Myers v. American National Bank & Trust Co.

277 Ill. App. 378, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 137
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 19, 1934
DocketGen. No. 37,570
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 277 Ill. App. 378 (Myers v. American National Bank & Trust 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
Myers v. American National Bank & Trust Co., 277 Ill. App. 378, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 137 (Ill. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice O’Connor

delivered the opinion of the court.

Complainants, as owners of bonds secured by a trust deed on property located at the southeast corner of Wabash and Harrison streets, Chicago, filed their bill on behalf of themselves and other bondholders against the defendants, praying that a decree of foreclosure, entered in a suit brought by the trustee in the trust deed securing the bonds, be vacated and set aside on the ground that it had been entered by collusion between the parties for the reason that parties to the foreclosure suit did not represent adverse interests; that the bondholders, who were the real parties in interest, were not made parties, and that if they had been made defendants the decree would have protected the bondholders ’ rights. A further prayer was that the trustee in the trust deed be removed, that there be an accounting, that the parties found personally liable be decreed to pay complainants any amount thus found due, and that it be decreed to be a lien on the premises in question. There were other prayers for relief which need not be mentioned here.

All the defendants except two filed their answer substantially denying the material allegations of the bill. The defendants S. W. Straus & Co., a corporation, and Melvin L. Straus, individually and as trustee, filed their joint and several demurrer. On May 18, 1933, an order was entered sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the bill as to the demurrants for want of equity, to which order the complainants excepted. Two days thereafter the cause was referred to a master in chancery to take the evidence and make up his report with his conclusions thereon. The master took the evidence, made up his report, and recommended that a decree be entered dismissing the bill for want of equity. Objections to the report were overruled. Afterward a decree was entered overruling all exceptions to the master’s report and dismissing the bill at complainants’ costs for want of equity, and complainants prosecute this appeal.'

The record discloses that on July 1, 1928, the Michigan Boulevard Garage Corporation executed its trust deed to defendant Straus National Bank & Trust Company (since changed to American National Bank & Trust Company of Chicago) to secure its bond issue of $2,225,000, $2,100,000 of which was a first lien, and the remaining $125,000 a junior lien on the premises conveyed by a trust deed. It is stated that S. W. Straus & Co., a copartnership consisting of Simon W. Straus, Samuel J. T. Straus and Sidney H. Kahn, underwrote the bond issue, but the facts concerning what the co-partnership did were not very clearly brought out. The defendant S. W. Straus & Co., a corporation, was engaged in the investment bond business and apparently bought the bond issue from the co-partnership and later sold the bonds, or some of them, to the public. This corporation circularized the public in an endeavor to sell the $2,100,000 of bonds and stated, “We Own and Offer” the bonds for sale. The circular contains a picture of the proposed building, which was to be known as the Wabash-Harrison Building, and was to be 19 stories high, 12 stories of which were for office space and 7 to be used for a garage and stores. The bonds are described as “First Mortgage Sinking Fund 6% Gold Bonds.” The circular describes the property and the character of the building to be constructed, and states that the land is “owned in fee” by the maker of the bonds and the trust deed, the Michigan Boulevard Garage Corporation; that the land has been appraised by two appraisers, the lower appraisal being $1,213,360, and that the proposed building was appraised by an architect at $1,872,732, making a total appraised value of $3,086,092. The circular further states that it is estimated that the annual net earnings of the property will be $329,300. The circular further contains the statement that the construction of the building will be undertaken at once and completed in accordance with the plans and specifications free of all prior liens, and that the construction is unconditionally guaranteed to the bondholders by the defendant S. W. Straus & Co., a corporation, “which reserves the right, however, to release and discharge its liability under this guarantee by repurchasing bonds at the original purchase price and accrued interest. ’ ’ There was a further provision for a sinking fund, which requires that periodic deposits be made by the mortgagor with the trustee on account of principal and interest; the amounts and dates of such deposits are specifically set forth.

It further appears that after the circular was issued the complainant Meyers bought bonds of the face value of $1,500 and the complainant, Phelps, $10,000, and there is evidence to the effect that all the complainants were owners of bonds of the face value of $32,700. It further appears that the construction of the building was not commenced until a considerable time after July 1, 1928, the date of the bonds and trust deed, and that it was not completed by August 1, 1929, as the trust deed provided, but on the contrary the building was not actually commenced until after August 1, 1929, and was not completed until about September, 1930. Straus & Co. seems to have had considerable difficulty in disposing of the bonds, and on December 15, 1929, it issued a “Revised Circular” describing the same bonds and offering them for sale, but the picture of the building to be constructed is a great deal different in appearance from the picture of the building in the original circular. In the revised circular it is stated that the building will consist of two units, one to contain a “12-story 370-room hotel with five stores, and the other to contain a 21-story 600-car garage.” The valuation placed on the land in the revised circular is the same as in the original, viz., $1,213,360, but the building is appraised at $1,954,395, or $81,663 more than is shown in the original circular, and in addition the revised circular values hotel furniture and furnishings and garage equipment to be installed, at $300,000. The estimated net income, however, is but $211,396 or $117,904 less than the estimated net income from the building described in the original circular.

On December 15, 1929, the same date the revised circular bears, the Wabash-Harrison Building Corporation, which was a new corporation organized, acquired all the rights of the Michigan Boulevard Garage Corporation, the mortgagor, and on that date the Wabash-Harrison Building Corporation entered into a supplemental trust deed and chattel mortgage with the trustee named in the original trust deed, viz., the Straus National Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago, as trustee. By the terms of the supplemental trust deed the original trust deed was changed and modified so that the character of the building might be changed and the time within which the building was to be constructed was extended to September, 1930.

Three days after the execution of the supplemental trust deed there appears in the record a document which purports to be an agreement between the Wabash-Harrison Building Corporation and. S. W. Straus & Co., a copartnership, whereby the building corporation agrees to sell and the Straus Company agrees, among other things, to buy the $2,100,000 bonds. Just how these bonds could be sold by the building corporation to the copartnership on December 18, 1929, when the bonds were issued on July 1,1928, and a great many of them sold to the public shortly thereafter, is not explained.

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Related

Cohen v. Central Republic Trust Co.
282 Ill. App. 569 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
277 Ill. App. 378, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-american-national-bank-trust-co-illappct-1934.