Strickland v. Washington Building Corp.

4 N.E.2d 973, 287 Ill. App. 340, 1936 Ill. App. LEXIS 389
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 30, 1936
DocketGen. No. 38,957
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 4 N.E.2d 973 (Strickland v. Washington Building Corp.) 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
Strickland v. Washington Building Corp., 4 N.E.2d 973, 287 Ill. App. 340, 1936 Ill. App. LEXIS 389 (Ill. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Matchett

delivered the opinion of the court.

Strickland is a judgment creditor of the Washington Building Corporation, an Illinois corporation, of which defendant Archie M. Andrews was a director and stockholder. October 14, 1930, he filed his amended bill against Andrews et al., setting np the rendition of a judgment in his favor against the corporation, the relationship of Andrews and his certain acts with reference to the corporation, and prayed that Andrews might be held personally liable for the amount of the judgment because while a director of the corporation he assented to the creation of the debt of the corporation to the plaintiff, which was in excess of the amount of its capital stock, because he assented to the declaration and payment of a dividend whereby the corporation was rendered insolvent and the capital thereof impaired, and because he had not paid in full his subscription to the capital stock of said corporation.

Defendants answered denying the equity of the bill. The cause was put at issue and referred to a master, who filed his report finding in favor of the complainant. Objections which had been filed to the master’s report and overruled were by order permitted to stand as exceptions. The exceptions, upon hearing, were overruled as to defendant Andrews and a decree entered against him on November 15, 1935, for the sum of $49,541, to reverse which he appeals.

Defendant contends that he fully paid for his stock in. the corporation; that he did not assent to the creation of any corporate indebtedness in excess of the capital stock; that under the evidence the plaintiff is not such a creditor as is entitled to enforce any personal obligation against him as an assenting director; and that the chancellor erred in refusing to reopen the case as requested by defendant, in order to permit the introduction of other proper evidence in his behalf. Plaintiff contends there was no error in these respects and also contends, as the decree finds, that defendant, through the manipulation of various corporations controlled by him, took from the Washington Building Corporation assets under such circumstances as to render him liable as found by the decree.

After the record was filed in this court the plaintiff made a motion to dismiss the appeal “for lack of jurisdiction” because the record was not filed in this court within 35 days from the filing of the notice of appeal in the trial court, as provided by Rules 1 and 10 of this court. The motion has been reserved to the hearing and is argued in the briefs.

As already stated, the final decree in this cause was entered on November 15, 1935. The cause was heard upon the exceptions of defendant to the report of a master to whom it had been referred, and defendant’s notice of appeal was filed in the cause on January 10, 1936. The record was not filed in this court until May 9, 1936. No order was entered extending the time for filing the same. The record shows on March 5,1936, the plaintiff made a motion in the trial court to dismiss the appeal. On the following day defendant Andrews filed a motion with affidavit in support thereof, asking that his time be extended to April 9, 1936, to file the transcript of testimony taken before the master and have the same approved. On March 9, 1936, plaintiff withdrew without prejudice the motion to dismiss, and the court entered an order that the date for defendant to file his report of trial proceedings be extended to April 9,1936, without prejudice to the contention of the plaintiff, and without any determination of the court as to “whether or not there can be or should be any report of trial proceedings of this cause.”

On April 6th thereafter the defendant presented an instrument purporting to be such a report of proceedings of the court, and over the objection of the plaintiff the judge signed, approved and ordered the same filed. The report in substance certifies that the cause came on for hearing upon the pleadings and report of the master in chancery, and the evidence attached to his report, and the 80 exhibits used and taken in such hearing before the master.

It further certifies that neither the complainant nor the defendants introduced any further or additional evidence. The certificate of proceedings adds nothing to the knowledge of this court not already disclosed by the record.

The Civil Practice Act changed in material ways the law of this State with respect to the method by which litigants may obtain a review of judgments and decrees in civil cases. The sections applicable will be found in Illinois State Bar Stats. 1935, chapter 110, sections 74-92, mf 202-220, pp. 2448-51. Section 74 provides that an appeal may be taken by “notice of appeal,” which shall be deemed to present to the reviewing court all issues which were theretofore presented by appeal or by writ of error. Section 76 provides that no appeal shall be taken to the Supreme or Appellate Courts after the expiration of 90 days from the entering of the judgment appealed from except upon order of the reviewing court, which may be granted upon proper showing within one year from the entry of the order or decree. Section 79 provides that the Supreme Court may by general rules regulate the practice and procedure upon review. Section 90 provides that notice of the taking of the appeal shall be given to the opposing party or his attorney “in such manner as may be provided by rules.” Paragraph 2 of section 76 provides that an-appeal shall be deemed perfected when notice of appeal shall be filed in the lower court, and that no step other than this shall be deemed jurisdictional.

The Supreme Court adopted rules at the December 1933 term, and these were amended at the June term of that court in 1935. These rules prescribe the form and contents of the notice of appeal, that it must be served on the other parties within five days after filing; that a praecipe for record must be filed with the clerk within 10 days after filing of the notice, and that the opposite party, if he desires, must file his praecipe for other parts of the record within five days; that the clerk shall prepare the record in chronological order, etc. The purpose of all these provisions is to expedite the business of the reviewing court and secure to litigants a speedy determination of their causes.

Plaintiff contends that a report of the master in chancery is a part of the record without being incorporated in a report of proceedings, and that a report of proceedings was here improper and unnecessary. Such was the law under the former practice, as stated in Ferris v. McClure, 40 Ill. 99, where the court said that the master’s report was as'much a part of the record as the bill, answer, replication or decree, and that no “Bill of Exceptions” was ever necessary or proper in a chancery case except to preserve oral evidence introduced upon the hearing under the statute allowing that to be done. In Central Illinois Public Service Co. v. City of Sullivan, 294 Ill. 101, the Supreme Court said that upon the hearing of a cause upon exceptions to the master’s report, the report of a master was a part of the record without any certificate of evidence; that upon such a hearing where the reference was to report conclusions of law and fact no evidence other than that taken by the master would be heard; that it was essential the record should show it contained all the evidence heard, but not that it should appear from the certificate of the chancellor nor from the certificate of the master.

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Bluebook (online)
4 N.E.2d 973, 287 Ill. App. 340, 1936 Ill. App. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strickland-v-washington-building-corp-illappct-1936.