for $5000 and took from Bennett his notes in equal amounts, indorsed by Curtis. The Grant Park Trust and Savings Bank succeeded the Grant Park National Bank and became the owner of its assets, including the accommodation notes referred to. The bill alleges that while said notes were so held by the bank, Arthur Price, Curtis and George M. Bennett fraudulently conspired and agreed that Price should purchase from Bennett, as trustee, the land described in the sixth, seventh and eighth paragraphs of the will of John Bennett, and that said Price did thereafter purchase said land; that a part of the consideration agreed upon was the $10,000 of Bennett’s indebtedness to the bank for which it held the accommodation notes of Arthur Pi-ice and David Price, and that the said conspiracy was carried out. The bill alleges that no other consideration was paid for the land by Price than the cancellation of Bennett’s indebtedness to the bank, but it is not now claimed the proof sustained that allegation. It is claimed that $10,000 of Bennett’s indebtedness to the bank for which the bank held accommodation notes of the Prices was canceled and satisfied as a part of the considei'ation for the sale of the land, and that when these notes were surrendered to the Prices they delivered up the notes of Bennett held by them and which were indorsed by Curtis. The bill further alleges that Price knew appellants had an interest in the land, and that he, Bennett and Curtis conspired to defraud them, and that they were ignorant of the said conspiracy; that during the spring or summer of 1908 George M. Bennett, conspiring with Price and Curtis to deceive and defraud appellants, represented to them that it was necessary for them to execute a quit-claim deed for the land to Bennett to enable him to give a perfect title when he sold the land in accordance with the terms of the will, and appellants were thereby induced to execute and deliver to Bennett quit-claim deeds; that at that time appellants were ignorant of the fact that Bennett had contracted for the sale of the land to Price. The bill further alleges that March 29, 1909, David Price, at the request and on behalf of Arthur Price, and pursuant to their fraudulent schemes, represented that Arthur Price was the bona fide owner of the lands; that he was desirous of making a loan thereon, and that the person from whom he was getting the loan required a deed to him from the heirs and devisees of. John Bennett, and relying upon these representations they were induced to, and did, execute a quit-claim deed to Price. The bill set out encumbrances placed on the land after the sale to Price, and alleged the conveyance by George M. Bennett to Price was made with full knowledge of and in fraud of appellants’ rights; that they have never received any part of the proceeds of the sale nor has the trustee ever paid them anything whatever upon their claims and interests as beneficiaries in the fund, and that said trustee is now insolvent. The bill prayed that the deed made by George M. Bennett, trustee and executor, to Arthur E. Price, and the quit-claim deeds from appellants to George M. Bennett, trustee, and to Arthur Price, respectively, be set aside and declared void as against appellants; that Bennett be required to account to appellants as executor and trustee; that he be removed and some suitable person be appointed trustee to sell the lands and distribute the proceeds, and that Curtis and Arthur Price be required to pay and discharge certain encumbrances on the land.

Appellees answered, denying fraud and conspiracy in the purchase and sale of the land; denied Bennett had not accounted; denied that the accommodation notes entered into the sale, and relied upon ratification, laches and the quit-claim deeds of appellants. They also denied that the deed should be set aside or present encumbrances against the land be decreed to be discharged by appellees Price and Curtis.

The cause was heard by the chancellor, who dismissed the bill for want of equity and at appellants’ costs, except as to appellee George M. Bennett, trustee. As to such trustee the court found he had sold the land devised to him in trust, for $31,130; that he had failed to make provision out of such sum for annuities; that he had not accounted to appellants for the proceeds of the sale nor the income from the land prior to such sale, and that'he had been guilty of a breach of trust. The decree further found Bennett’s settlement with the annuitants and legatees, out of private funds belonging to the trustee, except as to the settlement with Nellie Bennett, the widow of John Bennett, were advantageous to appellants and that' he is'entitled to credit therefor; that Bennett, as trustee,' out of 'funds belonging- to him individually, had satisfied the legacies and an-

0 nuities provided in the will, leaving him owing the estate $26,553.30; that Bennett in open court had waived in favor of appellants his right in a $12,000 lien on individual land he had sold, which, together with other land owned by him and valued at $7000, also turned over to the estate of John Bennett, deceased, entitled him, as trustee, to a credit of $19,000 on said $26,553.30 indebtedness. The court further found Bennett had been derelict as trustee and that he was insolvent, and removed him and appointed appellant McKinstry as trustee. Further orders and findings of the court not necessary to be here reviewed were recited in the decree. Complainants in the bill have prosecuted this appeal from that decree.

That appellants never have received from George M. Bennett any of the proceeds of the sale of the real estate is not in dispute. It is earnestly contended by appellants that there was fraud and collusion between Bennett and appellees Arthur Price and Curtis in the sale of the land. The Grant Park National Bank, of which Curtis was a stockholder and the cashier, held Bennett’s notes for more than $20,000, which, as we understand' the evidence, were unsecured. This became unsatisfactory to ,the bank authorities, and $10,000 of the indebtedness was adjusted by Arthur Price and David Price each giving the bank their accommodation notes for $5000. Bennett then gave each of the Prices his notes for $5000, which were indorsed by Curtis.

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Related

Dickison v. Dickison
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71 N.E. 1058 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1904)

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Bluebook (online)
263 Ill. 626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckinstry-v-price-ill-1914.