33 N.E.2d 607 | Ill. | 1941
Lead Opinion
On leave to appeal granted, this cause is here to review the judgment of the Appellate Court for the First District. *341
The petitioner, Abe Michelson, filed an intervening petition in the liquidation proceedings of the West Side Trust and Savings Bank, the respondent, seeking a preferred claim of $45,000. The cause was referred to a master in chancery, who heard the evidence which was, in substance, that the petitioner was illiterate and could not write the English language except to sign his name; that he did his banking business with the respondent bank which had purchased and was holding for him securities of the face value of $62,000. On February 19, 1932, after some of these securities had defaulted, he had a conversation with the respondent's president and cashier at which time the bank agreed to purchase the securities from him and buy United States Liberty bonds with the proceeds to the extent of $45,000. A cashier's check for that amount was presented to him and immediately endorsed and returned to the cashier. Michelson was assured by the president and cashier that the money was in safe-keeping and would be used to buy bonds. He inquired several times about the purchase of the bonds but the cashier kept "stalling him off" at the request of the president because they wanted to keep the money in the assets of the bank, which was in a precarious condition. On April 1, 1932, at which time petitioner was ill at his home, his brother, at the request of the bank president, had him sign a check for the purchase of the bonds. The bank did not buy them but merely redeposited the check the next day. Several conversations concerning the purchase of the bonds were had between the petitioner and the president, he being assured that they would be purchased when the price was right. The bank closed on March 4, 1933, and never reopened. The master's report recommended a decree allowing a preferred claim.
Thereafter, the receiver, the Trust Company of Chicago and Edward Berkson, as successor trustees, who had been allowed a lien on the deposit made with the Auditor of Public Accounts, filed objections to the master's report. *342 These objections were overruled except in certain particulars not here material and a decree was entered allowing the claim of the petitioner pro rata with other preferred claims, but held that he was not entitled to the benefit of the deposit under the Trust Companies act but only to a preference limited to cash on hand and due from banks. The Appellate Court held that the claim should be preferred as to all of the assets of the bank and that the claimant was a trust creditor entitled to recourse against the deposit with the Auditor of Public Accounts.
The receiver, Charles H. Albers, and the Trust Company of Chicago filed separate petitions for leave to appeal which have been consolidated, and Edward Berkson, successor trustee, has filed his motion to adopt the petition of the receiver.
There are three questions to be decided: (1) Was the claim properly given preference, (2) was it limited in preference to cash assets, and (3) was it such a claim as might participate in the security provided by the funds deposited under the Trust Companies act with the Auditor of Public Accounts?
As to the first point, this court held in People v. FarmersState Bank,
As to the Trust Companies act it is argued that the transaction between the claimant and the bank created an express trust which entitled Michelson to a priority over the general creditors of the bank and that he is entitled *344
to share pro rata with claims allowed, by virtue of that enactment. If we were to agree with this argument it would require us to ignore the obvious purpose of the Trust Companies act. Such a holding would prevent a uniform application of the act to all corporations doing a trust business. Under such a construction the creditors of a trust company engaged only in doing a trust business would acquire better protection than creditors of a corporation doing a trust business and a banking business. In People v. Cairo-Alexander Bank,
In People v. Chicago Bank of Commerce,
The words used in section 1 of the act, "Trustee by deed, and executor, guardian or trustee by will," cannot be overlooked. The language does not permit a different kind of trusteeship than therein described. It was intended by the legislature that the trusteeships to be covered by the statute were those in which appointments were made either by deed or its equivalent, or made by the court and accepted voluntarily, in each instance, by the banks and trust companies, and does not extend to any other kind of trusteeship, which, by operation of law, might grow out of the acts and doings of the banks and their officers.
One other holding of the Appellate Court requires consideration. It was found by that court that the claim of *346 Michelson should be allowed general preference as to all assets, and in this we think the court erred. On this question there has been much discussion and as to it there have been many decisions. On this point the latest holding of this court is People v.Peoples State Bank of Maywood, supra. Since the decision of that case the rule therein announced has been uniformly applied in the liquidation of banks throughout this State and it has many times been followed and cited by the various Appellate Courts. No useful purpose could be served by any lengthy quotation from that case in this one. It is sufficient to say that we now adhere to what we then held.
The judgment of the Appellate Court is reversed and the decree of the superior court is affirmed.
Appellate Court reversed. Superior court affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
I agree with the result reached in this opinion but not with all that is said therein.
Mr. JUSTICE FARTHING, dissenting.