Worcester National Bank v. Cheeney

87 Ill. 602
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 87 Ill. 602 (Worcester National Bank v. Cheeney) 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
Worcester National Bank v. Cheeney, 87 Ill. 602 (Ill. 1877).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is a controversy between Prentiss D. Cheeney and The Worcester National Bank, of Worcester, Mass., in regard to a large steam flouring mill at Kane, Greene county. Cheeney’s claim rests upon a sheriff’s deed, made pursuant to sale on a special execution issued on a judgment in attachment in his favor, and against one George W. Howe. The claim of the bank rests, primarily, upon a trust deed in the nature of a mortgage, executed by Donald Carmichael to Marcus M. Johnson, to secure the payment of promissory notes for $15,000.

The purpose of Cheeney’s original and supplemental bills was to have the claim of the bank declared fraudulent, as against his rights, and the several conveyances under which it makes claim, removed, as a cloud upon his title—and to this purport was the decree of the court below.

The proceedings in the attachment suit under which Cheeney claims were not commenced until February 4, 1871, and the bank claims that the trust deed of Carmichael to Johnson was filed in the proper office, for record, on the 31st of January, 1871, so that it necessarily has priority.

The evidence does not sustain this position. Carmichael did present the trust deed to the recorder, and the recorder indorsed it as “filed for record,” but Carmichael immediately, and before any entry whatever was made in regard to the instrument, withdrew it for the alleged purpose of having the necessary government stamps placed upon it, and it was not returned for more than a month afterwards. This was not sufficient to give constructive notice of the existence of the instrument, within the intent of the Registry law. It was either a trick, or an act of gross negligence on the part of Carmichael, and it could not affect the public. The clerk ought not to have permitted the withdrawal of the mortgage, with his file-mark upon it—but this affords no reason why the public should be affected by it. The bank, at that time, was not the owner of the instrument, and there is no pretense for saying that it or any one else interested in the mortgage did all the law required to be done to have it become a matter of record.

An instrument, to become constructive notice, must, in good faith, be filed for record, and left with the proper officer for that purpose. His file-mark is not, in and of itself, constructive notice, but evidence only that the proper steps have been taken to give constructive notice, which may be shown to have been indorsed through fraud or mistake.

Objection is taken to the sufficiency of the affidavit on which the writ of attachment in favor of Cheeney, against Howe, was issued—and it is also objected that no certificate of the levy of the attachment upon the property in controversy was filed, as required by statute. The latter only of these objections we deem it worth while to consider.

Although the evidence on this point is somewhat conflicting, we regard the preponderance as in favor of the bank.

The attorney who prepared the affidavit, etc., and caused the writ to be issued, shows that he was very careful, in consequence of the large amount in controversy, to have everything done required by the statute to perfect the lien, and he says he prepared the certificate of levy. He does not, however, pretend that he saw it filed, or that he saw it after it was filed, and admits that his knowledge does not extend that far. After commencing the proceedings, he removed from the State, and the declaration was filed and judgment obtained by another attorney. That attorney thinks that he once saw a certificate of levy among the papers, but is not positive. He says: “ My remembrance of certificate of levy is indistinct; I examined the case papers; I saw the affidavit was there right; the attachment was there, and I went and procured the certificate of publication; I have no special remembrance of having seen a certificate of levy, but there is an impression upon my mind that I saw it.”

Cheeney, in testifying, speaks with some positiveness of having seen the certificate of the levy, but, from his further examination, it is quite evident that he was very liable to have been, and doubtless was, misled by another paper.

Opposed to this evidence is, first, the fact there is neither any certificate of levy on file, nor any record or memorandum anywhere tending to show that such a paper was ever in existence ; and those in charge of the circuit clerk’s office, at the time it should have been made, and since, have no recollection of such a paper. The attachment papers were indorsed filed by a deputy clerk, who has, ever since, been in the office, and neither he nor the clerk has any recollection that a certificate of levy was filed, nor have they any recollection of ever having seen one. They give it as their opinion that no such paper ever was filed. And, secondly, the writ of attachment was levied by a deputy sheriff, and, if a certificate of levy was filed, it must have been by him. He has no recollection that he ever filed a certificate of levy, and says that he was not instructed by the attorney having in charge the attachment proceedings that it was his duty to do so.

He speaks with some positiveness, and says that he does not believe that he ever filed a certificate of levy, and he is corroborated in his recollection by his indorsement of his charges for costs on the writ of attachment, made at the time of making the levy, in which there is no item for filing a certificate of levy.

The witnesses are all gentlemen of undoubted integrity, and the attorneys who represented Cheeney are of deservedly high standing in their profession. There is no reason for attributing improper motives to any one. The evidence of the attorneys is deficient simply in the fact that it does not show with certainty that the certificate of levy was actually filed. The existence of a record can not be proved by merely balancing probabilities. If in existence, it proves itself—if not in existence, the presumption- is, it never existed, and those who affirm its prior existence must show clearly and satisfactorily that fact—not merely its probability.

The evidence failing to satisfactorily prove that a certificate of the levy of the attachment was filed, the attachment created no lien as against bona fide creditors and purchasers without notice.

But the point is made, that the bank is not a bona fide purchaser. The facts are these: A firm, composed of George W. Howe, Marcus M. Johnson and Charles H. Schnell, was engaged in business at Kane, Ill., under the firm name of “ M. M. Johnson & Co.,” and at Worcester, Mass., under the firm name of “The St. Louis Flour Company.” It is, also, probable that Donald Carmichael was a secret member of this firm, at the time the transactions in controversy occurred, but we do not regard this of any special importance. The business of the firm was, the manufacture and sale of flour, feed, etc. The manufacturing was done at the mill at Kane, and the sales were, chiefly, effected by the house at Worcester. George W. Howe was, in reality, the principal, if not the sole, owner of the firm property and business—certainly, Johnson and Schnell had but a purely nominal interest therein.

Howe, on behalf and in the name of the St.

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Bluebook (online)
87 Ill. 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worcester-national-bank-v-cheeney-ill-1877.