Trainor v. German-American Savings, Loan & Building Ass'n

68 N.E. 650, 204 Ill. 616
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 68 N.E. 650 (Trainor v. German-American Savings, Loan & Building Ass'n) 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
Trainor v. German-American Savings, Loan & Building Ass'n, 68 N.E. 650, 204 Ill. 616 (Ill. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from the judgment of the Appellate Court for the First District affirming a decree of foreclosure entered in the circuit court of Cook county on a bill in chancery filed by the appellee association against the appellant.

The appellee association was organized under the • act entitled “An act to enable associations of persons to become a body corporate to raise funds to be loaned only among the members of such association,” in force July 1, 1879. (1 Starr & Cur. Stat. 1896, p. 1045.) The appellant became a stockholder in the association and procured three loans from it; which were secured to be paid by mortgages or trust deeds on certain real estate, and he became liable to pay certain weekly installments as dues and certain monthly installments of interest upon this money so borrowed by him. He also became liable to have fines assessed against him in the event he should make default in such payments of dues or interest. The ascertainment of the amount which the association was entitled to be decreed to recover from the appellant involved an examination of the payments of weekly dues and monthly installments of interest so made by the appellant from September, 1890, to the date of the filing of the bill, in 1897, and also as to the payments of various fines assessed against him during the same period on account of alleged defaults in the payments of the dues or interest. There was, however, but little dispute as to payments made by the appellee prior to April 12, 1893, or after July 27,1895, but between those dates there was sharp conflict in the proof. The truth as to such payments was of material and vital importance to the rights of the parties. During this period from April, 1893, to July, 1895, one Joseph Schlenker was secretary of the association, and continued to serve in that capacity until some time in August, 1899.* He was a witness for the appellee company, but at the close of his testimony in chief became ill, mentally or physically, and his cross-examination was deferred for some weeks, during which time he went to California. On his return his testimony o was completed, and he soon after became bankrupt and was found to be in arrears with the appellee association in the sum of about $4000.

The association had adopted the plan of providing each member with a pass-book, to be presented by the member to the secretary of the association on making any payment of dues, interest or fines, for the purpose of having the secretary enter in such pass-book the fact of such payment and the date and amount thereof. The appellant subscribed for stock andsecured loans on September 24, 1890, January 5, 1891, and February 16, 1891, and on each of said dates received one of such passbooks. On April 12, 1893, the appellant and the proper officials of the association examined the state of their accounts, and the appellant surrendered his three passbooks and the association issued him a fourth pass-book, on which was transcribed the aggregate of the payments previously entered on the three pass-books. On July 27, 1895, the appellant seems to have surrendered this fourth pass-book and received the fifth pass-book, but the fifth pass-book' did not show any payments which had been previously made. The appellant produced the testimony of a number of different witnesses, and also testified himself, to the effect that during the period covered by the fourth pass-book, each tim.e when he made weekly payments of dues to the association he paid the sum of $33.50, and that each time when he paid monthly installments of interest to the association he paid $67, and that such payments were entered by the secretary of the association on this fourth pass-book. Said Joseph Schlenker was secretary of the association during all of the time in question, and in that capacity received all moneys paid by the members to the association.

Over the objection of the appellant the association was permitted to introduce the books kept by its secretary, for the purpose of showing payments of dues and interest by its members and the status of the accounts between the association and its members. These books contained entries of payments made by the appellant of only $12.50 per week as dues and only $58.34 per month as interest during all of the period covered by the fourth pass-book. Evidence was produced showing the first, second, third and fourth pass-books were in the possession of the association at the time of the institution of the suit; that these four pass-books were delivered by the association to one Louis Weber, an attorney at law and solicitor in chancery, whom it had employed to prepare the bill herein for foreclosure against the appellant. Mr. Weber prepared the bill and filed it on December 21, 1897, but early in the course of the litigation became insane and subsequently died, and was succeeded as solicitor for the association by W. J. Lavery. The appellant produced as a witness Mr. John N. Flamming, who testified that he was a clerk and stenographer in the office of Mr. Weber during the time that gentleman was preparing the original bill filed in the cause for a decree of foreclosure against the appellant, and that Mr. Weber then had in his possession four pass-books which had been issued by the appellee association to the appellant; that Mr. Weber told Schlenker, the secretary of the association, that the pass-books did not show the amount due from appellant to be the amount claimed by Schlenker to be due from him; that Schlenker insisted that the books of the association kept by him, as secretary, showed the correct amount to be due from the appellant, but that Weber told Schlenker the pass-books could not be made to show that amount; that the witness, at the dictation of Mr. Weber, prepared the bill for foreclosure in typewriting, leaving the amount claimed by the appellee association from the appellant blank; that Schlenker and Weber had a number of conferences about the matter, and that Schlenker finally told Mr. Weber to put “the figures" as he gave them in the bill for foreclosure, and that Mr. Weber said to him he would have to prove them to be correct on the trial, and directed the witness to insert in the bill the amount as claimed by the books kept by Schlenker, the secretary, and the witness wrote in the amount with a pen. Mr. Flamming made other statements as to the items of payments which appeared upon the pass-books which tended to support the contention of the appellant upon that point. Mrs. Weber, wife of the deceased solicitor, also gave testimony to the effect that she saw the pass-books in question in the possession of her husband while he was employed as solicitor for the association. The association did not produce the pass-books, though properly notified so to do, but presented proof to the effect it was not within its power to find or produce the books. The master ruled that the books kept by or under the direction of Schlenker, as secretary of the association, were admissible in evidence, and adjusted the accounts between the appellant and the association largely from the items appearing upon the books. Exceptions to such action on the part of the master were overruled, and the amount of the decree was determined upon consideration of the account as shown by the books. The true rule governing the introduction of the books of the association in evidence in support of the claim of the association against oné of its members must therefore be determined.

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Bluebook (online)
68 N.E. 650, 204 Ill. 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trainor-v-german-american-savings-loan-building-assn-ill-1903.