Chisholm v. First National Bank

190 Ill. App. 354, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 147
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 16, 1914
StatusPublished

This text of 190 Ill. App. 354 (Chisholm v. First 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
Chisholm v. First National Bank, 190 Ill. App. 354, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 147 (Ill. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action of assumpsit brought by John Y. Chisholm, trustee in bankruptcy of the Clark Grain & Elevator Company, against the First National Bank of Leroy to recover the amount of an alleged unlawful preference under the provisions of the Bankruptcy Act. The declaration contains several counts alleging in various ways that while the Clark Grain & Elevator Company, hereinafter called the Grain Company, was insolvent and within four months prior to its being adjudicated a bankrupt, the defendant received from it a transfer of property or the payment of money to the amount of $10,000, which it applied on the indebtedness of said Grain Company, and that at the time of the transfer or the payment of the money defendant had reasonable cause to believe that it would thereby obtain a preference over other creditors of the same class contrary to the Bankruptcy Act. A trial before a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment thereon in favor of the plaintiff, which on an appeal to this court was reversed and the cause remanded. Chisholm v. First Nat. Bank of Leroy, 176 Ill. App. 382. At the second trial a jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $10,718.50, on which judgment was rendered and the defendant again appeals.

The Grain Company, a corporation organized under the laws of Illinois, had been engaged, prior to November, 1910, in buying and selling grain at Argenta. On November 1, 1910, it sold its elevator at Argenta and purchased one at Leroy for $12,500, paying $6,000 in cash' and giving a mortgage on the property for $6,500. It also leased another elevator at Leroy and one at Empire. It began the operation of these elevators on November 4, 1910, and on that day made a deposit of $1,000 with the appellant in a general check and deposit account, known as the Leroy account. On November 21st it borrowed $1,000 from the appellant, giving its note therefor, and opened a second check and deposit account called the Empire account. The accounts of the Grain Company at the appellant Bank were overdrawn much of the time. The Leroy account was continuously overdrawn from January 17th to February 9th. On February 1, 1911, the Grain Company borrowed $5,000 from appellant for which it gave its note payable on demand. The Grain Company continued in business until March 22nd, and was declared an involuntary bankrupt May 15, 1911. The Empire account was continuously overdrawn from February 23rd to March 20th, when the overdraft in that account amounted to $1,438.59.

The Leroy account was continuously overdrawn from February 14th, the overdraft then being $5,746.68. On March 18th the overdraft was $4,027.51. It varied from February 14th to March 20th from $3,500 to $6,769.87. On March 20th the Grain Company sold its elevator and a crib of corn to Simeon Crumbaugh, from whom it had bought the elevator, and received two checks, one for $6,368, the other for $2,337, which were turned over to the defendant in payment of the $5,000 note and accumulated interest, $40, and the balance, $3,657.50, was deposited in part payment of the overdrafts in the Leroy and Empire accounts. The appellant also received two drafts amounting to $980 with waybills attached on March 20th. These drafts were applied in reduction of the overdraft. On March 21st other money was deposited by the Grain Company reducing the overdraft to $300.25.

The questions involved in the case are: (1). Was the Grain Company insolvent? (2) Did the defendant have reasonable cause to believe the Grain Company was insolvent? And (3) did defendant receive money from the Grain Company not in the regular course of business in payment of its debts while the defendant had reasonable cause to believe the Grain Company was insolvent within four months prior to the adjudication in bankruptcy?

It is stated in the argument for defendant: “As a matter of fact it (the Grain Company) was insolvent at the time it opened its account with appellant, but its condition was not known to appellant until after March 20th, 1911.” The proof clearly shows that when the Grain Company began business at Leroy the only assets it had were the equity in the elevator and $1,385. The company at that time owed Thayer & Company a note for $5,000, with interest from July, 1910, and had corn contracted at Argenta on which it lost between $2,000. and $3,000 by a decline in the price of corn. The evidence tends to show that this loss occurred by a shrinkage in the price of corn after the business was begun in Leroy. After buying the elevator the Grain Company expended $1,171 in improvements on it.

On November 28, 1910, Clark borrowed $1,063.97 on some life insurance policies on his own life which was deposited to the credit of the Grain Company with appellant. On November .30, 1910, the Grain Company borrowed $2,500 from B. A. Boyd, a grain commission man of Indianapolis, which it deposited with appellant to its credit. The leased elevator in Leroy, containing corn and oats belonging to the Grain Company of the value of over $6,000, burned February 13, 1911, with only $500 insurance on the contents, the draft for which was received by the defendant. The net loss resulting from the fire was over $5,000. The cashier of appellant was present at the fire and was then told of the amount of the insurance. The owner of the leased elevator that burned, causing such a large loss to the Grain Company, was George Dooley, the vice-president of the defendant. The Grain Company sustained heavy losses on corn sold in December, 1910, and January, 1911. Clark, the president of the Grain Company, on December 28, 1910, used $3,025 of the Company’s money in paying a debt of the H. C. Clark Grain Company, a different party from the Clark Grain & Elevator Company, in Oklahoma, for which the Grain Company was in no way responsible, and this was a total loss, as the party for whom it was paid was not financially responsible.

Shortly before the sale of the Elevator to Crumbaugh, the Grain Company at the demand of the defendant that the Grain Company’s indebtedness should be reduced, borrowed another sum of $2,000 from Boyd which was paid to the Bank on its overdraft. For several days before the elevator was sold, the Bank president and Taylor, its cashier, urged that it be given security and that its indebtedness and overdraft be paid. Cassley, the secretary and bookkeeper of the Grain Company, testified that the appellant was so anxious to have its overdraft paid that shortly before the sale of the elevator the cashier of the Bank said the account was worrying him and that he would give Cassley $100 to get the account transferred to some other bank, and that Cassley said he would do all he could to transfer the account and that he did talk with Clark about it. The Grain Company offered the Bank a second mortgage on the elevator, stock in the Grain Company and insurance policies on the life of Clark, but the Bank insisted the elevator and the com in a certain crib be sold and the proceeds applied on the indebtedness. The Bank began and conducted the negotiations, which lasted several days, for the sale of the elevator and corn to Crumbaugh. The evidence shows that the sale was forced through by the appellant, and that appellant urged Crumbaugh to offer $12,000 for the elevator, that a few months before he had sold for $12,500, and on which $1,171 had since been expended by the Grain Company in improvements.

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176 Ill. App. 382 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1912)

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Bluebook (online)
190 Ill. App. 354, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chisholm-v-first-national-bank-illappct-1914.