Platte Valley State Bank v. National Live Stock Bank

40 N.E. 621, 155 Ill. 250
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 40 N.E. 621 (Platte Valley State Bank v. National Live Stock Bank) 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
Platte Valley State Bank v. National Live Stock Bank, 40 N.E. 621, 155 Ill. 250 (Ill. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Wilkin

delivered the opinion of the court:

The National Live Stock Bank filed its bill of inter-pleader in the circuit court of Cook county, against the Platte Valley State Bank, the Union Stock Yards National Bank and one Halsey. The latter was defaulted, and the Union Stock Yards National Bank answered, not questioning the complainant’s right to file the bill, but claiming that the money mentioned therein belonged to it. The present appellant filed a .general demurrer to the bill, which was sustained by the circuit court, and the bill dismissed at complainant’s cost. From that order the National Live Stock Bank appealed to the Appellate Court for the First District, and that court, upon a consideration of the case, reversed the decision of the circuit court and entered its judgment remanding the cause generally. Subsequently during the term, upon the present appellant declaring its purpose to abide by its demurrer, that judgment was changed, and the decree of the circuit court was reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to permit the complainant in the interpleader (the National Live Stock Bank) to pay the money in its hands into court, to the credit of the Platte Valley State Bank, (this appellant,) and upon such payment being made, to order that said last named bank and the Union Stock Yards National Bank interplead with each other as to their respective rights to said fund, and that an injunction' issue restraining the Union Stock Yards National Bank from proceeding against the National Live Stock Bank in the attachment proceedings mentioned in the bill, and restraining all of the defendants to the bill from commencing any action or actions against the said National Live Stock Bank for the recovery of said fund. It was further ordered that the National Live Stock Bank recover its costs against the said Platte Valley State Bank, and have execution therefor. This is an appeal from that judgment. The National Live Stock Bank has entered a motion to dismiss the appeal, upon the ground that the judgment of the Appellate Court is not a final judgment, and that motion, having been reserved until the decision of the case, must first be disposed of.

The National Live Stock Bank is a banking corporation doing business at the stock yards in Chicago, and the Platte Valley State Bank and the Union Stock Yards National Bank are banking corporations located in the State of Nebraska. According to the allegations of the bill, as amended, one P. A. Halsey, who was also made a party defendant to the bill and was defaulted, by his agents deposited with the National Live Stock Bank the sum of $5963.18, to be credited to the Platte Valley Bank, and to be remitted or paid to said Platte Valley Bank upon presentation of a draft to be drawn by it. When the money was so deposited and credited, the agents of Halsey requested the National Live Stock Bank to immediately notify the Platte Valley Bank of the deposit and credit having been made, and notification thereof was accordingly, and on the same day, given, by both telegram and letter. It was further alleged, upon information and belief, that the Platte Valley Bank, acting upon said telegram and letter, and prior to any further advice from the National Live Stock Bank concerning the money so credited, paid out, to an extent unknown to the National Live Stock Bank, certain sums of money upon orders therefor drawn by said Halsey, and that said Platte Valley Bank does now, and has ever since the day of such deposit, claimed of the National Live Stock Bank the entire sum so deposited and credited, and that the entire sum so deposited and credited still remains in the hands of the last named bank. It is further alleged, that four days after said deposit was made, and before the receipt by the National Live Stock Bank of any draft or other request by the Platte Valley Bank or by said Halsey, the Union Stock Yards National Bank of South Omaha made known to the National Live Stock Bank that it claimed said fund of $5963.18, asserting that the same was the proceeds of sale of certain cattle owned by said Halsey and mortgaged to said Union Stock Yards Bank, and wrongfully converted by Halsey without its knowledge or consent, and that said Platte Valley Bank had notice of such mortgage and wrongful conversion, and of the disposition of the proceeds as aforesaid; that said Union Stock Yards Bank claims said money, and has notified the National Live ' Stock Bank not to pay the same to the Platte Valley Bank, and has begun a suit at law in attachment to obtain said fund from the National Live Stock Bank as garnishee, and threatens other suits at law and in equity against the said bank; that both the Platte Valley Bank and the Union Stock Yards Bank claim from the National Live Stock Bank the said specific fund of $5963.18; that both of said banks’ claims against the National Live Stock Bank arise out of the depositing by Halsey o.f said fund with it; that it is in danger of being harassed by other suits of said claimants ; that it is, and always has been, willing to pay said fund to whomsoever is lawfully entitled thereto, and offers to bring the same into court; that it fears it cannot be protected by the judgment that may be recovered against it in the suit at law that has been begun, or in other suits that may be begun against it by either of the rival claimants to said fund, and therefore prays that the said several claimants to said fund may be required to interplead and settle their demands between themselves ; that it has no interest in the subject matter, and is not colluding with either of said claimants touching the matter in controversy, but exhibits its bill of interpleader merely that it may be protected in the payment of said fund and avoid being harassed by the claimants thereto, and agrees to pay the same to whichever claimant may be adjudged to be entitled thereto, and prays for an injunction against the prosecution of said attachment proceedings, and from other suits being begun against it for the recovery of said money.

It will thus be seen that the judgment of the Appellate Court appealed from, grants to the National Live Stock Bank all the relief prayed for in its bill, and allows it to do just what it there offers to do. If the Appellate Court decided correctly in reversing the judgment of the circuit court, the latter should have overruled appellant’s demurrer to the bill. If it had done so, and appellant had elected to stand by the demurrer, as it did in the Appellate Court, it would have been the duty of the court to grant the prayer of the bill, and as there was then no issue between the complainant and other parties as to its right to file the bill of interpleader and have the relief therein prayed, we are unable to see why an appeal upon the prayer of this appellant from such a decree would not have been maintainable in the Appellate Court. The decree would have finally settled the rights of the complainant in the interpleader as against the Platte Valley State Bank, and as nothing remained to be litigated between it and the other bank, it could not have been said there was an attempt to take the case to a court of review by piecemeal. If an appeal could not have been prosecuted from such a decree, it is not perceived by what right the complainant below took the case to the Appellate Court.

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Bluebook (online)
40 N.E. 621, 155 Ill. 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/platte-valley-state-bank-v-national-live-stock-bank-ill-1895.