Reisman v. Central Manufacturing District Bank

15 N.E.2d 903, 296 Ill. App. 61, 1938 Ill. App. LEXIS 352
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 21, 1938
DocketGen. No. 39,927
StatusPublished

This text of 15 N.E.2d 903 (Reisman v. Central Manufacturing District 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
Reisman v. Central Manufacturing District Bank, 15 N.E.2d 903, 296 Ill. App. 61, 1938 Ill. App. LEXIS 352 (Ill. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Friend

delivered the opinion of the court.

Central Manufacturing District Bank closed its doors and went into liquidation June 24, 1932. Thereafter a representative suit was filed in the circuit court to enforce the liability of its stockholders. According to the records of the bank David E. Shanahan was the owner of 240 shares of the capital stock of the bank, upon which he became liable to the creditors of the bank in the sum of $24,000. To relieve himself of part of this liability he filed a verified petition in the circuit court, where the liquidation proceeding was then pending, representing that he was insolvent and unable to pay the full amount of his liability, and that if a decree were rendered against him it would be partially if not wholly uncollectible. Pursuant to this representation, the court on July 28, 1933, entered an order approving a compromise with Shanahan by which his liability to the creditors was satisfied for the sum of $6,300 and the assignment by him of certain deposits in the bank aggregating $7,200. After Shanahan’s death October 18, 1936, Helen Shanahan was appointed executrix under his last will and testament and filed an inventory in the probate court disclosing that at the time of his death Shanahan was the owner of various bonds totaling $145,000, common and preferred stocks valued at $151,100, mortgage notes of the value of $125,000, $251,714.87 in cash, and that he owned some twenty-three parcels of real estate in Chicago and vicinity. October 7,1937, various creditors joining with Howard K. Hurwith, who had been appointed receiver in the liquidation proceeding, filed a petition in the circuit court alleging that at the time of his death, and also at the time of the filing of the petition for the compromise of his stockholder’s liability, Shanahan was worth about $1,000,000; that the total claims filed against the estate amounted to approximately $2,100; that when Shanahan executed the petition for settlement of his claim he was not insolvent, but was well able to pay in full his stockholder’s liability; that the settlement theretofore made, July 28,1933, was an imposition and a fraud upon the court, which the court would never have approved had it been advised of the true facts of the case; that petitioners did not know and had no means of ascertaining the fact that Shanahan was solvent until approximately two months before the filing of the petition, when the inventory filed by the executrix disclosed valuable assets; and asking that the executrix be required to pay Shanahan’s full liability as a stockholder of the bank. Helen Shanahan, as executrix, filed a motion to strike the petition, on the ground (1) that it was in the nature of a bill of review and was not brought within the period of time allowed by law for the filing of such proceedings; (2) that the petition failed to set out sufficiently the proceedings sought to be reviewed; (3) that the petition involved the merits of the case and was filed after the expiration of the term in which the decree sought to be vacated was entered; and (4) that the petition sought, in effect, a rehearing upon the basis of newly discovered evidence, but failed to contain any allegations of facts which were not previously known or accessible to petitioners by the exercise of reasonable diligence. The court granted leave to file the petition instanter, sustained the motion to strike the same and entered judgment in favor of Helen Shanahan, executrix. This appeal by the various creditors and the receiver followed.

It is first urged as ground for reversal that since the court had no jurisdiction to approve a compromise of Shanahan’s liability, the order approving the settlement was void. This proposition is predicated upon sec. 11 of the Banking Act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1937, ch. 16½, at p. 193 [Jones Ill. Stats. Ann. 10.11]) which contains the following provision: “Said receiver shall have authority upon the order of the court appointing him to employ such auditors and assistants as may be necessary to establish and recover the liabilities of the stockholders, and may, with the approval of the court enter into compositions with insolvent stockholders, if any.” (Italics ours.)

It is argued that the motion to strike being in lieu of a demurrer admits that Shanahan was fully solvent at the time the order of settlement was entered on July 28, 1933, and that since the statute hereinbefore set forth authorizes the court to approve compositions only with insolvent stockholders, jurisdiction was lacking for the entry of an order approving the settlement with Shanahan, who was alleged to have had valuable assets, both at the time the settlement was made and also at the time of his death, without proof of his insolvency. Whatever doubt may have formerly existed as to the soundness of this rule of law was dispelled by the decisions in the recent cases of Burket v. Reliance Bank & Trust Co., 367 Ill. 196, and Hillmer v. Graf, 294 Ill. App. 612 (Abst.). In the Burhet case it was held that a trial court had no power to discharge a stockholder of an Illinois bank from any part of the liability imposed by the constitution without proof by the stockholder of his insolvency, and that any order discharging him from liability upon the payment of a sum less than that imposed by law without such proof, is erroneous. The Eillmer case was likewise a proceeding to enforce a bank stockholder’s liability under the State constitution, and an appeal was taken from an order authorizing the receiver of the Chicago Bank of Commerce to accept from Graf a sum considerably less than the full liability in settlement of the creditors’ claim. The record in the Graf case showed that after issue had been joined, Graf’s offer of settlement was approved by the court without hearing any evidence as to his insolvency, and the court citing and following Burket v. Reliance Bank & Trust Co., supra, held that that part of the decree authorizing the receiver to satisfy Graf’s liability was erroneous, and the order was accordingly reversed. Gardner v. Auburn Park Trust & Savings Bank, 293 Ill. App. 107, is to the same effect.

The executrix argues that a motion to strike a complaint functioning as a demurrer under the old practice merely admits the allegations well pleaded, and it is urged that although the petition herein set forth alleges that Shanahan owned valuable assets at the time of his death, it is not sufficiently shown that these assets exceeded his liabilities so as to render him solvent, either at the time that the compromise was approved or at his death. We find, however, that the petition after specifically listing the stocks, bonds, notes and real estate o.wned by Shanahan at the time of his death, contains the following allegation: “. . . in addition to the foregoing assets that the said David E. Shanahan owned considerable other personalty, so that he [Shanahan] was worth at the time of his death and also at the time of the filing of the petition for settlement, about $1,000,000; that thus far the total claims filed against the said estate amount to the sum of Twenty One Hundred ($2,100) Dollars; that the said David E. Shanahan, at the time of executing the petition for settlement in the above entitled cause was not insolvent, but was well able to pay in full his stockholder’s liability.” These are not conclusions of the pleaders but sufficient allegations of fact, which when undenied constitutes an admission of Shanahan’s solvency at the time of the settlement, and bring the petition squarely within the provisions of sec. 11 of the Banking Act.

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.E.2d 903, 296 Ill. App. 61, 1938 Ill. App. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reisman-v-central-manufacturing-district-bank-illappct-1938.