Barber v. General Automotive Corp.

240 Ill. App. 85, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 221
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 10, 1926
DocketGen. No. 30,843
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 240 Ill. App. 85 (Barber v. General Automotive Corp.) 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
Barber v. General Automotive Corp., 240 Ill. App. 85, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 221 (Ill. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Thomson

delivered the opinion of the court.

By this appeal the plaintiff seeks to reverse a judgment of the municipal court of Chicago, finding the issues for the defendant aad that the plaintiff take nothing by his suit and for costs to be paid by the plaintiff to the defendant. "When the case was originally reached for trial the defendant did not appear and the plaintiff presented his evidence before a jury and the jury found the issues in his favor, and fixed his damages at the sum of $6,881.80, and judgment in his favor was entered for that amount. Within 30 days the defendant appeared and submitted a motion to vacate the judgment and the court opened up the judgment and gave the defendant leave to appear and defend, the judgment to stand as security. That judgment was vacated when the judgment appealed from was entered. After the original judgment had been opened, the demand for a jury trial, which had been submitted, was withdrawn and the issues between the parties were submitted to the trial court without a jury.

The plaintiff brought this action on the third of a series of three notes held by him. All of these notes were dated February 5, 1924. The note involved in the case at bar was due February 1, 1925, and was drawn to the order of “Harvey S. and Chas. A. Pardee,” and indorsed by those two payees in blank. The other two notes, in this series of three, are the ones involved in cases Glen. Nos. 30,279 and 30,413, in which we are this day filing opinions.

In the case at bar the plaintiff was called to the witness stand by the defendant under section 33 of the Municipal Court Act [Cahill’s St. ch. 37, TT421], and he testified that he received the notes sued upon from the Pardees, on August 28, 1924, as collateral to an indebtedness of approximately $12,000 which they owed him for money he had advanced in payment of premiums they owed on certain life insurance policies, this indebtedness of the Pardees, being covered by their promissory notes which the plaintiff also held. He further testified that after he received the note sued upon, as collateral to the notes of the Pardees, the latter notes were returned to the Pardees in connection with their conveyance to him, by warranty deed, of certain property they owned in Highland Park, and that when he received this deed from them, and returned their notes to them, he also undertook to pay them a certain amount in cash. The defendant also called as a witness one Kingsley, an officer of the defendant corporation, and he testified to having a conversation with the plaintiff on August 23, or 24, 1924, referring primarily to the first of the three notes we have mentioned, which the plaintiff also held and which was due on August 1, 1924, explaining to Barber that the defendant was in very bad financial condition “owing to the fact that the company had been mishandled and serious mistakes had been made and a lot of money had been drawn out by the Pardees * * *. I told him the Pardees owed the company a large sum of money which they had taken out, overdrawn.” This witness then gave the substance of that conversation with the plaintiff, which was to the effect that with the money the Pardees had improperly withdrawn from the defendant company they had purchased their Highland Park property; that later the Pardees had put a mortgage of $25,000 on their property, the proceeds of which they had placed to the credit of the defendant company, and that the defendant had agreed to pay the mortgage notes given in connection with that loan, as they fell due, and in connection with that transaction the defendant company had given the Pardees these promissory notes sued upon by the plaintiff in cases Gren. Nos. 30,279, 30,413 and the case at bar, it being agreed by the Pardees that they would not negotiate those notes, but that contrary to their agreement they had negotiated them by indorsing them in blank and turning them over to the plaintiff as collateral security for notes of the Pardees, given to the plaintiff in connection with an indebtedness on their part to him, as a result of his paying certain of their life insurance premiums. Kingsley further testified that the plaintiff asked him about the condition of the Highland Park property and that he told him there were certain mortgages against it; that the property stood in the name of the Pardees, and that some of the company’s principal stockholders thought that the Pardees should turn the property over to the company, inasmuch as they had bought it with money they had taken out of the company’s treasury and had, in fact, practically wrecked the company in so doing, and had been obliged to borrow $25,000 on a second mortgage on the property and turn the proceeds of it over to the company to keep it from failing. He further testified that the plaintiff asked him whether the company intended paying the note he then held, being the first of the series and the one sued upon in case Hen. No. 30,279, and he told him they did, but that they did not intend paying the remainder of them; and that he further told the plaintiff that the company intended to- pay the money due on the mortgage to the mortgage company that had made the loan, so as to preserve the property for the company; that he told the plaintiff that the Pardees were indebted to the defendant company to the extent of over $100,000, for withdrawals they had made from the defendant company’s treasury, charging such withdrawals to themselves as overdrafts. Certain evidence which was sought to be presented by this witness was ruled out on objection of the plaintiff, whereupon counsel for the defendant made an offer to show that at a meeting of the board of directors of the defendant company a resolution was adopted authorizing the execution of the notes from the defendant company to the Pardees, the latter being present at that meeting and stating that they desired these notes, covering the amount of the money they had received on their Highland Park property, so that they would be sure that the company would pay these second mortgage notes as they became due; and that they further stated that they would hold the notes to be given them by the defendant company and not negotiate nor dispose of them; and that as the second mortgage notes were taken up by the company, they (the Pardees) would return the notes to be placed in their hands by the defendant corporation. In our opinion that evidence was competent and should have been admitted.

Counsel for the plaintiff argues in his brief that the foregoing testimony of the witness Kingsley “is so ridiculous that it deserves no credence whatsoever,” and in this connection he asks why, under the circumstances given by this witness, “should the company issue any notes at all * * *. The fact that the company issued unconditional promises gives the lie to Mr. Kingsley in this regard.” The testimony of this witness does not seem as unreasonable to us as counsel regards it. If the Pardees had improperly withdrawn upwards of $100,000 from the defendant company and with that money purchased the Highland Park property, and if this withdrawal put the defendant company in a precarious financial condition, so that it was about to fail, it would be quite natural for its officers to turn to the Pardees for assistance and inasmuch as the latter were in no position to turn back any of the money they had withdrawn, it would be expected that the officers of the company would insist that they borrow money, and put up their Highland Park property as security — in other words, put a second mortgage on that property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
240 Ill. App. 85, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barber-v-general-automotive-corp-illappct-1926.