Bone Gap Banking Co. v. Porter

203 Ill. App. 15, 1916 Ill. App. LEXIS 1028
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 13, 1916
StatusPublished

This text of 203 Ill. App. 15 (Bone Gap Banking Co. v. Porter) 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
Bone Gap Banking Co. v. Porter, 203 Ill. App. 15, 1916 Ill. App. LEXIS 1028 (Ill. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Bone Gap Banking Company recovered a judgment in the Circuit Court of Edwards county, Illinois, against George W. Porter, Flossie A. Porter, C. A. McClure, W. A. Morgan and H. J. Strawn, in the sum of $1,000, from which judgment a joint and several appeal was prayed by said defendants, but which appeal was perfected by H.' J. Strawn alone.

The declaration consists of the common counts and one special count. The special count charges that said above-named defendants executed and delivered to the Bone Gap Banking Company their promissory note in the sum of $1,000, dated March 3,1911, due six months after date, which said note was alleged to have been assigned for value to appellee by said payee and that the same had not been paid. To said declaration a plea of the general issue and several special pleas were filed.

The first special plea is sworn to and puts in issue the assignment of the said note, to appellee by said Bone Gap Bank; the second alleges that said note was given without consideration and that it passed into the possession of appellee, if at all, long after maturity; the third alleges that said note was given without consideration and as accommodation paper only, and also alleges, in substance, that said note passed into the possession of appellee without consideration and not in the regular course of business. The fifth special plea alleges, in effect, that the note in question was held-by the payee, the Bone Gap Bank, up to June 6, 1911, when it became insolvent; that at no time prior to its insolvency or since was said note negotiated by said Bone Gap Bank to appellee or to any one else. Beplications were filed to said special pleas and issue joined, a trial was had resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of appellee as above set forth.

The Bone Gap Bank, a copartnership composed of sixteen members, ceased doing business on June 6, 1911. It had been a financial failure and from time to time certain of its stockholders rendered it financial assistance by executing accommodation notes to be by it negotiated to raise funds to be used in its banking business. On the next day after the Bone Gap Bank ceased doing business, appellee, as the Bone Gap Banking Company, opened a bank in the same room and has since been operating a bank at said place.

On March 3, 1911, the note in question was executed by the above-named defendants and was delivered to E. A. Morgan, the then cashier of the Bone Gap Bank. Morgan, who was also a stockholder in said bank, resigned as its cashier- on May 8, 1911, and one B. L. Mayne then became its cashier and so remained until it ceased doing business, on June 6, 1911. Mayne became the cashier, of appellee bank when it opened on June 7, 1911.

About June 2, 1911, certain of the directors and stockholders of said Bone Gap Bank, nine in number, realizing its failing condition, entered into a contract with one J. A. Turner for the closing up of said business. The substance of said contract is as follows:

“1st. That the said Bone Gap Bank shall turn over and deliver to said J. A. Turner all of its assets of every description, notes, bills and choses in action for the purpose of having the same collected and realized on as speedily as possible; that Turner was to have as compensation therefor, five per cent, of the amount collected or received by him.

“2nd. That as fast as said assets were collected the same should be used in paying the liabilities of said Bone Gap Bank.

“3rd. It was further provided that said business shall be closed up as speedily as practical and for said purpose of closing said business said Bone Gap Bank should retain its legal existence and when deemed expedient by Gould, Marriott and McClure, who were named as a committee for said purpose, the said Bone Gap Bank should institute suit for the collection of its notes, bills and claims. It was further provided that Turner might settle any of said notes, bills or claims by or without the consent of said committee.”

This contract was signed by Gould, Harms, Drury, Porter, McClure, Marriott, Rude, Gould and Morgan.

The evidence further discloses that E. A. Morgan, while acting as cashier of said Bone Gap Bank, indorsed the note in question in blank but made no attempt to negotiate it either to appellee or to any one else, and that said note remained with said Bone Gap Bank until after it ceased to do business, and passed into the possession of said Turner. In May, 1912, Turner attempted to make a loan from appellee on behalf of said Bone Gap Bank, but appellee refused to make said loan. Thereafter during said month of May, 1912, Ansel Gould, Charles Marriott, Jacob Harms, J. T. Drury and H. E. Rude, certain of the directors and stockholders of the Bone Gap Bank, borrowed $2,000 of appellee. This loan was negotiated by Turner for said parties, and in doing so Turner delivered to appellee, as collateral to said loan, the note in question. Thereafter, in December, 1912, these same parties borrowed of appellee $1,000, and the note in question was again delivered by Turner as collateral to said note. Appellee sought to collect the note in question from said defendants, and on their failure to pay the same this suit was instituted resulting in a judgment as above set forth.

The principal grounds relied on by- appellant for a reversal of this case are that the court erred in refusing to peremptorily instruct the jury to find the issues for appellant and the other of the defendants sued; second, that the court erred in its rulings on the giving and refusing of instructions; third, that the verdict of the jury is against the manifest weight of the evidence. The judgment in this case will have to be reversed by reason of the erroneous rulings of the trial court in the giving and refusing of instructions.

The fourth instruction given on behalf of appellee is as follows:

“The court instructs the jury that as a matter of law that the fact that the note in question in this case was indorsed by the Bone Gap Bank by one of its agents, and afterwards delivered by another agent of the bank would not make void such delivery; but such a delivery would be legal.”

This instruction is erroneous for the reason.that it assumes that Turner, who was appointed by nine of the sixteen stockholders of the Bone Gap Bank after its dissolution to collect its assets, etc., was an agent of the bank for the delivery of said note. This was a disputed and litigated question in the case, and it was error for the court to assume Turner’s agency for said purpose, and also to instruct the jury that the delivery of the note would be legal.

The fifth instruction is as follows:

“The jury are instructed that a note indorsed in blank specifies no indorsee, and a note so indorsed may be negotiated by mere delivery from one person to another ; and if you believe from the evidence in this case that the note in question was indorsed in blank by the payee, then the title to said note passed to the plaintiff by the delivery of the note without further indorsement. ’ ’

This instruction was erroneous for the reason that it assumes that the title to the note in question passed to appellee by delivery without reference to who delivered it or by what authority it was delivered.

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Related

Bank of Montreal v. Page
98 Ill. 109 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1880)
Naef v. Potter
80 N.E. 1084 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1907)

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Bluebook (online)
203 Ill. App. 15, 1916 Ill. App. LEXIS 1028, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bone-gap-banking-co-v-porter-illappct-1916.