Sangamon Loan & Trust Co. v. Peoples Savings Bank & Trust Co.

204 Ill. App. 7, 1917 Ill. App. LEXIS 278
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 10, 1917
DocketGen. No. 6,289
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 204 Ill. App. 7 (Sangamon Loan & Trust Co. v. Peoples Savings Bank & Trust Co.) 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
Sangamon Loan & Trust Co. v. Peoples Savings Bank & Trust Co., 204 Ill. App. 7, 1917 Ill. App. LEXIS 278 (Ill. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Niehaus

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action of assumpsit commenced by the appellee, Sangamon Loan & Trust Company, receiver for the Northern Life Insurance Company, against the Peoples Savings Bank & Trust Company, appellant, to recover on a certificate of deposit for $2,500 issued by the Peoples Savings Bank & Trust Company, to the Northern Life Insurance Company, and which had been deposited by the Northern Life Insurance Company as a part of the securities required by the statute to be deposited with the superintendent of insurance and which under an order of court had been turned over to the receiver by the superintendent of insurance for the purposes of the receivership.

It is claimed by appellant bank, as a defense to the suit, that the certificate in question was issued by the appellant bank, with other like certificates under a valid written agreement which it had made with the president of the Northern Life Insurance Company, acting for the company, in which it was stipulated with the Northern Life Insurance Company that when the certificate became due it would be returned to the bank, with the other certificates, and exchanged for certain promissory notes amounting to $15,000, and a mortgage securing them, and that the Northern Life Insurance Company could not, therefore, legally enforce the payment of the certificate as provided in the certificate; that the Northern Life Insurance Company was bound by its agreement, and that the receiver, who was appointed to take charge of the assets of the company, has no greater rights in the premises and with reference to this asset of the company than the company itself would have had against the appellant bank.

There was a trial by the court, which resulted in a judgment in favor of the appellee and against the appellant for $3,103.47, the amount due on the certificate, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted. It appears from the evidence that the Northern Life Insurance Company was regularly organized in the year 1908, under the Act of the General Assembly approved March 26, 1869, and in force July 1, 1869; and that it had deposited with the superintendent of insurance the securities to the amount of its capital stock, as required by the statute, and that these securities, including the one in question, which had been accepted, and held by the superintendent of insurance in conformity with the law. That in December, 1910, Hope Thompson, president of the Northern Life Insurance Company, was desirous of negotiating a loan for the Northern Life Insurance Company with Pierre D. Southworth, the owner of a piece of property known as the “Sunset Ranch” in Lincoln County, New Mexico, and thereby dispose of some of the shares of treasury stock of the Northern Life Insurance Company and other shares of stock of the company held by a stockholders’ syndicate, of which Charles W. Lundahl, a cashier of the appellant bank, and Thompson himself, were members, and with these ends in view made an arrangement with the appellant bank, represented by its vice president, Nelson H. Greene, to finance the transaction.

In order to do so it was necessary to get $12,500 in cash to be turned over to Southworth, with the shares of the capital stock of the Northern Life Insurance Company to be transferred. It was arranged that Southworth execute a trust deed for the so-called “Sunset Ranch” in New Mexico, securing promissory notes for $25,000—and of these notes three are involved in this suit, namely, one for $5,000, and one for $6,000 and one for $4,000. Southworth executed the notes and trust deed contemplated in the arrangement on December 1.0, 1910, and they were sent by mail to and received by the appellant bank. After the appellant bank had received and had in its possession the Southworth trust deed and notes, Thompson, as president of the Northern Life Insurance Company, arranged with the appellant bank, through its vice president, in order that the necessary cash might be obtained to finance the Southworth loan, that the bank should issue to the Northern Life Insurance Company the certificate of deposit in suit for $2,500 and four other certificates of deposit of a like amount, and one for $1,000, all dated December 13, 1910, due one year after date, and that these certificates be used as securities for deposit with the superintendent of insurance, and to replace other securities of the Northern Life Insurance Company then on deposit with the superintendent, which were of a character that they could be utilized and converted into cash, of sufficient amount to realize the $12,500 needed for the South-worth loan.

At the time of the issuance of the certificate of deposit in question, and the others involved in the transaction mentioned, the appellant bank, through its vice president, exacted of the president of the Life Insurance Company an agreement in writing to return the certificates when they became due and exchange them for $15,000 of the notes secured by the Southworth trust deed, which agreement was in the form of a letter to the bank, as follows:

“Book Island, Illinois, December 13, 1910.
“Peoples Savings Bank & Trust Company,
Mr. Nelson H. Greene, Vice President,
Moline, Illinois.
Gentlemen :—
We have this day turned over to you Mortgage Notes of P. D. Southworth and wife, amounting to $15,000.00, and secured by Trust Deed on property in Lincoln County, New Mexico, for which you have issued us your Certificates of Deposit No. 4823, 4824, 4825, 4826 and 4827, aggregating a like amount. As this is a loan which we should like to have for our own investment as soon as the Territory of New Mexico is admitted as one of the States of the Union, we herewith agree that when the above mentioned Certificates fall due one year from their date, we will return them to you and take up from the proceeds thereof, the above mentioned Mortgage Notes for $15,000.00.
“Thanking you for your numerous courtesies, we are,
Tours very truly,
The Northern Lies Insurance Company of Illinois,
Hope Thompson,
(Signed) President.”

Thereafter and some months prior to the appointment of the receiver for the Northern Life Insurance Company and while the company was still transacting' its regular business of life insurance, the superintendent of insurance, in performance of his statutory duty, sent to the Peoples Savings Bank & Trust Company the following communication:

“November 27, 1911.
“Peoples Savings Bank & Trust Company,
Moline, Illinois.
Gentlemen :—
The Northern Life Insurance Company of Illinois, Bock Island, has on deposit in this Department, Certificates of Deposit issued by your bank to said company, as follows:
No. 4807, Due Nov. 29, 1911, $2500.00
No. 4823; << Dec. 13, i Í 2500.00
No.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
204 Ill. App. 7, 1917 Ill. App. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sangamon-loan-trust-co-v-peoples-savings-bank-trust-co-illappct-1917.