People ex rel. Nelson v. H. N. Schuyler State Bank

278 Ill. App. 529, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 312
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 14, 1935
DocketGen. No. 8,839
StatusPublished

This text of 278 Ill. App. 529 (People ex rel. Nelson v. H. N. Schuyler State Bank) 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
People ex rel. Nelson v. H. N. Schuyler State Bank, 278 Ill. App. 529, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 312 (Ill. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Allaben

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case arose out of the insolvency of The H. N. Schuyler State Bank of Pana, Illinois, which was closed by the auditor of public accounts on February 6, 1930, and for which bank a receiver was appointed on April 21, 1930. At the time the bank closed the City of Pana had on deposit a total sum of $47,672.62, composed of a general fund deposit of $18,992.82, and a special assessment fund deposit in the amount of $28,679.80. After the closing of the bank the receiver held claims against the City of Pana totaling $33,-604.43.

When the Schuyler Bank closed Millikin National Bank of Decatur, Illinois, held as assignee of the Schuyler Bank four anticipation warrants of the City of Pana, issued in October, 1929, against taxes levied and to be collected in 1930, totaling $6,995, one of the anticipation warrants being against a water fund, a second against a fire fund, a third against a police fund, and the fourth against a salary fund. The Millikin Bank also held, as assignee of the Schuyler Bank, an evidence of indebtedness of the City of Pana to one W. F. Sell, in the amount of $6,211.39, issued by the City of Pana in October of 1929, for work done by Sell on the city reservoirs, assigned by Sell to the Schuyler Bank, which in turn assigned to H. N. Schuyler, who assigned it to the Millikin Bank. The Millikin Bank made a demand on the City of Pana for the payment of the warrant, and the Sell claim, for a total amount of $13,206.39, which the City of Pana refused to pay. On July 21, 1930, the City of Pana filed a claim against the receiver of the Schuyler Bank, for $47,672.63, the total of its deposits at the time the bank closed, and thereafter filed its amended intervening petition in the circuit court of Christian county, praying that all of the claims held by the Schuyler Bank against the City of Pana, and the anticipation warrants and the Sell certificate held by the Millikin Bank, be offset against the total deposit of the City of Pana in the Schuyler Bank. The petition questioned the validity of the anticipation warrants held by the Millikin Bank, and asked that their validity be determined by the court. The receiver of the Schuyler Bank answered that he was willing to offset the amount of the Schuyler Bank claims against the City of Pana which he alleg-ed to be $36,758.50 against the claim of the city for its deposits, and that a general claim would be allowed for such balance as remained due, but the receiver denied that the Schuyler Bank had any interest in the anticipation warrants or the Sell certificate, held by the Millikin Bank, and further denied that these claims could be made a proper offset in the adjudication of the city’s claim against the Schuyler Bank.

The Millikin Bank answered the intervening petition of the City of Pana averring the validity of the tax anticipation warrants held by it, and of the Sell claim, and denying the right of the City of Pana to the relief prayed for in its intervening petition.

The Missouri Bolling Mill Corporation filed an intervening petition on May 18, 1931, claiming a portion of the moneys due Sell, by reason of a lien under section 23 of the Lien Act, Cahill’s St. ch. 82, ¶ 23, for material furnished Sell and used by him in doing the work for the city. Upon a hearing the circuit court held: That the total of the claim of the Schuyler Bank held by it at the time it closed, or acquired thereafter, should be set off against the total funds on deposit in the Schuyler Bank by the City of Pana, and that a general claim should be. allowed the City of Pana for the balance; that the validity of the anticipation warrants, and the Sell, claim, held by the Millikin Bank, were not proper matters to be determined in the action and dismissed the Millikin National Bank as a party, to the proceedings, at the cost of the City of Pana.

The court also dismissed the intervening petition of the Missouri Rolling Mill Corporation at its cost. From this decree an appeal was taken to this court by the City of Pana.

The two questions involved in this case are: First: Whether the anticipation warrants held by the Millikin Bank are just and lawful claims against the City of Pana, and the second question: Whether the anticipation warrants and the Sell certificate, the validity of which last item is not in question in this appeal, are proper offsets of the City of Pana against the total funds which it had on deposit in the Schuyler Bank, and whether such offset is a proper matter to be adjudicated in this controversy. It is contended by appellant that the warrants held by the Millikin Bank were void because they were issued without any power to issue them for the particular purposes which caused their issue; that the statute authorizing the issuance of the warrants in anticipation of taxes levied (Cahill’s St. ch. 146a, ¶ 2; ch. 146½, sec. 2, Smith-Hurd’s Statutes 1933) provides that they may be issued to meet the ordinary and necessary expenses of the city, and building purposes, and for no other purpose; that the warrants in question were issued to refund other warrants, and that the city was not authorized to issue warrants to pay miscellaneous items of indebtedness, but such warrants could be issued solely for the purposes expressed in the statute. However, the resolution of the city council of October 14, 1929, which is in evidence in this case expressly found that the funds of the City of Pana for water, fire, police and salary, had become exhausted, and that it was necessary in order to conduct the' current business of .the city that funds therefor-be- procured; that warrants in anticipation of 1929 taxes be issued, and such warrants were described in the resolution. This court has no fault to find with the case of People v. Coolley, 146 Ill. App. 113, cited by the appellant for the proposition that warrants cannot be issued to pay for miscellaneous items of indebtedness, and attention is drawn to the fact that in the case cited the court held that the orders issued in anticipation of taxes were unauthorized because they were to be in payment of claims as they should be allowed, and consequently were not for definite indebtedness existing at the time, which it was necessary to meet, and the court said, in its opinion, “but when the board shall have determined that it has insufficient money on hand to defray necessary expenses of the county, it then becomes the duty of the county board to provide a fund for that purpose by issuing orders.” Obviously in this case appellant cannot successfully contend that the items for which these warrants were issued were expenses which do not ordinarily arise in the administration of city government, or that they were miscellaneous expenses, and further we do not see how the argument of appellant that the.funds ill the accounts for which these warrants were issued were not actually exhausted on the last day of September, 1929, would lead to the conclusion that the council for the City of Pana, two weeks later when the resolution was adopted, may not have reasonably decided that such warrants were necessary for the current business of the city, as is indicated in their action of passing the resolution in question. If full faith and credit is not to be given to the resolutions of the city council in such matters, and such action construed favorably to the validity of warrants issued pursuant thereto, it • would be virtually impossible for any city to issue and dispose of tax anticipation warrants without the greatest difficulty.

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Bluebook (online)
278 Ill. App. 529, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-nelson-v-h-n-schuyler-state-bank-illappct-1935.