C. E. Healey & Son v. Stewardson National Bank

1 N.E.2d 858, 285 Ill. App. 290, 1936 Ill. App. LEXIS 532
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 17, 1936
DocketGen. No. 8,965
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 N.E.2d 858 (C. E. Healey & Son v. Stewardson National Bank) 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
C. E. Healey & Son v. Stewardson National Bank, 1 N.E.2d 858, 285 Ill. App. 290, 1936 Ill. App. LEXIS 532 (Ill. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Fulton

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action at law brought by appellee against appellant bank to recover on an alleged guaranty by the appellant for the payment of a portion of a check given by one Floyd Whitacre to the appellee. By agreement of parties jury was waived and cause tried by the circuit court of Shelby county.

The complaint, as amended, charges in substance, that the appellant, the Stewardson National Bank, was duly incorporated under the laws of the United States and engaged in the banking business in the Village of Stewardson, Illinois; that on November 30,1933, Floyd Whitacre made his personal check for the sum of $1,274.21, payable to the order of appellee, which check was drawn on the appellant bank; that thereupon, on November 29, 1933, in consideration that appellee, at the request of the appellant, would accept the said check, the appellant, by telegram, at the request of the DuQuoin State Bank, of DuQuoin, Illinois, guaranteed the payment of the said check up to the amount of $700 and promised to pay appellee the same, if the said Floyd Whitacre should not pay the said check; that the appellee relied upon the undertaking of the appellant and accepted the check from the said Floyd Whit-acre ; that the said Floyd Whitacre has not paid said check or any part of the same; that appellee after-wards presented the said check to the appellant hank for payment but payment was refused.

Attached to the complaint under the caption of “copy of instruments sued on” appears the following:

Floyd Whitacre Cream, Poultry and Eggs

N. P. No. 14621 70-371

Stewardson, Ill., Nov. 30,1933.

Pay to the

Order of C. E. Healey & Son $1247.21

Twelve Hundred Seventy-four 21/100 Dollars

Floyd Whitacre By: Ben Brown.

To the Stewardson National Bank 70-968 Stewardson, Ill.

Western Union

November 29, 1933

To DuQuoin State Bank

Street and No...........

Place DuQuoin, Illinois.

We guarantee Floyd Whitacre check up to Seven Hundred Dollars to Healey at their request.

Stewardson National Bank Stewardson, Illinois.

The answer of the appellant was in substance a general denial of all the material facts alleged in the complaint and while other matters are set up in the answer, the main ground of defense urged by appellant was that the act or contract of guaranty set forth in the complaint was ultra vires and beyond the charter powers of a national hank such as the appellant corporation.

There was no serious controversy over the facts and from the stipulation and testimony it appears that the appellee is a partnership consisting of 0. E. Healey and Flora B. Healey and that they were engaged in the wholesale and retail poultry and egg business. M. A. Palmer was manager of a plant operated by them at DuQuoin, Illinois. Floyd Whitacre resided at Stewardson, Illinois, and was engaged in the wholesale poultry and eggs and general merchandise business. He was, and had been for some time prior thereto, a customer of the appellant bank. Ben Brown was a poultry buyer in the employ of Whitacre. On November 29, 1933, Palmer, acting for appellee, called Whit-acre on the telephone and asked him what he would give for a load of poultry. Whitacre offered 16 cents per pound for hens, which would make a carload of such poultry worth about $700. Palmer told Whitacre he could have the poultry on the following day, provided Whitacre would have his bank send to the bank at DuQuoin a guaranty of the payment of a check for the load of poultry. Palmer further testified that he told Whitacre to be sure and have his bank wire the bank at DuQuoin that such check would be paid and that he told Whitacre that there would be a carload of poultry to which Whitacre replied “all right.” After banking hours, on November 29, 1933, appellant wired the DuQuoin State Bank that they would guarantee Floyd Whitacre’s check up to $700, payable to appellee. On the following* day a quantity of poultry was weighed up, loaded on trucks and delivered to Ben Brown, acting for Whitacre, and at the same time he made, executed and delivered to Palmer a check for $1,247.21, the copy of which was attached to the complaint. The weight, the kind of poultry and the amount delivered to Brown for Whitacre were all determined after the telegram in question was communicated to appellee. The check given appellee was deposited with the DuQuoin State Bank and sent through its regular correspondence until it reached the appellant bank. At the time it reached the appellant bank, Whitacre had absconded and had not sufficient funds in the appellant bank with which to pay the check. The check was marked by appellant “Returned Unpaid. N. S. F.” and returned to the DuQuoin State Bank. Later the check was presented to the appellant bank by agents of the appellee for payment which was again refused. There was no claim that appellant received any consideration for the alleged contract of guaranty.

The court found the issues in favor of the appellee and entered judgment for the sum of $756.80 against the appellant, the amount being the $700 mentioned in the telegram, plus interest.

It is the contention of the appellant bank that it guaranteed an obligation of Floyd Whitacre, in the event he, Whitacre, did not pay the obligation, which constituted a contract of guaranty and was therefore ultra vires and void. The appellee, in answer to the position assumed by the appellant, urges that the appellant bank would not be permitted to set up its unauthorized act as a defense to a suit, brought by a party who had no actual knowledge of the scope of the powers of the appellant bank and also that the appellant was estopped because of the doctrine that one cannot profit by his own wrong and where one of two parties must suffer the one who gave the power to do the wrong must bear the burden of the consequences. In support of these principles they rely chiefly upon the case of People’s Bank v. Manufacturers Nat. Bank, 101 U. S. 181, and Farmers & Merchants Nat. Bank v. Illinois Nat. Bank, 146 Ill. 136. In the former case a national bank in transferring promissory notes guaranteed the payment thereof through its duly authorized agents which was one of the powers given under the National Banking Act, reading as follows: “To exercise by its Board of Directors, or duly authorized agents, all such incidental powers as shall be necessary to carry on the business of banking, by discounting and negotiating promissory notes, drafts, bills of exchange and other evidences of debt, by receiving deposits,” etc. To transfer negotiable instruments by indorsement and guaranty is a common mode of transacting banking business and therefore there was nothing ultra vires of the act of the bank in that case.

The other case seems to be authority for the position taken by the appellee in this case. The facts are strikingly similar to the evidence in this case and the court held that it was not ultra vires for the defendant bank to promise to honor a draft upon which suit was subsequently instituted.

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Bluebook (online)
1 N.E.2d 858, 285 Ill. App. 290, 1936 Ill. App. LEXIS 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-e-healey-son-v-stewardson-national-bank-illappct-1936.