Bock v. Felker

23 N.E.2d 568, 302 Ill. App. 116, 1939 Ill. App. LEXIS 488
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 19, 1939
DocketGen. No. 9,385
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 23 N.E.2d 568 (Bock v. Felker) 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
Bock v. Felker, 23 N.E.2d 568, 302 Ill. App. 116, 1939 Ill. App. LEXIS 488 (Ill. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Dove

delivered the opinion of the court.

On June 11, 1937 Harry C. Bock, Lucille Bock and Reuben Bock filed their complaint in the circuit court of Ogle county alleging that the plaintiff Harry 0. Bock for six years prior to November 5, 1936 had been employed by the defendant H. W. Felker as a drug clerk and While so employed had performed his duties in a business-like way and accounted for all moneys received by him as such clerk; that on said November 5, 1936 he was wrongfully accused by defendant W. W. Hall of stealing and embezzling money from said defendant Felker and that as a result of cruel and abusive threats of criminal prosecution, his reason and judgment were destroyed and he procured a note of $2,850, which was secured by a real estate mortgage, which belonged to him and his wife, to be discounted receiving therefor $2,000, which amount, together with four notes aggregating $400, which he procured his brother Reuben Bock to execute, were given to said Felker, all without consideration and solely because of the threats made to and duress imposed upon the plaintiff Harry C. Bock. The complaint charged that Hall and Felker had entered into a conspiracy to cheat and defraud the plaintiffs out of said money and notes by threats of criminal prosecution and prayed for the return of the value of the $2,850 notes so secured by real estate mortgage and for the cancellation and return of the four notes aggregating $400. Service was not had on Hall and before hearing the suit was dismissed as to W. W. Hall.

The answer of the defendant Felker, among other things admitted that the plaintiff Harry C. Bock performed his duties as drug clerk in a careful and business-like manner but denied that he had accounted to the defendant for all money received by him, denied that he had made any threats of criminal prosecution or that he authorized Hall to make any such threats, denied that he and Hall had ever entered into any conspiracy or scheme to' defraud Bock, but averred that Bock had executed an instrument in writing admitting he had embezzled money from this defendant of not less than $2,700 aiid alleges that in settlement thereof Bock paid him $2,000 in cash and delivered to him the four notes signed by Harry and Reuben Bock aggregating $400. A jury was waived and the issues submitted to the chancellor, who entered a money decree in favor of the plaintiffs Harry C. and Lucille Bock for $2,850 and a money decree for $65 in favor of Harry C. Bock and directed the return by the defendant to Harry C. and Reuben Bock of the four notes aggregating $400. From this decree the defendant appeals.

The evidence discloses that appellant, H. W. Felker, owns and operates a drug* store in Mt. Morris, Illinois and has since March, 1930. Appellee, Harry C. Bock, was 35 years of age at the time of the hearing of this case, and began work for appellant as a clerk in his drug store at the time appellant became the owner thereof and was receiving for his services as clerk the sum of $25 per week. Lucille Bock is the wife of Harry O. Bock and testified that they had been married 14 years, that she had worked 9 or 10 of those years and at the time of the hearing owned a beauty shop in Dixon. Reuben Bock, the other appellee, is a brother of Harry Bock, 47 years of age, lives in Mt. Morris and is employed by the liable Company and has been for many years.

Harry Bock worked continuously for appellant as his clerk from March, 1930 until some time in 1934 when he went to Denver, Colorado to attend a pharmaceutical school. After completing a six months’ course there he returned to Mt. Morris and re-entered appellant’s employ and continued until April, 1936, when he quit and went to Morrison, where he worked until July, 1936, when he returned to Mt. Morris and again went to work for appellant in his drug store and continued working for him until about November 21, 1936. W. W. Hall, B. J. MacMurran and Katherine Turpney were a partnership doing business under the name of the Walton Service, Des Moines, Iowa. Its business, according to the testimony of Hall, was to send its representatives into a store, make purchases and a survey of the merchandise, observe the conduct of the clerks and check up to determine whether the store was functioning as it should and whether the clerks were honest or not. Mrs. O. R. Jamieson was one of the employees of the Walton Service and she and another employee in October, 1936 went to Mt. Morris and interested appellant in its service and entered into an oral contract with him by the provisions of which appellant was to pay $25 for the service rendered and in addition Hall and his associates were to receive one-half of any amount which was recovered from any defaulting employee. The latter part of October or the first week in November thereafter, Hall and three of his employees came to Mt. Morris and the three employees made purchases at the store. There was a cash register in the store into which all cash received from sales was to be placed and in connection with this register there was a strip of tape which recorded the amount of the sales. On November 4,1936, according to the testimony of appellant and Hall, Hall went to Mt. Morris, met appellant, checked with him some of these sale strips and appellant introduced him to Bock as an advertising man and at the request of Hall, Bock went with Hall to Hall’s room at the Kable hotel in Mt. Morris. According to Bock’s testimony, at one time this was on Tuesday, November 3, 1936, at another time he testified it was November 4, 1936. At the hotel, according to Bock’s testimony Hall told him that he and appellant had been checking up and found that Bock had taken $3,832 of appellant’s money while clerking in his store, told bim that he would be blacklisted all over the country and there was only one thing to do and that was to dig up some money for Felker or go to the pen. According to the testimony of Hall, he, Hall, showed Bock the sales strips from the cash register and stated to bim that he had not been ringing up the money on his sales and asked him if there was anything he wanted to tell him, Hall, about this and Bock replied: “Yes, I guess you caught me. ’ ’ Before they left the hotel Hall wrote on a typewriter, the instrument hereinafter set forth. Bock testified that Hall read it over to him but he was so frightened and nervous that he didn’t understand it, but signed it and handed it to Hall. Hall testified that after he prepared the instrument he handed it to Bock, who read it, signed it, handed it back to Hall and according to Hall they both went to the drug store and Hall showed appellant Bock’s confession, which is as follows: “November 4, 1936. I, Harry Bock, am an employee of Hugh Felker of Mt. Morris, Illinois. I have been in Mr. Felker’s employee for the past six years in the capacity of salesman. Before Mr. Felker purchased the drug store I worked for Mr. F. J. Dean in the same location. During the time I worked for Mr. Dean I first began making sales and not turning in all the money but appropriated money from the cash sales wrongfully. This habit continued when Mr. Felker bought the store. I have taken as much as three dollars and seventy cents in one day and as closely as I can estimate it I have averaged not less than a dollar and sixty cents a day. I can not tell or estimate how much money I have taken from Mr. Felker but to the best of my knowledge and belief the total amount of money I have wrongfully appropriated is not less than two thousand seven hundred dollars.

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Bluebook (online)
23 N.E.2d 568, 302 Ill. App. 116, 1939 Ill. App. LEXIS 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bock-v-felker-illappct-1939.