Doretti v. George E. Rice Potato Co.

210 Ill. App. 300, 1918 Ill. App. LEXIS 230
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 24, 1918
DocketGen. No. 23,550
StatusPublished

This text of 210 Ill. App. 300 (Doretti v. George E. Rice Potato 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
Doretti v. George E. Rice Potato Co., 210 Ill. App. 300, 1918 Ill. App. LEXIS 230 (Ill. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Taylor

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment in the sum of $206.67 and costs entered in favor of the appellees and against the National Produce Bank as garnishee.

On January 24, 1917, the appellees began - suit in the Municipal Court for the sum of $206.67, and in their statement of claim set forth that having bought and paid for certain carloads of potatoes it was found upon examination that “the said cars did not contain the amount agreed upon to be delivered”; that they “paid sight draft bill of lading,” and that by reason of the “short weight” there was due appellees the net sum of $206.67. On the same date the appellees filed an affidavit for attachment in aid against the George E. Bice Potato Company and the appellant, the National Produce Bank of Chicago (garnishee), for $206.67 “for liquidated damages.” An attachment writ in aid was issued and on the same date returned served on the appellant, the National Produce Bank, as garnishee, and on February 2, 1917, the latter filed its answer, stating that it had no “money, goods or property of the defendant, the George E. Bice Potato Company, in its possession, control, custody or charge.” The George E. Bice Potato Company was duly served with summons, and notice of the writ of attachment in aid, by publication^

March 6, 1917, the appellant, the First National Bank of Foley, Minnesota, hereinafter called intervening claimant, filed an intervening petition claiming that the draft—which was the subject of the attachment in aid or garnishment—was assigned to and deposited with the intervening claimant by the George E. Bice Potato Company on January 20, 1917;-that at the time the George E. Bice Potato Company was given credit for the amount of said draft in partial payment of an indebtedness theretofore existing between the George E. Bice Potato Company and the intervening claimant; that for a good and valuable consideration and the partial extinguishment of the indebtedness of the George E. Bice Potato Company, the intervening claimant claims the amount of the draft so garnisheed as its own property.

March 6, 1917, the appellant, the National Produce Bank, hereinafter called garnishee, filed a supplemental answer setting up, among other things, that the draft on Doretti Brothers & Company, appellees, was on January 20, 1917, prior to the service of the attachment writ upon the George E. Rice Potato Company, assigned to the intervening claimant, and by the latter accepted in partial payment of a debt from the George E. Bice Potato Company, and that the intervening claimant, the First National Bank of Foley, on the same date gave the George E. Rice Potato Company credit on said debt in the amount of the draft.

From the' evidence it appears that there is no question but that appellees ordered a certain quantity of potatoes from the George E. Bice Potato Company, and upon receipt of the bill of lading accepted a draft dated January 19, 1917, drawn by the George E. Bice Potato Company on appellees in the sum of $1,039.80, payable to the intervening claimant, the First National Bank of Foley. And, further, there is no question but that certain carloads of potatoes were short in weight, and that there was due to the appellees from the George E.» Bice Potato Company, by reason of the short weight, the sum of $206.67.

At the time of the trial it was admitted by all parties that the amount' claimed in the statement of claim was in the hands of the garnishee, National Produce Bank of Chicago, the contention of the garnishee and the intervening claimant being that at the time of the issuance of the writ of attachment the.draft did not belong to the George E. Bice Potato Company. It was also admitted that there being no appearance of the George E. Rice Potato Company of record, the appellees need not prove the amount of damages. The testimony of one Mushel, called on behalf of the intervening claimant, is to the effect that the latter made, during the fall of 1916, certain loans to the George E. Rice Potato Company; that on January 20, 1917, the George E. Rice Potato Company owed it, the intervening claimant, $10,300 on four demand notes: one of October 4, 1916, for $1,800; one of October 25, 1916, for $5,000; and two of November 1, 1916, one of which was for $2,000 and the other for $1,500; that in addition to those notes the intervening claimant on January 20,1917, held for collection a note executed by the George E. Rice Potato Company on October 4, 1916, to the State Bank of Foreston; that the draft on appellees, Doretti Brothers & Company, drawn by the George E. Rice Potato Company and payable to the intervening claimant, which was the subject of the garnishment, came into the possession of the intervening claimant on January 20, 1917; that “it was brought to the bank by A. R. Davis, secretary of the George E. Rice Potato Company”; that that draft, together with others, was “applied on the note of $1,800, and held by the First National Bank of Foley for collection,” and also applied upon the notes held by the intervening claimant; “that for several weeks prior to that time the George E. Rice Potato Company was paying up outstanding notes as rapidly as receipts from the sales and shipments permitted”; that all drafts received were applied in that manner; that the draft in question was sent by the intervening-claimant to the garnishee, the National Produce Bank of Chicago “for collection and returns”; that “the note of the State Bank of Foreston was returned to the George E. Rice Potato Company, marked ‘Paid,’ and a draft for the amount of the note forwarded to the State Bank of Foreston.” The draft, in question, was dated “Foley, Minn:, January 19th, 1917,” and

was for the sum of $1,039.80, drawn by the George E. Bice Potato Company, directed to Doretti Brothers, Chicago, Illinois, and payable to the First National Bank of Foley. On its face it was marked “Paid Jany. 19,” and it was indorsed on the back: “Pay to any bank or banker. First National Bank, Foley, Minn.”

On the trial of the case, the trial judge, without a jury, found the issues as to the interplea of the First National Bank of Foley—the intervening claimant— in favor of the appellees (Doretti Brothers & Company), and also found the issues as to the attachment and as to the merits of the action against the George E. Bice Potato Company, and assessed the appellees’ damages at the sum of $206.67. Judgment was entered in favor of the appellees and against the George E. Bice Potato Company in the sum of $206.67, and judgment was also entered in favor of the George E. Bice Potato Company against the garnishee, the National Produce Bank, in the sum of $206.67 for the use of the. appellees.

The decisive question in the case is whether, at the time the attachment in aid was begun, the garnishee, the National Produce Bank, had in its possession any property belonging to or was in any way the debtor of the George E. Bice Potato Company. On January 17, 1917, a draft was drawn by the George E. Bice Potato Company, appellant, payable to intervening claimant, the First National Bank of Foley. On January 20, 1917, the drawer took the draft to the payee, the intervening claimant, and the latter applied it— together with others—on a note of $1,600 which the drawer owed to the State Bank of Foresten, and which the intervening claimant held for collection, and on other notes held by the intervening claimant. The latter at that time held certain note,s of the George E.

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Bluebook (online)
210 Ill. App. 300, 1918 Ill. App. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doretti-v-george-e-rice-potato-co-illappct-1918.