Am. Nat. Bk. & T. Co. v. Scenic Stage Lines
This text of 276 N.E.2d 420 (Am. Nat. Bk. & T. Co. v. Scenic Stage Lines) 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.
Opinion
AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK & TRUST COMPANY OF CHICAGO, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
SCENIC STAGE LINES OF SAVANNA, INC., a/k/a SCENIC STAGE LINES OF IOWA, INC. et al., Defendants-Appellants.
Illinois Appellate Court Second District.
Smith, Smith & Smith, of Savanna, Stewart R. Winstein, and Dorothy O'Dean, both of Rock Island, for appellant.
Baker and McKenzie, of Chicago, and Nack, Richardson and Nack, of Galena, for appellee.
Judgment affirmed.
Mr. JUSTICE VAN DEUSEN delivered the opinion of the court:
On May 12, 1970, defendants-appellants Scenic Stage Lines of Savanna, Inc. and Roger J. Crow executed and delivered to Hausman Bus Sales, Inc. their confession note for $80,000.00 made payable in one installment on June 26, 1970, to secure the purchase of certain used buses. The note *447 bore the following printed words on the reverse side thereof, with the exception of the signature of "Eugene Tarkoff, Sec-Treas.", which was handwritten:
ENDORSEMENT Pay To the Order of American National Bank and Trust Company of Chicago ___________________________________ (Endorser) ___________________________________ (Endorser) ___________________________________ (Seller) By /s/ Eugene Tarkoff Sec-Treas. (Title)The note was placed in judgment on July 24, 1970, by appellee-plaintiff American National Bank & Trust Company of Chicago who alleged in their complaint ownership of said note.
On August 7, 1970, defendants filed their motion to vacate alleging that the face of the complaint and the note disclosed that Hausman Bus Sales, Inc. did not endorse said note and that plaintiff was not the legal holder at the time judgment was taken. They further alleged that defendants had a meritorious defense and supported their allegations by the affidavits of Lawrence A. Smith, Jr., their attorney, and by the defendant, Roger J. Crow, President of Scenic Stage Lines of Savanna, Inc. The alleged defense was a claimed breach of an agreement to make certain repairs and to guarantee the working condition of the buses and to deliver and keep said buses in operating condition. The affidavit of Roger Crow also asserts that plaintiff Bank had at all times known of said claims. Plaintiff filed the counter-affidavit of Eugene Tarkoff, Secretary-Treasurer of Hausman Bus Sales, Inc., stating, among other matters, that the note in question had, on May 13, 1970, been assigned, endorsed and delivered to plaintiff and that on June 28, 1970, Hausman Bus Sales, Inc. had received a letter dated June 27, 1970, from Scenic Stage Lines of Savanna, Inc. indicating the presence of certain problems with reference to functioning of the buses.
*448 The trial judge found that defendants' affidavits and motion did not disclose a prima facie defense and denied the motion to vacate, and confirmed the judgment.
On appeal the defendants claim that the trial judge abused his discretion in refusing to open the judgment by confession in that (1) defendants had shown by their affidavits a meritorious defense to plaintiff's demand, (2) in the alternative, the defendants had a counterclaim against plaintiff's demands, and (3) that plaintiff was not the legal holder of the note in question in that the purported endorsement was legally insufficient.
1 In its reply brief plaintiff also claimed that the note in question was not a negotiable instrument because it allegedly authorized confession of judgment before maturity. This point was not raised at the trial court level or in appellant's initial brief; it has, therefore, been waived. Crane Construction Co. v. Symons Co., 25 Ill.2d 521, 527. Sup. Ct. Rule 341(e)(7).
Defendants' contention that the trial judge should have permitted the filing of a counterclaim and stayed proceedings until disposition thereof under the provision of Supreme Court Rule 276 is without merit. Defendants' motion to vacate and supporting affidavits at best may disclose a counterclaim against Hausman Bus Sales, Inc. but in no way would constitute a basis of a counterclaim against the plaintiff Bank. Nor did the defendants ever make any such motion for leave to file a counterclaim and stay proceedings on the judgment at the trial court level.
The defendants' assertion that the plaintiff Bank is not the legal holder of the note in question is based solely on the fact that the alleged endorsement on the back of the note is signed only by "Eugene Tarkoff, Sec-Treas." without any reference to the legal entity which he purportedly represents. They do not otherwise deny the plaintiff is the owner of the note, nor do they deny the validity of the signatures on the note or the authority of Tarkoff to act for Hausman Bus Sales, Inc., or that value was paid, nor do they claim fraud. Defendants do assert and contend defenses against Hausman Bus Sales, Inc., the payee on the note, and that the plaintiff had notice of these defenses at all times.
Ordinarily, therefore, under Section 3-307(2) of the Uniform Commercial Code, where the signatures are admitted, production of the instrument entitles a holder to recover on it unless defendant establishes a defense. According to the commentator's notes, this subsection goes further than Sec. 59 of the NIL, which it replaces. Under Sec. 59 of the NIL the Illinois courts had long held that it is the established doctrine of this state that, in the absence of proof to the contrary, the endorsee is presumed to have taken it (the note) in due course before maturity for *449 value and in good faith, and he who questions the fairness of the transaction must, to defeat recovery, show that it was obtained by fraud and circumvention. Wells Manufacturing and Merchant's Life Association 1920, 213 Ill. App. 549, 551.
The initial question here, however, is whether or not a note made payable to a corporation by its corporate name can be legally endorsed by the signature of an individual followed by a description of his position but without reference in the endorsement itself to the entity for which he purports to act. The Illinois Uniform Commercial Code does not deal directly with this issue. Article 3 of the Code dealing with liability of parties does provide in Sec. 3-403 Signature by Authorized Representative that where the instrument names the person represented and the representative signs in a representative capacity, the representative is not liable. In the Code comment on this section (chap. 26, Smith Hurd Illinois Annotated Statutes, p. 224) the commentator points out that the unambiguous way to make the representation clear is to sign "Peter Pringle by Arthur Adams, Agent" but that any other definite indication is sufficient as where the instrument reads "Peter Pringle promises to pay" and it is signed "Arthur Adams, Agent." There is a strong inference to be drawn from section 3-403 that where the note names the corporation as payee that an endorsement signed by its agent in his own name, followed by a description of his position, is a sufficient indication that the individual signer is acting as agent for the named payee and that such an endorsement is legally sufficient.
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276 N.E.2d 420, 2 Ill. App. 3d 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/am-nat-bk-t-co-v-scenic-stage-lines-illappct-1971.