Turney v. Wilton

36 Ill. 385
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 36 Ill. 385 (Turney v. Wilton) 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
Turney v. Wilton, 36 Ill. 385 (Ill. 1865).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Breese

delivered the opinion of the Court:

On the third day of October, 1835, Thomas Wilton made his promissory note for the sum of four hundred dollars, payable to the president, directors and company of the State Bank of Illinois, with interest, and to secure its payment, executed a mortgage on the premises in controversy.

On the twenty-second day of February, 1848, the bank filed a bill in chancery in the Clinton Circuit Court, to foreclose. he mortgage, against Thomas Wilton and wife. At the October term, 1848, Harry Wilton was made a party to the suit, and on the seventeenth of October, 1848, he entered his appearance. On the sixteenth day of May, 1849, a decree of foreclosure was rendered in favor of the bank, for the sum of six hundred and eleven dollars and sixteen cents, and the premises were ordered to be sold for its payment. On the nineteenth day of June, 1850, the premises were exposed to sale by the master in-chancery, and were bid off in the name of the bank. The sale was reported to the court and approved, on the sixteenth of October, 1850. The master conveyed the premises to the bank by deed, dated October 14, 1850. The appellant derives his title through certain trustees of the bank, appointed under the act of first of March, 1847. The appellee claims title under Harry Wilton, who derived his title from Thomas Wilton.

The case turns upon the validity of this decree of foreclosure' and the subsequent proceedings under it, the appellee insisting that they are void, for the reason that the charter of the bank expired on the first day of November, 1848, and its trustees had no authority to prosecute a suit or do any other act, in the name of the bank, after that time. He insists that a decree, pronounced in favor of a corporation, after the expiration of its charter, must be regarded as a nullity.

It is agreed by the parties, that the State Bank was incorporated in 1835, and in 1843 an act of the General Assembly was passed to put this bank in liquidation. In 1845, 1847 and 1849, other acts were passed having reference to the State Bank, all of which are made part of this agreement. On the 31st of October, 1848, the president, directors and company made a deed of assignment to trustees of all the lands, effects, choses in action, etc., belonging to the bank.

It is agreed that the board of directors of the State Bank, on March 3rd, 1847, accepted the provisions of the act of the legislature passed in that year. Trustees were appointed by the governor on the 31st of October, 1848, and on the 26th of November, 1862, they executed a bond for a deed to appellant, and afterwards, on the 28th of November, 1862, they executed to him a deed for the land in controversy.

To determine the point made by the appellee, it is necessary to examine closely the several acts of the legislature to which reference has been made.

The first act is the act of January 24, 1843, and is entitled “ An act to diminish the State debt, and put the State Bank into liquidation.” (Sess. Laws 1843, p. 21). That act required the bank to go into immediate liquidation under the direction of its officers, and it was inhibited thereafter to discount notes, lending money, buying or selling bills of exchange, issuing paper for circulation, receiving deposits, or doing other acts usual for banks, excepting to close its affairs, to collect and secure debts due to, and to pay debts due from, the bank; to sell its real and personal estate, issue certificates for balances, as is provided in. the act; to renew the notes of its debtors from time to time, upon the payment of installments of one-fifth of the debt at each renewal; and to sue and be sued in relation to all its dealings ; for which purposes, and none others whatever, the charter of the bank was continued in force for the term of four year’s from March 4, 1848, and no longer. The State, in pursuance of the provisions of the act, transferred to the bank two million and fifty thousand dollars of its stock, and received therefor an equal amount of State indebtedness.

Thereafter, the State held fifty thousand dollars of the stock, and withdrew all the State directors except the bank commissioner, who was, ex officio, a director.

By the act of March 1, 1847, (Sess. Laws 1847, p. 20), the president, directors and company were allowed the use of the charter until the first day of November, 1848, to enable them to close its affairs, but subject to the restrictions contained in the act of January 24, 1843, and acts supplementary thereto.

If the affairs of the bank were not closed before the first day of November, 1848, then the governor was required to appoint three trustees, whose duty it should be to take charge of all assets of the bank, and close its affairs, they being governed in so doing, by the provisions of an act entitled “ An act supplemental to an act to reduce the public debt one million of dollars, and to put the Bank of Illinois into liquidation,” approved February 28, 1845, so far as the said provisions were applicable.

It is evident, from these acts, that the officers of the bank had no power to use its corporate name for any purpose after the first day of November, 1848, and it must be conceded, that the acts of 24th January, 1843, and March 1, 1847, repealed the charter of the bank, and that its corporate existence ceased for all purposes on the first of November, 1848, except such purposes for which its existence was continued under the last mentioned act.

The question then arises, were the trustees appointed under the act of March 1,1847, authorized by it to prosecute suits in the corporate name of the bank ?

They were authorized to take charge of its assets, and to close its affairs, and their powers and authority for that purpose were the same as those conferred upon the trustees appointed to take charge of the assets and close the affairs of the Bank of Illinois, under the act of February 28, 1845. We must, therefore, ascertain the nature and extent of the authority of the trustees appointed to close the affairs of the Bank of Illinois, in order to determine the extent of the authority of the trustees who were appointed to close the affairs of the State Bank.

To ascertain the precise nature of the powers conferred upon the trustees appointed to close the affairs of the Bank of Illinois, a reference to the legislation had in regard to it is necessary. The act of 25th February, 1843, entitled “ An act to put the Bank of Illinois into liquidation,” (Laws of 1843, p. 27), repealed the act incorporating that bank, and all acts supplementary thereto, and vested its real and personal estate in three commissioners, who were to close its affairs. This act was, by its terms, to take effect from and after the 3rd March, 1843.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Ill. 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turney-v-wilton-ill-1865.