Wolcott v. Lake View Building & Loan Ass'n

59 Ill. App. 415, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 174
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 5, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 59 Ill. App. 415 (Wolcott v. Lake View Building & Loan Ass'n) 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
Wolcott v. Lake View Building & Loan Ass'n, 59 Ill. App. 415, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 174 (Ill. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Waterman

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The abstract filed by appellant in this cause opens as follows-:

“ Appellant’s Abstract of Record.

Placita.

Pleas before the Honorable O. H. Horton. Original bill of complaint filed the 16th day of March, A. D. 1891. Bill filed for the purpose, as is supposed, of foreclosing three pretended mortgages.

Exhibit A, pretended bonds; Exhibit C —; Exhibit E, pretended bond; Exhibit B, a pretended mortgage.”

Turning to appellant’s brief we find the following:

“ Statement.

The appellant is now the widow of Luther M. Wolcott. The original bill filed in this cause, is a bill supposed to have been filed for the purpose of obtaining a decree of foreclosure of three pretended mortgages of real estate, pretended to have been executed by appellant and Luther M. Wolcott, and if said bill contains any prayer for relief whatever, it prays for a decree against appellant and Luther M. Wolcott, jointly. The appellant answered the bill, and thereafter filed her amended answer, in which answer and amendment thereto she specifically and- at large denied each and every material averment of complainant’s bill of complaint. Having fully answered the bill, the complainant thereafter filed her cross-bill of complaint against said complainaint (appellee), and made her said answer and amendment thereto a part of her said cross-bill of complaint; appellant in her cross-bill avers that she is the wife of said Luther M. Wolcott, and that he, the said Luther M. Wolcott, was at the time of the filing of said cross-bill, and had been for a long time prior thereto, a member of the board of directors of said Lake View Building and Loan Association (complainant in said original bill). * * *

Complainant alleges that she is the owner of certain shares of stock in said association, and charges reckless and gross mismanagement of its affairs, and that when she obtained said shares of stock, said shares were either valuable or worthless.

Alleges that said defendant association has as accretions to its business derived certain profits, in which complainant alleges she is justly and equitably entitled to share; that said profits amount to a very large sum, the amount thereof being unknown to her; prays for an accounting, and that said several items of rent, damages, profits, and her share of the assets of said association and the value thereof be allowed and decreed to her, and prays for a discovery as to the actual financial condition of said defendant association, and offers to do equity and to pay into court or under its direction whatever sum of money may be found due and unpaid from her on said accounting, and prays for an injunction. Also prays that the value of her said shares of stock may be ascertained on said accounting, and that she may be decreed to ratably share with the other stockholders on said accounting, and be credited with her ratable share and just proportion of all the earnings, including all the profits, premiums, interest, fines and penalties, and assets belonging to said association.

The defendant .association (appellee) filed a demurrer to said cross-bill which said demurrer was sustained by the Circuit Court. * * *

I call your honor’s attention to these pretended payments and beg to submit that in view of the total failure to connect or attempt even to connect the appellant in any way with the pretended payments of monejq and the failure to prove the execution by her of either the. pretended application for a loan or the pretended power of attorney (addressed e to whom it may concern ’), or the pretended bonds, that this whole transaction, in the light of the testimony, looks like a scheme on the part of appellee to obtain from appellant, without consideration, security for .money divided among its officers, one of whom was the husband of appellant, and the person who drove appellant from her said homestead and surrendered the possession of the premises in question to the appellee.”

'Thus warned that there is so much pretense in the case we turn to the record and find that the bill filed by appellee, a building association, was for the foreclosure of three mortgages made to secure the payment of three bonds, all of said instruments being alleged to have been made by appellant and Luther E. Wolcott, her husband.

A copy of one of the mortgages and copies of three of the bonds are attached as exhibits to the bill.

We also find in the record three mortgages, each purporting to be executed by appellant and Luther A. Wolcott, her husband, being to secure, respectively, the sums of $2,700, $200 and $400, recited severally in said mortgages as due and owing by said appellant and said Luther M. Wolcott, secured to be paid by bonds, respectively, by them made to said building association. Each of said mortgages appears to be duly acknowledged by appellant and Luther M. Wolcott before a notary public of Goolc county, Illinois. We find also three bonds corresponding to those described in the several mortgages, each purporting to be signed and sealed by appellant and Luther M. Wolcott. Each of the bonds and mortgages contains recitals showing the pledging by appellant of certain shares of stock in the said building association as security for the loan for which the bonds and mortgages are respectively executed. The mortgages are each of the same property; upon this it appears that appellant procured three loans from appellee. The record as to the making of the loans, the disbursement of the money, payment made by appellant on account of said loans, proceeding of the association, fines for non-payment on account of stock, etc., is voluminous, covering nearly 400 pages. The objections made by the solicitor for appellant during the taking of testimony were very many, and the cross-examination of complainant’s witnesses most extended.

After reading the statements in appellant’s abstract and brief concerning the “ pretended ” bonds, mortgages, and pretended disbursements thereon, we naturally expected to find some testimony of appellant concerning the same, or at least of the charges of fraud and conspiracy so freely made by appellant in her answer and cross-bill; but nothing tending to show that any of the bonds or mortgages introduced by appellee were fraudulent, or that the disbursements claimed thereunder to have been made were not made, or that in any of the transactions proven by appellee there was aught of fraud or conspiracy, was offered by appellant.

A demurrer to the cross-bill of complainant having been sustained, the cause was referred to a master to take testimony and report the same with his conclusions. The master specifically reported that October 26, 1887, appellant borrowed from the said building association, first, the sum of $2,700, securing the same by her bond and mortgage; that afterward she borrowed from the association the sum of $200, securing the same by her bond and mortgage dated July 26, 1888. That May 9, 1889, she borrowed from the association $400, securing the same by her bond and mortgage of that date.

The master found a specified amount due and that all the material allegations in the bill were true; also that the equities of the case were with the complainant.

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59 Ill. App. 415, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolcott-v-lake-view-building-loan-assn-illappct-1895.