Pritchard v. Wilcox

40 N.E.2d 831, 314 Ill. App. 132, 1942 Ill. App. LEXIS 942
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 24, 1942
DocketGen. No. 41,937
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 40 N.E.2d 831 (Pritchard v. Wilcox) 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
Pritchard v. Wilcox, 40 N.E.2d 831, 314 Ill. App. 132, 1942 Ill. App. LEXIS 942 (Ill. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sullivan

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff, Myra Hekner Pritchard, filed a creditor’s complaint for discovery of assets under section 49 of the Chancery Act, in which she named as defendants, Boland E. Wilcox, the judgment debtor, Citizens State Bank of Park Bidge and others. The trial cou,rt entered a money decree for $1,600 against the Citizens State Bank of Park Bidge, from which decree said bank prosecutes this appeal.

Plaintiff’s complaint alleged that March 26, 1935, she recovered a judgment for $5,592.70 against Roland E. Wilcox in the superior court of Cook county; and that April 8, 1935, a writ of fieri facias was issued pursuant to said judgment and was returned nulla bona by the sheriff on August 3, 1935. The complaint contained the usual allegations in general terms as to possible holdings by the various defendants of assets belonging to the judgment debtor. It then averred that Roland E. Wilcox was the owner of shares of stock in the Citizens State Bank of Park Ridge; and that said bank had in its possession or in its control divers goods, wares and merchandise and other articles of personal property that belonged to defendant Roland E. Wilcox.

The complaint specifically prayed that the bank “state whether said defendant Roland E. Wilcox now owns any of the shares of stock in said corporation . . . and whether he has at any time since August 26, 1931, owned any of said shares of stock, which have been subsequently transferred on the stock record books of said corporation.” The complaint included a prayer that the defendant Roland E. Wilcox be enjoined, among other things, from selling or transferring any of his assets and that a receiver be appointed for his property.

The answer of the principal defendant, Roland E. Wilcox, admitted that he owned ten shares of stock of the Citizens State Bank of Park Ridge and further admitted that such stock was in the possession of said bank.

The Citizens State Bank of Park Ridge admitted by its answer that the judgment debtor, Roland E. Wilcox, was the owner of record of 10 shares of the capital stock of the bank; that the certificate for said 10 shares of stock belonging to Wilcox was on deposit with and held by the bank; and that-Roland E. Wilcox was president of the defendant bank.

As has been shown the defendant bank admitted in its answer of October 14,1935, that it had in its possession 10 shares of its capital stock which were the property of the judgment debtor, Boland E. Wilcox. Plaintiff served notice that on September 17, 1937, she would make application for the appointment of a receiver and for an order directing the bank to turn over the stock belonging to Wilcox to said receiver. It then appeared for the first time that the bank had on April 10, 1936, about seven months after it had filed its answer, delivered to Wilcox, the judgment debtor, the 10 shares of bank stock which it had in its possession belonging to him. On the same day that the bank delivered the stock to Wilcox, he sold and transferred same to his son for $1,250. The bank made the transfer on its books, canceled the old certificate and issued a new certificate to the transferee. August 7,1936, about four months later, Wilcox’s son sold the stock to one Paul Ludmann for $1,600.

The defendant bank’s principal contention is that even though it admitted by its answer that it had in its possession the ten shares of bank stock belonging to the judgment debtor, it had the right to turn such stock over to said judgment debtor and thus place it out of the reach of the court because plaintiff had not acted promptly to sequester the discovered asset by having an injunction issue restraining Wilcox from transferring the stock or restraining the bank from making a transfer of the stock on its books or by having a receiver appointed and the bank directed to turn over the certificate of stock to him.

Plaintiff’s theory as stated in her brief is “that where, in a creditor’s suit, service of process is had upon a defendant who is possessed of assets belonging to the judgment debtor, the lien thereby acquired on such assets and the jurisdiction of the court over same cannot be defeated and destroyed with impunity by the voluntary action of such a defendant who turns the property over to the judgment debtor, whereby it is put out of reach; that in such case, equity having once acquired jurisdiction over the subject matter and of the parties, the court may properly enter a money judgment against such defendant for the value of the property, without relegating the plaintiff to any other remedy which may be available.”

Section 49 of the Chancery Act (par. 49, ch. 22, Ill. Rev. Stat. 1941 [Jones Ill. Stats. Ann. 106.12]) provides in part as follows:

“Whenever an execution shall have been issued against the property of a defendant, on a judgment at law or in equity, and shall have been returned unsatisfied, in whole or in part, the party suing out such execution may file a complaint against such defendant, and any other person, to compel the discovery of any property or thing in action, belonging to the defendant, and of any property, money or thing in action due to him, or held in trust for him, and to prevent the transfer of any such property, money or thing in action, or the payment or the delivery thereof to the defendant, . . . . The court shall have power to compel such discovery, and to prevent such transfer, payment or delivery, and to decree satisfaction of the sum remaining due on such judgments, out of any personal property, money or thing in action, belonging to the defendant . . . which shall be discovered by the proceedings in chancery, whether the same were originally liable to be taken in execution at law or not . . . .”

It will be noted that under the foregoing statute the court was granted the power to compel the discovery of assets belonging to a judgment debtor, the power to prevent the transfer of the discovered assets to such judgment debtor and the power “to decree «atisfaction of the sum remaining due on such judgments, out of any personal property .... belonging to the defendant, . . . which shall be discovered by the proceedings in chancery, whether the same were originally liable to be taken in execution at law or not.”

The bank’s claimed right to thwart the application of the discovered asset of the judgment debtor to the satisfaction of plaintiff’s judgment is based entirely upon the failure of the court to exercise the second of the aforementioned powers. In other words it is claimed that because plaintiff did not promptly apply to the court for the issuance of an injunction or for the appointment of a receiver to prevent the transfer or delivery of the ten shares of stock by the bank to defendant and because the court did not promptly exercise its power “to prevent such transfer ... or delivery,” the bank had a right to deliver the certificate of stock to the judgment debtor, who was its president, thereby depriving plaintiff of her right to have the stock applied toward the satisfaction of her judgment.

While ordinarily plaintiffs do act promptly to sequester “discovered” assets and while the plaintiff herein might have resorted to the interlocutory remedies of injunction or receivership to prevent the transfer and delivery of the certificate of stock by the bank to Wilcox, in our opinion she was under no obligation to do so.

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Bluebook (online)
40 N.E.2d 831, 314 Ill. App. 132, 1942 Ill. App. LEXIS 942, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pritchard-v-wilcox-illappct-1942.