Smith v. United States Express Co.

25 N.E. 525, 135 Ill. 279
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 25 N.E. 525 (Smith v. United States Express Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. United States Express Co., 25 N.E. 525, 135 Ill. 279 (Ill. 1890).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the Court:

In a proceeding instituted in the Superior- Court of Cook County by Thomas P. Tallman, the cashier of and a stockholder in the Trader’s Bank of Chicago, a corporation organized under the laws of Illinois, Byron L. Smith, the appellant herein, was appointed receiver of said bank on October 3, 1888. By the orders of the court he was clothed with the usual powers of a receiver, and “empowered to institute suits in law or equity for the recovery of any assets, claims, choses in action, justly belonging to or due said Trader’s Bank.”

On October 29, 1888, Smith, as receiver, filed his petition in said proceeding, praying that an order be entered requiring Charles C. Boyle (individually), Charles C. Boyle, as guardian of Mary E. Gossage and Margaret G. Gossage, minors, the Merchants’ National Bank of Chicago and the United States Express Company, all of whom are appellees herein, “to stay and discontinue all proceedings under (the) writs of attachment and in (the) suits (hereinafter) described, and to release all moneys, property and assets heretofore attached by them as belonging to * * * said Trader’s Bank of Chicago, and requiring them to immediately pay over to petitioner any moneys or assets, which they have received or may receive either directly or indirectly from the proceedings and suits (so) instituted; ” and further praying, that said parties “may be enjoined from further interfering with petitioner as receiver and the property and assets to which (he) is entitled * * * ; and that a rule be entered requiring them and each of them to show cause why an order should not be entered in said cause punishing *' * * each of them for contempt,” and for other relief.

The material facts set up in the petition and answers thereto are as follows: When the receiver was appointed, funds amounting to about $25,000.00 and belonging to the Trader’s Bank, were on deposit with the Seaboard National Bank, the Tradesmen’s National Bank and the Continental National Bank of New York City. At the time of its failure, the Trader’s Bank owed Boyle individually $1014.45; Boyle, as guardian, $15,692.82; the Merchants’ National Bank $1800.00; the United States Express Company, for itself and as assignee of one Crosby, $8860.21. Boyle, the Merchants’ National Bank ■and Crosby were residents of Chicago, Illinois, and the United States Express Company, though an association organized under the laws of New York, did business in Chicago and had an .office there under the control of its vice-president and manager.

In the early part of October, 1888, Boyle assigned his indi•vidual claim to William 0. Jaquette and his claim as guardian do William K. Kitchen; the Merchants’ National Bank assigned its claim to William A. Nash, and Crosby assigned his claim to the U. S. Express Co. The parties, to whom the. claims were thus assigned, were residents of New York. On October ■8, 9 and 11, 1888, Jaquette, Kitchen, Nash and Thomas C. Platt, president-of the U. S. Express Co., commenced attachment suits in New York City in the Supreme Court of New York upon the respective claims above mentioned against the Trader’s Bank of Chicago, and attached or garnisheed the •funds in the hands of the New York banks above named.

Boyle individual, Boyle guardian, the Merchants’ National Bank, and the U. S. Express Co., who were the only parties required to answer the petition of the receiver, filed their answers on the 9th and 10th days of November, 1888, setting up their claims, the assignments thereof, the proceedings begun in New York, and insisting upon their right to prosecute the attachment suits, and upon. the right of the New York court to entertain jurisdiction of said suits and to determine the •ownership of the attached funds. These New York attachment suits are the proceedings referred to in the prayer of the re.ceiver’s petition as above set forth.

On March 4, 1889, the defendants to said petition, by leave ■ of the court, filed their amended and supplemental answers, alleging therein that on January 5, 1889, Smith, the receiver, .employed counsel in New York City and caused an appearance •to be entered in the name of the Trader’s Bank in the New York, suits; that such appearance was in fact on behalf of said ■receiver; that, on January 8, 1889, said receiver caused un-dertakings to be executed and filed by the American Surety Company of New York in the attachment suits in order to procure releases of the funds attached, and thereupon said funds amounting to about $25,000.00 were released and delivered to said receiver; that said receiver became thereby a party to the attachment suits and bound by the judgments therein; that on January 23 and 29, 1889, judgments were rendered by the Supreme Court of New York in favor of the plaintiffs in the attachment suits for the amounts of their respective claims as above set forth with interest and costs; that plaintiffs became thereby entitled to have such judgments paid out of the funds attached; that, by reason of the premises, the receiver is barred and estopped from maintaining his petition; that, under the constitution of the United States (Article 4, section 1), full faith and credit should be given to the legal proceedings and judgments in New York; that said judgments are conclusive adjudications, binding upon said receiver, as to the rights of the parties to the funds attached, and authorize the plaintiffs in the judgments to enforce payment of the same upon the undertaking of the American Surety Company. It appears from the answer of the United States Express Company, that, upon the recovery of its judgment in the name of its president, it brought its action in the Supreme Court of New York against said Surety Company upon the undertaking aforesaid, and, thereupon, on February 1, 1889, the Surety company paid to said president the full amount of the judgment, $9036.52.

In December, 1888, and January, 1889, testimony was taken before one of the masters in chancery of the Superior Court, but no order was entered in accordance with the prayer of the petition until March 4, 1889, when a hearing was had upon the issues made by the petition and the answers thereto. Upon the hearing the court entered a decree finding that the assignments made of the claims above named were without consideration and void and fictitious and made for the purpose of giving the assignors a preference over the other creditors, and that the actions in New York were prosecuted in the interest of the Illinois creditors, who assigned the claims, and that said Illinois creditors were the real parties in interest, and the plaintiffs in the suits were mere nominal parties.

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.E. 525, 135 Ill. 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-united-states-express-co-ill-1890.