Continental & Commercial Trust & Savings Bank v. Lantry Contracting Co.

189 Ill. App. 296, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 320
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 13, 1914
DocketGen. No. 19,818
StatusPublished

This text of 189 Ill. App. 296 (Continental & Commercial Trust & Savings Bank v. Lantry Contracting Co.) 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
Continental & Commercial Trust & Savings Bank v. Lantry Contracting Co., 189 Ill. App. 296, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 320 (Ill. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by plaintiff, the trustee in bankruptcy of the Contractors Supply and Equipment Company, called herein the Supply Company, from a judgment of nil capiat in an action brought against The Lantry Contracting Company, called herein the Contracting Company, on the following instrument:

“The Lantry Contracting Co.
Paola, Kansas, Aug. 29th, 1908.
C. A. Morse, Chief Engineer,
Topeka, Kansas.
Dear Sir:—
Please pay to The Contractors Supply & Equipment Company, Thirty-eight Hundred Seventeen 69/100 Dollars, same being in full of all claims against The Lantry Contracting Company, and charge to our account.
It is understood that the garnishment suit brought by said Contractors Supply & Equipment Company is to be dismissed at cost of said Company.
The Lantry Contracting Company,
By T. T. Kelly,
Secretary & Treasurer.”

The defendant corporation in 1907 and the first two months of 1908 was engaged in constructing a tunnel through the Baton Mountains and received machinery and supplies for such work at Lynn, New Mexico. Of this corporation Charles I. Lantry was president up to January 1, 1908. The Lantry Construction Company, another corporation, in September, 1907, and afterwards, carried on business as a contractor at Duluth, Minn., and of this corporation Lantry was an officer. In August, 1907, and afterwards, Lantry, under the name of Lantry Ballast Company, had a contract to do certain work for the Tidewater Construction Company in Virginia. The two corporations and Lantry as an individual, trading under the name of the Lantry Ballast Company, ordered machinery and supplies from the Supply Company and that Company charged all the articles furnished on such order to the defendant, the Contracting Company. The Supply Company sent the following statement or voucher to the Tidewater Company about September 14, 1907:

“To Contractors Supply & Equipment Co.
Old Colony Bldg.
Please receipt and return promptly to
Assistant Treasurer
Tidewater Construction Company, Norfolk, Va.
Address Chicago, Ill.
Tidewater Construction Co.
Norfolk, Virginia, Sept. 18, 1907.
P-5933.
9/14 For 2-150 HP Tubular Boiler complete with fittings, pipe connections and stacks..........'...............$2,200.00
1-175 H.P.-Buckeye Automatic Engine with all fittings................ 1,500.00
1-Cross compound two stage Lane & Bodly Air Compressor, complete with Fittings and Air receiver........... 1,500.00
l-#7½ Symons Gyratory Car....... 2,600.00
l-#5 Symons Gyratory Car......... 1,500.00
I.A.B. $9,300.00
The above is a correct statement of account as audited.
F. C. Uhlman John J. Correll,
Assistant Treasurer.
Received Chicago 9/21 1907 of Tidewater Construction Company Ninety-three Hundred... .Dollars
In full for the above account.
Sign here
Contractors Supply & Equip. Co.
................Witness By Geo. L. Smith, Secretary.”

and received from that Company $9,300 September 21st as stated in the receipt above set forth. The first articles shipped by the Supply Company to the Lantry Construction Company at Duluth were shipped and charged September 21, 1907, and all the articles ■ shipped to Duluth were paid for by the Lantry Construction Company. Prior to September 14th the Supply Company had made but one shipment to the Tidewater Company, and this was charged August 24th and amounted to $649.50; there had been no communication between the two corporations and it is clear the $9,300 paid by the Tidewater Company to the Supply Company was paid under some arrangement or agreement between the Tidewater Company and Lantry.

"We "think that from the evidence the jury might properly find that the arrangement was that the Tidewater Company should render financial aid to Lantry by advancing to him the cost of machinery provided by him for the work, and that this included not only advances for machinery actually delivered on the ground, hut machinery purchased by Lantry and shipped to Virginia for use in the work; that in forwarding the voucher to the Tidewater Company, the Supply Company acted for and represented Lantry, and that the $9,300 paid by the Tidewater Company to the Supply Company was paid to that Company for Lantry; that the two tube boilers charged in the voucher at $2,200 were bought by Lantry August 20th of the Interstate Equipment & Engineering Company for- $1,400; that the Buckeye Engine charged in the voucher at $1,500 was bought by Lantry of the same Company August 20th for $1,000; that the air compressor charged in the voucher at $1,500 was bought by Lantry of the same Company August 20th for $1,450; that Marsh was the general manager and treasurer of the Supply Company and president of the Interstate Company, and that Smith was the treasurer of both Companies; that Marsh for the Supply Company claimed that $4,399.60 was due from the Contracting Company to the Supply Company, and Lantry directed the Supply Company to pay the amount due the Supply Company from the Contracting Company out of the $9,300 to be received by it from the Tidewater Company, and that he would come in later and adjust the balance; that Lantry made a draft on the Contracting Company for $4,399.60 to reimburse himself for the money he had directed the Supply Company to take from the $9,300 so to be received from the Tidewater Company and apply it in payment of the indebtedness due from the Contracting Company to the Supply Company, and the Contracting Company paid the draft.

Lantry suffered a nervous breakdown in October, 1907, and spent much of the time between that date and August 29, 1908, in a sanitarium.

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Related

Mulholland v. Bartlett
74 Ill. 58 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1874)
American Trust & Savings Bank v. Lantry Contracting Co.
171 Ill. App. 626 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1912)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 Ill. App. 296, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-commercial-trust-savings-bank-v-lantry-contracting-co-illappct-1914.