Silvey v. Dowell

Decision Date31 January 1870
Citation53 Ill. 260,1870 WL 6189
PartiesJOSEPH SILVEYv.GEORGE DOWELL et al.
CourtIllinois Supreme Court

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

APPEAL from the Circuit Court of Mason county; the Hon. CHARLES TURNER, Judge, presiding.

Messrs. LACEY & WALLACE, for the appellant.

Mr. L. DEARBORN, for the appellees.

Mr. CHIEF JUSTICE BREESE delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill in chancery in the Mason circuit court, exhibited by Joseph Silvey against George Dowell, John Welch, J. W. Stevenson and David B. Phelps, the sheriff, to enjoin proceedings on a fi. fa. issued on a judgment obtained by Stevenson against Dowell and Silvey, and which Stevenson had assigned to Dowell.

It appears from the record, that Dowell and Silvey were securities on a note which John Welch had executed to William Claypool for two hundred and fifty dollars, the price of certain personal property Welch had bought of Claypool; that by agreement between Welch, Dowell and appellant, Silvey, Welch was to execute a chattel mortgage to Dowell and Silvey on the property purchased, and some other property, as security to them, which he did execute; that soon after its execution, Dowell took possession of the property, and assumed the payment of Welch's note to Claypool; that Dowell paid one-half the note, and then procured Stevenson to buy the note of Claypool for his, Dowell's, benefit, he, Dowell, furnishing the money for that purpose. Stevenson bought the note, paying full value therefor, and had it assigned to himself, and brought an action thereon against Dowell and appellant, in his own name, and recovered a judgment against them for one hundred and forty-seven dollars nineteen cents and costs. It is the execution issued on this judgment, and which was levied on appellant's personal property, that was sought to be enjoined.

Though the defendants, Dowell and Stevenson, in their answers to the bill, deny the facts above stated, yet they were abundantly proved by appellant, and by Stevenson himself, who was sworn and testified in the cause.

Had these facts been known to appellant, and presented as a defense to the action at law on the note, they could not have availed, for he was, doubtless, liable on the note to the holder by assignment. But when, as it now appears, his co-defendant and co-maker of the note, Dowell, was the party beneficially interested in the note, and who had been put in funds by Welch, the principal debtor, sufficient to pay it, and had assumed to pay it, the...

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3 cases
  • Crawford v. Richeson
    • United States
    • Illinois Supreme Court
    • 18 Enero 1882
  • Holden v. Herkimer
    • United States
    • Illinois Supreme Court
    • 31 Enero 1870
  • Boughner v. Hall
    • United States
    • West Virginia Supreme Court
    • 3 Mayo 1884
    ... ... of the parties to each other, and any extrinsic facts ... affecting the equities." ...          In ... Silvey v. Dowell, 53 Ill. 260, Dowell and Silvey ... became the sureties of Welch to Claypool in a note of two ... hundred and fifty dollars, given for ... ...

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