Owens v. Stapp

32 Ill. App. 653, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 195
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 32 Ill. App. 653 (Owens v. Stapp) 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
Owens v. Stapp, 32 Ill. App. 653, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 195 (Ill. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Upton, P. J.

This was a bill in equity brought by plaintiffs in error to the Circuit Court of Warren County, against defendants in error, in which is prayed special and general relief, upon the following facts, which are in substance set forth in the bill.

The First Rational Bank of Monmouth, Illinois, was duly organized under the act of Congress know as the “ Rational Banking Act.” B. T. O. Hubbard was its cashier duly appointed. James F. Owens, husband of Mary T. Owens, was indebted to various persons, and on the 21st of May, 1880, applied to the bank to learn of a source from whence he could obtain about $2,400, with which to liquidate that indebtedness. Hubbard, its cashier, acting for the bank, offered to make to him the desired loan from the bank, and the offer was accepted, for which Owens executed three notes payable to Hubbard, one for $1,000, and two for $700 each, all due and payable in three years from date, with interest at eight per cent. To secure these notes Owens and his wife, plaintiffs in error, joined in a mortgage upon the real estate of the wife. The interest as it became due upon this loan was paid by Owens to Hubbard in each year at the bank.

October 30, 1883, Jas. F. Owens made a further loan of the bank through its cashier, of the sum of $280, due in ninety days, and his wife, Mary T., joined in a note payable to the bank therefor. Some time about February 1, 1883, this indebtednessbeing past due, Owens was in need of more money, being pressed for payment, and was informed by Hubbard that the bank held the three notes given for the $2,400 loan of May 21, 1880, and that it would be willing and was desirous to renew that loan upon the same security as then held for the old loan of May 21st. It was agreed that the bank should make a new loan of $3,500 to Owens, the money to be applied to the satisfaction of the notes secured by the mortgage of May 21, 1880, and about nine months interest thereon, and in satisfaction of the $280 note; cancel all these notes and surrender the same to Owens; cancel and release of record the mortgage of. May 21st, and cause to be placed of record the new mortgage to secure said last loan, and place the balance of the $3,500, remaining after making such payments, to the credit of Jas. F. Owens on the books of the bank.

In pursuance of this last mentioned agreement, plaintiffs in error executed four notes, bearing date February 1, 1884, payable in three years from date to Hubbard (cashier), together with a mortgage to secure the same, (which notes bore interest at eight per cent per annum, both Owens and his wife joining in the execution thereof,) on the land of the wife, being the same security which had been agreed upon, and delivered the same so executed, to its cashier at the bank. When these notes and mortgage were delivered, Hubbard informed plaintiffs in error, that he could not complete the matter at that time, by the delivery and cancellation of the notes of date of May 21, 1880, for the reason, as he then stated, that one of the notes was not then in the bank, but would be in a few days, and then the whole matter should be closed up and completed as had been agreed. To obviate all trouble to plaintiffs in error by this delay, it was agreed that Jas. F. Owens might draw checks on the bank the same as if such balance had been ascertained and placed to the credit of plaintiffs in error, and when the note was returned, he, Hubbard, would ascertain the exact balance and complete the agreement by giving the credit on the books of the bank, cancel and deliver the old notes of May 21, 1880, release the mortgage given to secure the same, and deliver said canceled and released notes and mortgage, together with the 8280 note to Jas. F. Owens, as he had previously agreed to do. These notes were never delivered, nor the old mortgage released, nor the credit given on the books of the bank, and but one of the notes taken up and canceled, as hereafter stated.

Hot one of the notes of May 21, 1880, were, at the time of making the before mentioned agreements, in possession of the bank. Its cashier, Hubbard, had taken those notes before that time, and sold and transferred the same to certain custo tiers of the bank—the note of $1,000 to one William P. Pressley, one for $700 to a Miss French, and the other one for $700 to one Cyrus Atwood, all of which was unknown to the directors of the bank, or the plaintiffs in error.

In the performance of the agreement, however, Hubbard, on or about February 6, 1884, negotiated two of the new notes of date February 1st, one for $1,000 and the one for $500, to the same William P. Pressley, who then held the 81,000 of May 21, 1880, taking up and canceling the $1,000 note of May 21, 1880, and on the 8th of February, 1884, Hubbard assigned one other of the $1,000 new notes, dated February 1,1884, to one David Haley, in consideration of $1,000, which the bank owed Haley on certificates of deposit issued by the bank. Pressley paid Hubbard, for the bank, for the two notes purchased as above stated, by his check on the bank for the difference between the note then held by him of $1,000, of date May 21, 1880, and interest thereon for about nine months, and the $1,500, being the face of the two notes purchased by Pressley, the amount of such check being $443.78, and the cashier, Hubbard, allowed James F. Owens to draw on the bank from February 6, 1884, under said agreement, to March 5, 1884, about $563.14.

In that condition matters remained, with one note of $1,000, of date May 21, 1880, taken up and canceled, and one of the $1,000 notes of date February 1, 1884, and the mortgage, in possession of the bank (the note not indorsed), the old mortgage of May 21, 1880, then and still uncanceled, and the new-one unrecorded, until April 5, 18S4, when the directors of the bank, learning of the fraudulent acts and defalcation of its cashier, Hubbard, took control of its affairs from the hands of its cashier, Hubbard, who before that time had been in almost exclusive control thereof—placed the same in the custody of John Carr, one of its directors, and on the 8th of April, 1884, the bank closed its doors, went into liquidation, and defendant in error—Guy Stapp—was appointed its receiver, under and pursuant to the provisions of the above mentioned banking act. In the meantime, Carr, acting for the bank and before it ceased its business as a bank, placed the mortgage of date February 1, 1884, on record, while the notes for $700 each, in the hands of Atwood and French, were outstanding, and while the note for $280 was in the possession of the bank nncanceled, and no creditgiven upon the books of the bank to Owens, as had been agreed, and the books of the bank showed overdrafts against Owens of $512.04. The plaintiffs in error admit in their bill of complaint, that Pressley, Atwood, French and Haley hold as innocent purchasers for value, notes secured on the lands of Mary P. Owens, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $3,900 as principal; ask relief against the bank for the wrongful acts of its cashier and director, Carr; pray that the note for $280 and the overdrafts for $512.04 be canceled, and seek a decree against the bank for the excess over $3,500 (evidenced by the note held by Pressley, Atwood, French and Haley as before stated, against the lands of Mary T. Owens), and that the §1,000 note, of date February 1, 1884, not negotiated, be surrendered, and for general relief.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Security Savings Bank v. Smith
122 N.W. 825 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1909)
Squires v. First National Bank
59 Ill. App. 134 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1895)
Stapp v. Owens
45 Ill. App. 488 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1892)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 Ill. App. 653, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owens-v-stapp-illappct-1889.