Clause Printing Press Co. v. Chicago Trust & Savings Bank

44 N.E. 256, 145 Ind. 682, 1896 Ind. LEXIS 116
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 26, 1896
DocketNo. 17,822
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 44 N.E. 256 (Clause Printing Press Co. v. Chicago Trust & Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clause Printing Press Co. v. Chicago Trust & Savings Bank, 44 N.E. 256, 145 Ind. 682, 1896 Ind. LEXIS 116 (Ind. 1896).

Opinion

Hackney, J.

— The appellee sued the appellants, the Clause Printing Press Company, John J. Clause, William L. Collins and William E. Thrasher, upon a note for $7,500.00, executed by said Clause, payable to his own order and by him endorsed to the appellee, and upon a note for $15,000.00, secured by a chattel mortgage of certain personal property, executed by Clause and delivered to the appellee as collateral security for the former note, said several obligations having been executed in Chicago, in the State of Illinois, and the property covered by said mortgage having been brought from said city to the city of Elkhart, in this State, after the execution of said several obligations. Various rulings were had upon demurrers to pleadings, and issues were formed upon an amended complaint, certain answers and cross-pleadings, and the court rendered a special finding of facts with conclusions of law in favor of the appellee, from which judgment followed for $7,350.00 against said Clause, and a foreclosure of said mortgage as to all. of the appellants.

The appellants, the Clause Printing Press Company, and Wilson L. Collins, only, present any question for [684]*684decision by this court. The special finding was as follows:

“1st. That on or about the 30th day of March, 1889, the plaintiff and defendant, John J. Clause, entered into an arrangement by which plaintiff was to furnish money to said defendant to carry on its business in the following manner: Said Clause was to make his note to the plaintiff in the sum of $1.5,000.00, secured by a chattel mortgage upon his stock and machinery, which was to be held by the plaintiff as collateral security for any advancements that might be made by the plaintiff, and for any indebtedness of said Clause that might thereafter accrue to the plaintiff. That for the purpose of obtaining such advancements, said Clause was to make his own notes from time to time to the bank and receive credit on the books of the bank for the amount of such notes, less two and one-half per cent, per month thereon, and said Clause was to check out the amount of such credit as needed, and was to pay his notes by deposits as his business would allow; that such collateral note and mortgage should be renewed from time to time so as to keep it at all times a good and valid security under the laws of Illinois.
“2d. That pursuant to such an arrangement the parties began and continued dealing from the 30th day of March, 1889, until the execution of the note for $7,500.00 sued upon in the complaint, as hereinafter set forth. And the said defendant, to obtain such advancement, executed his several notes to the plaintiff for the several amounts, and payable at the several dates as set forth in the fourth answer of the said defendant Clause filed herein. And the several amounts of interest as stated in said answer were each severally deducted and reserved from such advancements severally at the time that credit for each of said notes was given in the books of the bank.
[685]*685“3d. That payments were made from time to time by said Clause to the plaintiff pursuant to such arrangement by his deposits of money in the bank, which was applied in payment upon said notes and as each note was fully paid it was surrendered up to said Clause, if not fully paid it was renewed, but the evidence does not show what payments were so made, nor the amount or time of making any such payments, nor the notes so renewed or surrendered and given up, nor the dates of any such surrender, payments, or renewals, except as hereinafter set forth.
“1th. That on the 23d day of March, 1892, the said Clause executed to the defendant, William E. Trasher, his note for $7,500.00, and as the consideration therefor, the said Thrasher executed and delivered to said Clause his check on the bank for $7,350.00, $150.00 being reserved out of said $7,500.00 as- interest at the rate of two per centum per month in advance. That at the time of the execution of said note, said Clause executed to said Thrasher the note and mortgage for $15,000.00, a copy of which is filed with the complaint and marked ‘exhibit B.’ Such note and mortgage were at said time delivered to the defendant Trasher as collateral security for the said $7,500.00 note so given to him. Said Thrasher delivered the said $15,000.00 collateral note and mortgage to the plaintiff’s bank and retained possession of the principal note of $7,500.00 for five months, and collected and received from said Clause as interest thereon each month thereafter in advance $150.00, being at the rate of two per centum per month, and amounting in all to $900.00. Thrasher in said transaction acted for the plaintiff and as its agent.
“5th. That on the 28th day of August, 1892, the defendant Clause executed, endorsed and delivered to the plaintiff the note for $7,500.00, a copy of which is [686]*686filed with, the complaint marked ‘exhibit A.’ Such note was given in renewal of said $7,500.00 note so given to said Thrasher as aforesaid, and at the time of the execution of said note to the plaintiff it was the understanding between said Clause and itself, that said note and mortgage for $15,000.00 which Clause had executed to Thrasher as collateral security, should be thereafter held by the bank in the same manner; and said note of August 26, 1892, so executed to the plaintiff by said Clause, is past due and wholly unpaid, and amounts to $8,900.00, principal and interest to this date.
“6th. That said mortgage for $15,000.00 so executed by the said Clause to the said Thrasher as such collateral security at the time of its date, was fully executed, acknowledged, filed and recorded, according to the laws of Illinois, in the county of Cook, and State of Illinois, where all parties then resided, and the goods and property described in said mortgage were then owmed by and in the possession of said Clause in said Cook county, and said mortgage then became and was, and is yet a valid and subsisting lien on such goods and property. That all said transactions heretofore stated occurred in the county of Cook, and State of Illinois. And said John J. Clause, resided in the town of South Chicago in said county, at the time said mortgages were executed.
“7th. That about the 30th day of October, 1892, with the knowledge and consent of the plaintiff, the said Clause removed the said goods and property described in said mortgage to the city of Elkhart, Indiana, and it was the understanding between said Clause and the plaintiff, that if Clause should succeed in procuring the organization of a corporation to take and use said property, and should procure the assignment to the plaintiff of fifty-five per cent, of the stock [687]*687of such corporation, the plaintiff would release its said mortgage. That Clause procured the organization of such corporation and sold to' it the goods and property described in its mortgage, but did not cause to be assigned to the plaintiff any of its stock, and such goods and property are now in the possession of the defendant, the Clause Printing Press Company, at Elkhart, Indiana, which is the same organization or corporation so procured to be organized by said Clause, and said defendant company executed to the defendant Collins a mortgage on said property as alleged in the complaint, but it is subsequent and inferior to the plaintiff’s mortgage.
“8th.

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.E. 256, 145 Ind. 682, 1896 Ind. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clause-printing-press-co-v-chicago-trust-savings-bank-ind-1896.