Sidelinger v. Freeman

86 Ill. App. 514, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 277
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 20, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 86 Ill. App. 514 (Sidelinger v. Freeman) 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
Sidelinger v. Freeman, 86 Ill. App. 514, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 277 (Ill. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Burroughs

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case arises in the proceedings in the County Court of Vermilion County, in the matter of the assignment of the firm of Strong & Bomig, insolvents, who made an assignment for the benefit of their creditors to Henry Freeman, one of the appellees here, their estate being administered in that court.

A controversy arising among creditors of that firm in that court, as to their respective proportions of the distribution of a fund of $856.37 in the hands of the assignee, the matter was properly submitted to that court, and it made the following order of distribution, to wit:

“How comes Freeman, the assignee, and presents to the court his petition alleging that of the creditors of said insolvents who, within ninety days from the time he gave notice to file claims with, him, the following claim a preferred right or lien on the assets of said insolvents, as set forth in their respective claims:
The Jones-Earle Shoe Co., The James A. Lawrence Co., Maloney Bros., Helmig-Williamson Shoe Co., The Cady-Ivison Shoe Co., Gr. B. Sidelinger, W. F. Baum, Whitney & Wabill, H. S. Albright & Co., Palmer National Bank, Stevens & Berring and The American Mutual Insurance Co.
And the assignee prays that said priorities may be adjusted and determined and the assets of said estate distributed.
Also come .said creditors claiming priorities, by their respective attorneys, and their cause coming on to be heard for the said purposes, and the court, having heard evidence and arguments of counsel and being fully advised, doth find that June 20,1898, the said insolvents, Strong & Romig, as copartners, executed their deed of assignment for the benefit of their creditors to Harry L. Freeman, as assignee, which was filed for record same day at eight o’clock, a. m.; that June 18, 1898, they confessed by warrant of attorney, a judgment in favor of said Sidelinger for $704 and costs in this court, and thereupon execution was issued and delivered to the sheriff, who thereupon levied upon the goods and fixtures aforesaid, and at same time levied a distress warrant thereon, as agent of W. F. Baum, the owner of the store building. On June 22, 1898, it appearing that there were sundry executions in the hands of the constables of said county against the said insolvents, existing at the time and prior to said levy, the plaintiffs in which were claiming liens upon said property, and thereupon said claimants, the sheriff and assignee, and all parties excepting Strong & Romig, The Palmer National Bank and Whitney, Wabill & Co. entered and appeared in said court upon a petition filed, and thereupon the court ordered said assignee to receive said property from the sheriff, whereupon the same should become assets in his hands, and should be by him converted into money and to be held to abide the further order of the court as to said several claims of priority, and the final disposition thereof to abide the further order of the court.
And the court further finds that said assignee, having duly qualified as such, on the 22d day of June, gave the notice required by the statute, to all persons having claims against said insolvents to present the same to said assignee within three months from said date; and that at the expiration of said time, namely, October 4,1898, the said assignee reported and filed with the clerk of this court a true list, under oath, of all such creditors who had claimed to be the creditors of said insolvents, among whom were H. S. Al-bright & Co., $141.63; G. B. Sidelinger, $715.45; W. F. Baum, $116.28; James A. Lawrence Co., $140.67; Whitney &Wabill, $614.65; Palmer National Bank, $650.04; Oody-Ivison Shoe Co., $84.25; Maloney Bros., $624.25; Stevens & Berring, $32.40; American Mutual Fire Insurance Co., $30.35; Helmig-Williams Shoe Co., $52.65; Jones-Earle Shoe Co., $41.60; James A. Bannister Co., $201.75.
And the court further found that no person interested, as creditor or otherwise, by himself or attorney, appeared within thirty days after the filing of said report, and filed any exception with said clerk to the claim or demand of any creditor as aforesaid; that said assignee had converted said property into money, and now asks direction as to the manner of its distribution among the creditors of said insolvents.
Upon due consideration the court doth order and decree that said assignee, after paying all costs and expenses of said assignment, shall distribute the remaining assets, namely, $857.57, to said creditors, whose claims were in judgment and in which executions were in the hands of officers at the time of the making of said assignment, shall be paid according to the seniority of the liens of said executions; that is to say, Jones-Earle Shoe Co., $41.60; Codv Ivison Shoe Co., $84.25; James A. Bannister Co., $201.75; Helmig-Williams Shoe Co., $52.65; James A. Lawrence Co., $140.67; Maloney Bros., $624.25; American Mutual Fire Insurance Co., $30.35; Stevens & Berring, $32.40; H. S. Albright & Co. $141.63; G. B. Sidelinger, $715.45; W. F. Baum, $116.28, and to distribute the residue to the other creditors who have presented their claims as aforesaid.
The court finds that the executions on the judgments of Palmer Bank and Whitney & Wabill were not delivered to the sheriff until after the execution and filing for record of said deed of assignment, and that they have not any prior lien upon said assets.” .

And the appellants not being satisfied with such order and distribution, appealed therefrom to this court.

The evidence shows that various executions on justices’ judgments, in favor of the appellees,other than the assignee, and against the insolvent firm, were in the hands of constables when the assignment was made, some of them a considerable length of time, but less than seventy days, and that demands had been made by such constables upon said firm for payment thereof, but they were not paid.

G-. B. Sidelinger, one of the appellants, later obtained a judgment in the County Court of Vermilion County against the firm, upon a note he held against them, and caused an execution to be issued thereon and at once placed it in the hands of the sheriff of that county, who immediately levied the same upon the stock of boots and shoes of the firm.

The firm at once made the assignment hereafter mentioned, and the assignee, Freeman, procured an order of that court directing the sheriff' to surrender the stock of boots and shoes so levied upon by him, to the assignee, preserving the rights of all parties interested therein as they then stood. The assignee sold the stock and converted it into money, amounting to $856.37, which constitutes the fund in controversy in this case.

The principal contentions of the appellants are:

(1) That the executions from the justices’ courts having been sworn out, the statute required them to be immediately levied, which not being done, subordinated them to their executions.

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Bluebook (online)
86 Ill. App. 514, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sidelinger-v-freeman-illappct-1899.