City of Chicago v. Dollarhide

255 Ill. App. 350, 1930 Ill. App. LEXIS 164
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 2, 1930
DocketGen. No. 33,533
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 255 Ill. App. 350 (City of Chicago v. Dollarhide) 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
City of Chicago v. Dollarhide, 255 Ill. App. 350, 1930 Ill. App. LEXIS 164 (Ill. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Holdom

delivered the opinion of the court.

On a trial before the court without a jury defendant was found- guilty of carrying on a general brokerage business without a city license and fined the sum of $25, upon which finding a judgment was entered after the court had overruled defendant’s motion in arrest of the judgment, and defendant brings the cause here by appeal.

In the inception of the trial, Mr. Leon Hornstein, representing the city, made the following statement:

“It is stipulated and agreed that the defendant is a resident of, and is and during 1928 and prior thereto was engaged in business in Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, where he occupies offices which bear a sign erected by him in public view reading ‘DoIIarhide Lumber Company’; that he has not applied for or taken out a license under the ordinance of Chicago relating to General Brokers; that in his business he and help employed by him take orders in Chicago for lumber to be delivered by non-resident lumber mills to consignees in Chicago; that he carries no stock of lumber, handles no lumber, represents no lumber mill, jobber or dealer in Illinois, takes no orders for lumber located, stored or owned by any person or concern in Illinois; that he sends the orders he receives to one of twelve wholesale lumber mills located outside the State of Illinois, and the lumber so ordered is shipped direct to the purchasers by the mills, jobbers or dealers, who send their bills to, and receive remittances direct from, the purchasers; that all orders (unless the defendant is authorized in a particular case to sell at a fixed price) are taken subject to rejection by the non-resident principal; that defendant received a'commission on all orders accepted and filled, which is paid by the non-resident mills; that defendant journeys about the city and vicinity soliciting orders for lumber, which orders are taken in the name of the non-resident mills.”

It was also agreed by counsel for the city and defendant that the introduction of the foregoing stipulation in evidence should not preclude either party from introducing additional evidence “not contrary to the facts stipulated. ’ ’ The ordinances involved in this proceeding are as follows:

“City of Chicago Municipal Code of 1922, Section 373, ‘It shall be unlawful for any person, copartnership, association, firm or corporation to engage in the business of or to act in the capacity of a general broker, as hereafter defined, without first having obtained a license so to do as herein provided. ’

“Section 374, ‘Any person, copartnership, association, firm or corporation, other than an employee of the principal or principals for whom the business is done, that negotiates, buys, sells, trades, leases or handles for another on a commission basis, or on the basis of compensation in proportion to the amount of the transaction, any stocks, bonds, mortgages, loans, investment securities, certificates of indebtedness, bills of exchange, letters of credit, steamship transportation tickets, grain, provisions, produce and live stock, goods, wares, and merchandise, or other commodity, property or article (except real property) whether similar or dissimilar to those herein mentioned, or acts through the medium of another licensed broker in the same capacity, or for any of the purposes aforesaid, shall be and is hereby defined as a general broker. ’ ’ ’

On behalf of the city, Hugh Ryan, a city license investigator, and one John H. Wilson, assistant superintendent of the department of licenses of the city, were examined as witnesses, and testified to conversations with the defendant. Nothing was extracted from these witnesses de hors the stipulation except that Ryan testified that the witness Wilson said to the defendant “according to the city ordinance you are a broker,” and defendant answered “yes.” Defendant, however, denies making such statement, the effect of which we will hereafter refer to. Counsel for the city introduced sections 373 and 374, theretofore read in evidence by counsel, and thereupon rested the case of the city.

Defendant was examined as a witness and inter alia denied that he stated to Wilson or Ryan that he took orders from everybody or anybody that came along; and testified that none of the mills he represented had lumber in Illinois; that he did not sell any lumber supplied, furnished, manufactured or produced in Illinois; that he had no employees except a stenographer, and further testified that he did not say to Mr. Wilson or Mr. Ryan in March 1928 that he represented competing lines of lumber, and further testified that in case an order was rejected or the firm was unable to'fill it, the order was canceled; that he did not tell Mr. Wilson or Mr. Ryan that he was a broker; that he never represented or held himself out as, or stated to anybody that he was a broker; that he did not represent or presume, or try to represent any person or persons other than the 12 mills, hereinabove specified, nonresidents of the State of Illinois; that he never sold lumber for the Edward Hines Lumber Company, the North Side Lumber Company, the Pilsen Lumber Company, or the Bishop Lumber Company; that he knew all these people, but he never sold or handled any lumber for them directly or indirectly but he sold lumber to them; that he never placed orders through any broker, and never received commissions froip any broker for lumber sales; that he remembers a conversation with Mr. Wilson in the presence of Mr. Dolan in the City Hall; that he told Wilson he was a sales representative of these 12 mills; that Wilson tried to convince him that he was a broker but defendant did not admit he was a broker to Wilson.

Every material question here involved is decided in Linehan v. City of Chicago, 227 Ill. App. 255, in which the Supreme Court denied an application for a writ of certiorari, making the opinion of this court final. Since that decision section 374 of the Municipal Code, above set out, has been amended, evidently in an effort to avoid the effect of the Linehan decision, supra. The contention that defendant admitted that he was a broker is not involved in the Linehan case. Neither is the question here involved as to defendant being engaged as the representative of the 12 nonresident lumber mills in interstate commerce.

First, as to the contention that defendant admitted that he was a broker. The record shows that he denied that he made any such statement to Mr. Wilson in the presence of the witness Ryan. Not only does defendant deny that he made any such statement, but the evidence of Wilson sustains defendant in such denial. True it is that if defendant had made any such statement, that would not amount to proof that he was a broker. Whether or not he was a broker is a question of law. Furthermore, the statement of Ryan in this regard is overcome by defendant’s denial that he made such statement, which denial is sustained by Wilson, to whom Ryan said defendant made the statement. Therefore, in any view of the case, such statement has no. probative value.

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Bluebook (online)
255 Ill. App. 350, 1930 Ill. App. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-chicago-v-dollarhide-illappct-1930.