Ottawa Banking & Trust Co. v. Kendall

227 Ill. App. 531, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 290
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 24, 1923
DocketGen. No. 7,023
StatusPublished

This text of 227 Ill. App. 531 (Ottawa Banking & Trust Co. v. Kendall) 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
Ottawa Banking & Trust Co. v. Kendall, 227 Ill. App. 531, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 290 (Ill. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Jett

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant took judgment by confession in the circuit court of Bureau county for $5,399.77 and cost, based on a note of $4,989.40. A motion was made by appellee to open up the judgment with leave to plead, which motion was allowed. Pleas were filed to the declaration and replications filed to the pleas and a trial was had and the issues were submitted to a jury and a verdict rendered for the appellee upon which judgment was rendered and from which ■ judgment this appeal is prosecuted. On March 5,19.10, one J. C. Hamil, who was then the vice president, and one Joseph Stout, who was the secretary of the South Bend Life Insurance Company, sold to the appellee 600 shares of stock of that company for $15,000, and in payment of the same appellee gave two notes each for $7,500, one due in thirty days after date and the other one due one year after date.

In April, 1910, after the first $7,500 note was due, it was placed in the bank of appellant for collection and various efforts were made by Johnson, the president. of the bank, to collect the note but without success. Johnson made investigation and found that the appellee was financially good, and on May 27, 1910, purchased of Stout the $7,500 note due in thirty days, and took the $7,500 note due in one year as collateral security for a $15,000 note then executed to the appellant by said Stout. The appellee up to this time had not informed Johnson, the president of appellant, nor had she informed the appellant that she had any defense to the note but on April 20, 1910, wrote the appellant she would pay the note soon. Each of the $7,500 notes was payable to the order of Stout and by him indorsed by a general bank indorsement. After the purchase of said thirty-day note and the taking of said note due in one year as collateral, and after the former note came due, it appears that repeated demands were made with threats to bring suit and frequent requests for delays and extensions on the part of appellee with promises by her of payment.

It appears that on June 3, 1910, appellee wrote that she was making an effort to get the money, and on the same day she wrote Johnson and, among other things, said this “note is perfectly .good. ” On June 4, 1910, appellee wrote Johnson, “I am unable to get the money to pay the note due.” On June 5 she wrote Johnson, “I cannot tell how deeply mortified I am over this, nor how much I appreciate your great kindness in the matter. Rest assured you shall not lose anything by this. ’ ’ It further appears after frequent demands and no payments being made a meeting was held in the office of R. L. Russell, the attorney for appellee, and at which meeting there were present appellee, her attorney, and Johnson. This meeting was in the early part of October, 1911, at Princeton. It further appears that prior to this meeting Hamil had obtained a judgment in the circuit court of McHenry county against Joseph Stout for the sum of $5,005.83, $4,500 of which amount was for commissions on the sale of the 600 shares of stock to appellee, the agreement between Stout and Hamil being that each should have one-half of all commissions received from the sale of stock. At this conference, Johnson demanded a settlement at once. At this meeting of the above-named parties the Hamil judgment was mentioned. Appellee stated that Stout ought to make good one or more of the notes, and Johnson said to her he would be glad to have her make any arrangements she could with Stout. It appears nothing, however, was accomplished at this conference. Early in December of the same year, 1911, another conference was had at the office of Bussell, attorney for appellee, at Princeton, at which time were present appellee, Johnson, Bussell, representing appellee, Stout, and for a short time Judge Hinebaugh. Johnson again insisted on the payment of the note but stood ready to render any assistance to any of them that he could; that if appellee wanted more time she could have it on her unsecured notes, and if Stout wanted more time he could have it if he had proper collateral security acceptable to the bank. Appellee, Bussell and Stout conferred but did not reach any agreement and Johnson left. The next day he received a letter from appellee and also a telephone message from Bussell, sent at the request of appellee, saying there was a chance to come to an agreement with Stout, and arranging for a meeting at the bank of appellant in Ottawa for December 12, 1911. Appellee and Bussell, her attorney, on December 12, .1911, went to the bank and informed Johnson that they had come to take up the two $7,500 notes. The interest was computed and found to be $975, and it was then agreed that appellee should take up her two $7,500 notes and give the bank three $5,000 notes for the principal of said two $7,500 notes, one due in six months and the other two in one year, and that she should also give a note for $975, the accrued interest due in six months. Johnson gave Bussell some blank notes and he drew the notes agreed upon, appellee signed them and delivered them to Johnson. Johnson surrendered to the appellee the two $7,500 notes, which the bank then owned and which had been indorsed by Stout, and the certificate for 600 shares of stock in the South Bend Life Insurance Company which had been put up by her with the bank as collateral security for her two $7,500 notes. At or near the time of the conclusion of the last above-mentioned transactions, Stout appeared at the bank and he, Bussell and appellee had a conference and Judge Hinebaugh was called into the conference as Stout’s attorney. Johnson was not present at this conference. Appellee insisted that Stout should take the stock back and repay her the $15,000 which she had paid for the stock, and Stout insisted that it would not be fair to do that and then have to pay Haniil $4,500 commission on the stock sold her. It was agreed that Stout would repurchase the stock by giving appellee his notes for $15,000, secured by the 600 shares of stock which had been issued to her, and that appellee should obligate herself to secure a release of the Ha.mil judgment against Stout, Stout to pay the balance of the judgment over the $4,500 commission on the sale of the stock, amounting to $505.83, appellee signing a written obligation binding herself to secure a release of said judgment from Hamil, which she thereafter procured. The Stout notes, the certificate of stock and some other papers appellee then and there delivered to her attorney to retain for her. Appellee afterwards gave the three $5,000 notes executed to her by Stout to a man by the name of Thomas, in whom she had confidence, to collect, and she says she could not get the notes nor the money and that Thomas had left the country. Appellee after giving her four notes to the bank, being the three $5,000 notes with which to take up the two $7,500 notes and the note for $975, the accrued interest, made payments thereon from time to time, and gave renewal notes for the balance due from time to time, from December 12, 1911 until March 9, 1915, at which time there was due only a balance of $4,989.40, and for that amount she then gave her note to the bank due in ninety days after date. Thereafter she made no payments and judgment was entered on that note November 22, 1915. There have been made many charges and counter-charges of fraud throughout the argument of this case. Much time has been taken up and space occupied in arguing the charges of fraud that it is claimed is disclosed upon the face of the record in this cause.

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Bluebook (online)
227 Ill. App. 531, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ottawa-banking-trust-co-v-kendall-illappct-1923.