Osborne v. Dewees

78 Ill. App. 314, 1898 Ill. App. LEXIS 961
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 5, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 78 Ill. App. 314 (Osborne v. Dewees) 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
Osborne v. Dewees, 78 Ill. App. 314, 1898 Ill. App. LEXIS 961 (Ill. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Glenn

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Equitable Assurance Society of the United States, The Provident Life Savings Assurance Society of Hew York and the Provident Savings Life Assurance Society of Hew York, each filed bills of interpleaders in the Circuit Court of Morgan County, making Jacob H. Osborne, receiver for the Central Illinois Banking and Savings Association, John J. Chambers, Wm. E. Yeitch and Harriet B. Dewees, defendants therein, and alleging that the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States on the 31st day of August,1888, issued a life insurance policy on the life of Samuel Dewees for $5,000, to be paid to Harriet B. Dewees, his wife, if she should be living at the time of his death; also that the Provident Life Savings Assurance Society of Hew York, on the 28th day of December, 1888, had issued a life insurance policy for the sum of $5,000 upon the life of Samuel Dewees, to be paid to Harriet B. Dewees if she should be living at the time of his death, and also alleging that the Provident Savings Life Assurance Society of Hew York, on the 5th day of June, 1889, issued a life policy of insurance for the sum of $10,000 upon the life of Samuel Dewees, to be paid to Harriet B. Dewees, if she should be living at the time of his death.

It is averred in the bills of interpleaders that on August 19, 1890, the complainants were notified that Harriet B. Dewees, the beneficiary named in each of the policies of insurance, assigned her interest in the same to Wm. E. Yeitch, cashier of the Central Illinois Banking and Savings Association; that in August, 1893, the Central Illinois Banking and Savings Association became insolvent, and a bill was filed in the Circuit Court of Morgan County to wind up the business of the association, and the defendants, John J. Chambers and Wm. E. Yeitch, were appointed receivers and qualified as such. Yeitch resigned, and Chambers was appointed and qualified as sole receiver, and afterward he resigned, and the defendant, J. H. Osborne, was appointed and qualified, and is still such receiver. Wm. E. Yeitch, as cashier of the Central Illinois Banking and Savings Association, assigned the policies of insurance to himself and Chambers as receivers, and then assigned them to Chambers as sole receiver, and he assigned them to Jacob H. Osborne, the present receiver. For several years prior to 1893, the Central Illinois Banking and Savings Association carried on a general banking business. It was a co-partnership composed of several persons. Certificates of stock were issued to each partner, showing the interest each partner had in the firm. Samuel Dewees was a small stockholder. Wm. E. Yeitch was cashier. The co-partnership was insolvent. Samuel Dewees died December 22, 1896. Complainants aver that they were notified soon after his death that his wife, the beneficiary, claimed the money due on the three policies of insurance, and that her assignment of them was void. J. H. Osborne, receiver for the Central Illinois Banking and Savings Association, also demanded the money due on the policies. The complainants, the insurance companies, admit there is $20,000 due under the policies, and are willing to pay the same to whoever is entitled thereto. They aver there is no collusion and that each party threatens to bring suit. Complainants asked the defendants be ruled to interplead, and tendered the $20,000 to the court. The defendants were ruled to inter-plead. The defendants each filed answers in each'case. The answers of the defendants, respectively, in each case, are the same. The defendant Harriet B. Dewees, in answering avers that she is the beneficiary in the policies, and is entitled to the funds; that she assigned the policies as oollateral security for her husband’s indebtedness to the bank, in consideration that the bank would grant an extension of the time of payment; that such extension was made, and when the indebtedness matured the bank renewed the notes, and thereafter repeatedly extended the time of payment of said indebtedness- by taking renewal notes without her knowledge or consent, whereby the policies were released as such collateral security.

J. H. Osborne, receiver for the Central Illinois Banking and Savings Association, alleges that the bank for which he is receiver, did a general banking business for many years prior to August 25, 1893, at Jacksonville; that Samuel Dewees was an extensive farmer and dealer in stock, and was a heavy borrower from the bank; on August 19, 1890, he was indebted to the bank over $42,000; that the bank was demanding payment or security; that in order to- partially secure such indebtedness, Samuel Dewees and his wife, Harriet B. Dewees, the beneficiary therein, both assigned such-insurance policies to Yeitch as cashier, and copies of such assignments were delivered to the insurance companies, and after such assignments the bank paid all premiums on said policies; that the bank became insolvent and Chambers and Yeitch were appointed receivers therefor, and the policy came into their hands as assets of the bank; that J. H. Osborne became and now is receiver, and the policies were assigned to him by his predecessors, having paid all premiums accruing on such policies; that at the time the bank failed Samuel Dewees owed it $27,024.74, and it had paid as premiums $3,527.05 and Samuel Dewees was insolvent, and the only security the bank had, over the insurance policies; that Samuel Dewees died December 19, 1896; that thereupon the money due on such insurance policies became due to Osborne as such receiver, and that proper proofs of death were sent the companies; that on the.date of the death of Samuel Dewees there was due from him to - J. H. Osborne, as such receiver, $20,852.56, and that the receiver, Osborne, demands the amount due on the policies, and prays for an order to that effect. The other defendants filed disclaimers, setting up that they had no interest in the subject-matter now in controversy.

These three cases were by agreement consolidated and tried together. They were referred tó the master to state the account, and report his conclusions of law" and fact.

The master made his report finding, after stating the accounts, that the three policies of insurance involved in this suit were assigned and pledged to the Central Illinois Banking and Savings Association, as collateral security for any indebtedness then existing, or that might thereafter exist from Dewees to the bank; that the indebtedness was then in the shape of short notes; that in consideration of such assignments the bank agreed it would not press their collection, but would extend the time of payment of the wrhole indebtedness then existing; that no definite time was agreed upon, but to be at the discretion of the bank; that at the time of the assignment and delivery of the policies, it was agreed that all the notes then existing, and all the notes that might thereafter be given, whether renewal notes or notes for new indebtedness," should, as they matured, be taken up and new notes given, and that such renewals should continue at the pleasure of the bank, and that the policies should be held as collateral therefor in whatever "shape the indebtedness might be; that after the policies were assigned the bank made no new contract for extensions; and that no new contract was made when the renewal notes were given; and that the policies assigned as collaterals were not released by the bank taking renewal notes under the contract of assignment; and that all the money derived from the policies should be paid to J. H.

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Bluebook (online)
78 Ill. App. 314, 1898 Ill. App. LEXIS 961, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osborne-v-dewees-illappct-1898.