Prindeville v. Curran

156 Ill. App. 278, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 393
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 3, 1910
DocketGen. No. 15,001
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 156 Ill. App. 278 (Prindeville v. Curran) 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
Prindeville v. Curran, 156 Ill. App. 278, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 393 (Ill. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Smith

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Decorators Supply Company filed the original hill in this record setting forth the recovery of a judgment for $469.07 and costs against Eichard Curran, the issue of execution and levy thereof upon the real estate in question in this suit, and charging amongst other things that Curran, the judgment debtor, had caused the legal title to valuable real estate and interests in real estate to he vested in persons other than himself, and transacted his business, so far as the same related to real estate and interests in real estate, through the medium of said persons, making mortgages, loans and contracts in their names, and naming the defendants, Isabella Curran and Samuel E. Hurford, and others as the persons through whom Curran acted. The bill further shows that the real estate of the defendant Eichard Curran, standing of record in the names of Isabella Curran and other persons, was that described in this record.

The bill avers that Curran is in fact the owner of the real estate, and that the same is held in trust for him. The bill was filed in behalf of the complainant and all other creditors of Curran who might become parties thereto and contribute to the expense thereof. It shows that Thomas E. Bishop at the same term of court at which the complainant sued out its writ of attachment, sued out an attachment writ against Curran and levied the same on the real estate described in the bill. The bill makes Eichard Curran, Isabella Curran, Thomag B. Bishop, Samuel B. Hurford and others parties defendant, and prays that by its decree the court may order and decree that the several parcels of real estate described in the bill, and every part and parcel thereof, be subject to the complainant’s judgment, and for general relief. The Currans answered the bill.

The attachment suit of Bishop v. Curran, referred to in the bill, ripened in due course into judgment for $1,192.41, and Bishop answered the bill, setting forth the facts, his attachment and judgment, issue of execution and levy thereof on the real estate of the defendants Curran, and praying the benefit of the proceeding for the collection of his judgment. He afterwards filed his petition to be made a party complainant, and made his answer on file a part of the petition. Other judgment creditors of Bichard Curran also intervened, and before any other proceedings were had in relation to the claim of Bishop, Curran undertook to settle all the claims in the suit. He succeeded in settling all of them except Bishop’s, and for a time it was believed that Bishop’s claim had been settled; and on May 23, 1905, an order was entered in this suit upon the stipulation of parties, whereby the cause was dismissed out of court without costs.

The signature of Bishop’s attorneys to the stipulation upon which this order-was entered was obtained by gross fraud, and under circumstances which are the subject-matter of this court’s opinion in Prindeville v. Curran, 132 Ill. App. 162.

That opinion was rendered in an appeal by appellees herein from a decree sustaining a demurrer to an amended bill filed in another cause in the Circuit Court attacking the stipulation of the parties and the order of court above mentioned as having been procured by fraud, and to correct a mistake in a deed represented by Bichard Curran to be a deed of Isabella Curran to'some lots in South Chicago and given by him to Prindeville in settlement of Bishop’s judgment, and after Curran and his wife had come in, and in response to the prayer of the original bill in that case, an answer under oath being demanded, and in response to special interrogatories propounded by the complainant, answered that the deed by appellant Isabella Curran was not her deed and had never been executed by her, and praying that the satisfaction of the judgment and the order of the dismissal of this suit be set aside. The facts in that case up to the entry of the decree therein from which the appeal was taken sufficiently appear in the opinion of this court.

After the decree was reversed and the cause remanded, it was redocketed in the Circuit Court, and proceeded to a hearing and decree which set aside the satisfaction piece and stipulation to dismiss this cause on the ground of fraud, and ordered this cause reinstated and that it proceed in the same manner as if no dismissal had been had. The decree in that case also directed that appellee Thomas W. Prindeville and the McArdles be subrogated to all the rights of Bishop in his said judgment against Curran in case 258,806 in the said Circuit Court and in this cause, and that said deed purporting to be executed by Isabella Curran and her husband conveying lots described in the bill to Prindeville was not executed by Isabella Curran and was not her deed, and that the deed was fraudulent and void.

IJpon the entry of that decree in Prindeville v. Curran this cause was reinstated in the Circuit Court and redocketed. Thomas W. Prindeville, Thomas it. Bishop, Edward J. McArdle and Patrick L. McArdle filed a supplemental bill by leave of court, setting up in substance the original bill and the proceedings in the case of Prindeville v. Curran, above referred to, and the proceedings in the case of Kennard v. Curran, General Humber 266,124, and the decree therein; also the proceedings in the case of Bishop v. Curran, General Humber 258,806 in the Circuit Court, and the facts in relation to the obtaining of the dismissal of this cause and of the fraudulent satisfaction of the judgment in Bishop v. Curran, and the setting aside of the deed given in satisfaction of the Bishop claim, and the pleadings and proceedings in this cause prior to the filing of the supplemental bill, and setting forth in haec verba the decrees in Prindeville v. Curran and in Kennard v. Curran and the affirmance of the decree in Kennard v. Curran by this court in June, 1909, the subrogation of the complainants in the supplemental bill to the rights of Bishop, and. that no part of the Bishop judgment had been paid, and that the same was in full force and effect, and that there was then due thereon $1,792.41 and interest from Hay 1, 1905, and that the defendant Hurford at the time of filing the supplemental bill had in his possession and held title to certain property described therein for Bichard Curran, and as security for $14,990.25 and interest, and claiming that said judgment is subject to the lien of the Bishop judgment, and averring that Hurford acknowledges and admits, and the bill charges it to be a fact, that Hurford at the time of the filing of the bill had, and still has, in his possession, and holds title in trust to said real estate for Bichard Curran, and that during the pendency of the case of Prindeville v. Curran, No. 167,982, there was on April 4, 1907, a deed of conveyance recorded from Isabella Curran to John F. Gavin of certain property described in the bill, and avers that Gavin is a relative of Curran’s, and holds" whatever title to said real estate passed to him by said deed for Bichard Curran.

The bill avers that the rights of Dewitt T. Kennard and one Day, receiver in the Kennard case, are inferior and subject to the rights of the complainant, and that Prindeville and the HcArdles are assignees and equitable owners of the Bishop judgment and entitled to be subrogated to all his rights as judgment creditor in said judgment as co-complainants in this bill;

To the supplemental bill Samuel B. Hurford filed his answer, admitting that he holds the real estate as found in the decree in Kennard v.

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Bluebook (online)
156 Ill. App. 278, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prindeville-v-curran-illappct-1910.