People ex rel. Chicago Bar Ass'n v. Vollintine

264 Ill. 586
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 264 Ill. 586 (People ex rel. Chicago Bar Ass'n v. Vollintine) 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
People ex rel. Chicago Bar Ass'n v. Vollintine, 264 Ill. 586 (Ill. 1914).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Cooke

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is a proceeding instituted in this court for the disbarment of A. Hale Yollintine, an attorney residing in Chicago and practicing law under a license issued to him by this court on June 10, 1890. The information was filed by the Chicago Bar Association, and as grounds for disbarment charges respondent with' a series of alleged fraudulent acts and unprofessional conduct while acting as attorney for Minnie P. Cleveland in the settlement of the estate of her deceased husband. Mrs. Cleveland was shortly after the death of her husband, on February 8, 1904, appointed executrix of his will, and during the month of October, 1904, turned over to respondent, as her attorney, $10,795 of the funds received by her as executrix, which respondent deposited in his individual bank account.

The specific charges made against respondent in the information are, (1) that after obtaining authority from Mrs. Cleveland to- loan $5000 of this money upon the representation that the loan was to be secured by real estate worth $20,000, he loaned $7500 thereof to the Search Light Manufacturing Company, an insolvent corporation in which his father-in-law wTas interested as a stockholder and officer, and took as security for said loan bonds issued by said corporation of the par value of $7500 but which had but little real value, the loan being evidenced by two promissory notes executed by said company, one for $2500, due three months after date, and the other for $5000, due one year after date; (2) that the $2500 note was not paid when due, and that shortly after the $5000 note became due the respondent, without consulting Mrs. Cleveland, canceled and surrendered to said company the two notes above mentioned and accepted in satisfaction of the indebtedness evidenced thereby the bonds which had be.en given as security for said notes and which respondent well knew were not worth par; (3) that thereafter, on June 20, 1906, respondent fraudulently advised and induced Mrs. Cleveland to make a furr ther loan of $1500 to said company, well knowing that said company was in straitened circumstances and that any loan to or investment in the business of said company was a dangerous and hazardous loan or investment, and that in order to procure the money to make this loan respondent induced Mrs. Cleveland to borrow $1500 from a bank and to execute her note therefor; that subsequently the property of .the company was sold upon foreclosure of the bonds which had been issued by it, and respondent received out of the proceeds of sale, on account of the bonds taken by him in satisfaction of the original $7500 loan, the sum of $1500, which he used in paying the $1500 note above mentioned which Mrs. Cleveland had given to the bank on June 20, 1906; that by reason of the transactions above mentioned Mrs. Cleveland lost $7500 of the funds belonging to the estate of her deceased husband; (4) that within a short time after Mrs. Cleveland turned over to respondent the $1:0,795 above mentioned, and after respondent had loaned to said company $7500 thereof, he withdrew from the bank and used the balance of said money in payment of his personal obligations, thereby fraudulently converting such balance to his own use without the consent or knowledge of Mrs. Cleveland; (5) that respondent delayed the settlement of the estate of Mrs. Cleveland’s husband for a period of almost five years, although Mrs. Cleveland from time to time called upon him to attend to his duties in said matter; (6) that respondent failed and refused to account for the money turned over to him by Mrs. Cleveland, and she was compelled to, and did, employ other attorneys to take up the matter with him, and was compelled to-, and finally did, file with the grievance committee of the Chicago- Bar Association a complaint against him, and that soon thereafter respondent made an accounting of the disposition of the funds placed in his hands.

In his answer the respondent admits his employment by Mrs. Cleveland and the receipt of the $10,795 by him. He admits loaning $7500 of this money to the Search Light Manufacturing Company and taking bonds of the company of the par value of $7500 as security therefor, but denies that he told Mrs. Cleveland that the loan was to be $5000 or that it was to be secured by $20,000 worth of real estate. He denies that he fraudulently used the balance of the money, or any part thereof, for his own use, but alleges that while he did make some drafts upon this balance for his o-wn use, this was done with the consent and acquiescence of Mrs. Cleveland, and that he has fully accounted for all the money he received from her. He admits that his father-in-law, at the time the original loan of $7500 was made and when the other transactions were had with the Search Light Manufacturing Company, had money invested in the company and was secretary thereof. He alleges that before making the loan of $7500 he conferred with his father-in-law about the affairs of the company and visited and inspected the plant, and from the information thus obtained believed that the company was in a good financial condition and that its bonds were good security for the loan; that after making this loan he ascertained that the company was financially embarrassed and needed more capital, and in June, 1906, various persons interested in the company agreed to furnish more money in order to re-organize the company and make it a profitable enterprise; that he explained the situation to Mrs. Cleveland, and she agreed to put in, and did put in for that purpose, $1500, and shortly thereafter surrendered her notes which she held against the company and took its bonds in satisfaction thereof for the purpose of increasing the available capital and reducing the liabilities of the company; that thereafter the trust deed securing the bonds issued by the company was foreclosed and respondent received for Mrs. Cleveland her pro rata share of the proceeds of sale, amounting to $1642.19, out of which he paid the $1500 note given by her to the bank and has fully accounted to her for the balance. Respondent further says by his answer, that before obtaining authority to loan the $7500 to the Search Light Manufacturing Company he informed Mrs. Cleveland of the investigation he had made and the information he had received regarding the company and its financial condition; tjiat Mrs. Cleveland at all times thereafter had full knowledge of all the transactions that he had with the company in her behalf, and that he never consciously or wittingly deceived her in regard thereto in any respect. He further alleges that the delay in settling her husband’s estate was with the acquiescence of Mrs. Cleveland, and that she did not, until near the middle of the year 1911, demand any accounting from him; that when such demand was made for an accounting he explained to her that it would require some time to prepare an itemized statement, as he had not kept a regular account with her and would be compelled to go over the items themselves, which he proceeded to do, and in November, 1911, rendered her an account showing the disposition made of all moneys in his hands except payments for taxes and assessments upon her real estate and one or two other small items.

Upon the filing of the answer we referred the cause to a commissioner, who afterwards filed a report, together with the evidence offered by the respective parties before him.

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

Related

Heinrich v. Norton
219 Ill. App. 86 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1920)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
264 Ill. 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-chicago-bar-assn-v-vollintine-ill-1914.