Arnold v. Hart

75 Ill. App. 165, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 728
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 24, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 75 Ill. App. 165 (Arnold v. Hart) 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
Arnold v. Hart, 75 Ill. App. 165, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 728 (Ill. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Windes

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Appellee sued appellants, A. J. Howe and Gustav A. Bodenschatz, as copartners, doing business as Arnold Bros., Baker & Co., the declaration being the common counts. Service was had only upon appellants, who pleaded non-assumpsit and non-joint liability, and verified both pleas. A trial before the Circuit Court and a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment against appellants for $1,164.48, from which this appeal is taken. It is claimed by appellants, first, that there was error in the rulings of the trial court in admitting and rejecting evidence; second, that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the verdict; third, that the court erred in giving and refusing instructions; fourth, that the verdict is contrary to the instructions.

The evidence shows that appellants and said Howe and Bodenschatz entered into a contract of partnership December 23, 1892, to do a general banking, exchange, insurance and mortgage business under the firm name of Haymarket Produce Bank, commencing May 1,1893, and expiring April 30, 1903; that they conducted business as bankers under this contract to November 5, 1895, when articles of dissolution were entered into, under date of October 25, 1895, between the partners, whereby a bond of §300,000 was furnished by said Howe and Bodenschatz to appellants, for their protection against the liabilities of said partnership, and the partnership was dissolved, Howe and Bodenschatz agreeing to notify the creditors of the old firm of its dissolution, to pay all its liabilities, and not .to use the name of Arnold Bros., Baker & Co. in continuing the business, and appellants agreeing not to engage in the same business carried on by the old firm within five years in Chicago, and thereby sold all their interest in the property, outstanding accounts and choses in action of the old firm to Howe and Bodenschatz.

After this dissolution Howe and Bodenschatz continued the banking business at the same place, under the name of Haymarket Produce Bank until in August, 1896, when they suspended business, and the bank went into the hands of an assignee.

January 8, 1895, appellee made a deposit of §225 in the savings department of the bank, and a deposit or bank book was given to him, on the outside cover of which was printed in large letters, “Haymarket Produce Bank, Arnold Bros., ° Baker & Co., Bankers,” and on the inside first page was printed in large letters the word “ Conditions,” underneath which was also in much smaller type the following : “ on which we receive deposits, and which are by the acceptance of this book, agreed to by the depositor.” Further down on the same page, as one among many other of the conditions, appears the following:"

“On making the first deposit, the depositor shall subscribe his or her name in the signature book kept for that purpose. Such book contains a copy of the conditions under which we receive deposits, and any person signing such book will be deemed to have assented thereto and to all the provisions thereof.”

Also a further condition, that the bank would pay interest at four per cent per annum semi-annually, in January and July of each year, on sums of $5 or upward, which had been deposited for one month or more previous to the interest day. On the second page, which is a continuation of said conditions, also appears the following :

“ We may allow moneys to be withdrawn or paid on account of savings deposits at any time during business hours. But because it is necessary to loan out our funds to enable us to pay interest, and as time to get in the same may sometimes be desirable, we therefore reserve the right, and make it a condition on all savings deposits, to demand and have sixty days’ previous notice, in writing, as a condition of payment on all sums exceeding one hundred dollars, and thirty days’ notice, on smaller sums whenever, in our opinion, the same may be deemed advisable; and all savings deposits shall be made and received subject to these conditions.”

On the fourth and fifth pages of the same book, it is headed in large letters, “ Dr., Arnold Bros., Baker & Co., in account with Charles Hart, Cr.;” lower down on page four is the word “ Receipts,” and on page five the word “ Payments.” Following these words on the respective pages, and the succeeding pages of the book, are entered deposits made by Hart with the bank, and payments by the bank to Hart, with the dates of each respectively, commencing January 8, 1895, the last deposit being August 1, 1896, and the last payment being May l,v1896, the deposits being twenty-four in number, and the payments twenty-eight. The aggregate of the receipts and interest, less payment, is $1,164.48, the amount of appellant’s judgment.

Each time appellee made a deposit or received money from the bank, he went personally and did the business with either Bodenschatz, who was receiving and paying teller, or with Peter Boyesen, who sometimes assisted at this work. Bodenschatz or Boyesen made all the entries in Hart’s bank book. When each payment was made, Hart signed, at a desk near where he received it, a receipt for the money, the receipts prior to the dissolution being on a printed form which, when filled, is as follows:

“ Haymarket Produce Bark.
Arnold Bros., Baker & Co.
Book Ho. 359. Savings Department.
Chicago, October 23, 1895.
Received of Arnold Bros., Baker & Co., the sum of ten dollars ($10).
Charles Hart.”

Which is stamped in red ink, (not quite legible in the original, which has been examined by the court), viz: “ Haymarket Produce Bank, Arnold Bros., Baker & Co. Paid, October 23, 1895, Chicago Ills.”

After the dissolution the receipts were on a similar printed form of about the same size, color and general appearance of the other form, which, when filled, is:

“ Haymarket Produce Bank.
Howe & Bodenschatz. Book Ho. 359.
Savings Department.
Chicago, Hovember 11, 1895.
Received of Howe & Bodenschatz, the sum of ten dollars.
$10. Charles Hart.”

On which is stamped in red ink (quite legibly in the original, which has been examined by the court), viz.: “ Hay-market Produce Bank. Howe & Bodenschatz. Paid, Hov. 11, 1895, Chicago, Ills.”

Hart testifies that he never read any of the receipts; would see that the amount he received each time was correctly stated in the receipt and sign it, and never noticed the names of Howe & Bodenschatz. On both forms the words “Haymarket Produce Bank” are the most prominent, but the words “ Arnold Bros., Baker & Co.” and “ Howe & Bodenschatz ” are also quite prominent, and in the same kind and size of type. Hart, who is a fireman, passed the bank on the street once or twice a month, and lived six or seven blocks from it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 Ill. App. 165, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnold-v-hart-illappct-1898.