Drain v. LaGrange State Bank

135 N.E. 780, 303 Ill. 330
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 1922
DocketNo. 14601
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 135 N.E. 780 (Drain v. LaGrange State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drain v. LaGrange State Bank, 135 N.E. 780, 303 Ill. 330 (Ill. 1922).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

Upon a trial in the county court of Cook county of this action of trover brought by the appellee, Ralph A. Drain, against the appellant, the LaGrange State Bank, for the conversion of an automobile, there was a verdict finding the defendant guilty and assessing the plaintiff’s damages at $1000. Judgment was entered on the verdict, and on appeal to the Appellate Court for the First District the judgment was affirmed. A certificate of importance was made and an appeal to this court allowed.

The facts which the evidence for the plaintiff tended to prove and which have been finally determined by the judgment of affirmance by the Appellate Court are as follows: The plaintiff, Ralph A. Drain, was the owner of a MolineKnight automobile and lived at Monmouth, Illinois. He was expecting to enter the military service of the United States, and desiring to sell the automobile he drove it to Chicago and delivered it to the Schillo Motor Car Company at its place of business on South Michigan avenue. Ed. Schillo received the car but did not succeed in selling it and sent it to the garage of his father, Adam Schillo, on West North avenue. Soon afterward, on January 26, 1918, the plaintiff met Arthur J. Smith and told him that he had a car for sale. The plaintiff, Smith and Anton Benson went to Adam Schillo’s garage, where Smith examined the car and agreed to buy it for $1000, and to pay for it $100 cash and $100 a week until it was paid for. The car was to remain at the garage until paid for, but the plaintiff told Schillo to let Smith have the car when he called for it. The plaintiff and Smith came down-town to the Brevoort Hotel, and Smith gave plaintiff his check for $100 drawn on the LaGrange State Bank, the defendant, as a cash payment. Plaintiff deposited the check in the bank at Monmouth and it was presented and payment refused, and it was protested for non-payment on January 31, 1918, and returned to the bank at Monmouth. Plaintiff came back to Chicago in the early part of February and called Smith to the Brevoort Hotel, showed him the check and asked him what it meant. He told Smith if he could not make the first payment they should call the deal off, to which Smith assented. Plaintiff then called Ed. Schillo to come down to the hotel, where he showed him the check and told him it had been protested; that the deal was off and he was to notify his father, Adam Schillo, that the car was not to go out of that garage unless on a written order from him. This was about the first week in February, according to the recollection of Ed. Schillo, who testified that he gave his father notice as directed. At the time the deal was called off and the sale canceled Smith had not taken possession of the car, but he afterward took possession and took it away from the garage. Adam Schillo testified that his son told him over the telephone not to deliver the car to Smith, but at the time his son told him, Smith had taken it away. The time when the car was taken from the Schillo garage is not certainly fixed, but the first account of it after it was taken is when Smith, on February 19, drove it to the Keck garage at LaGrange and left it there. The plaintiff was informed that Smith had gone to the Schillo garage and taken the car, and he came to Chicago, as he thought, about the middle of February. He asked Smith what he meant by going out and taking the car and told him to get it back immediately. Smith offered as an excuse that he was drunk when he took the car and that he expected to bring it back, and said that he would. Almost immediately after this talk with Smith the plaintiff went to Washington to report for duty in the military service and knew nothing more about the car until the last of April, 1918. On April 3, 1918, the defendant obtained a judgment against Arthur J. and Grace M. Smith upon a promissory note dated October 11, 1917. The next day an execution was issued on the judgment, and it was levied upon the car in Keck’s garage in LaGrange. The sheriff advertised it for sale to be held on April 15, 1918. The day before the sale was to take place Smith telephoned Benson, who had been interested in the real estate business with the plaintiff, that the car was advertised for sale,—that they were going to levy on it and sell it. The next morning, before the time for the sale, Benson notified the president of the defendant that the car they were about to sell did not belong to Smith but to the plaintiff, and the president answered that he would not bother about it. Benson then called up Keck, at whose garage the car was to be sold, and told Keck the same thing, and then went to Swain, the defendant’s attorney, and gave him the same information. The sale was postponed to April 25, 1918, when the car was sold for $400, and the plaintiff being informed of the fact, on April 30, 1918, telegraphed the bank from Union Hill, New Jersey, where he was in the service, as follows : “Understand you have sold Moline-Knight thinking it belonged to A. J. Smith; you’re absolutely wrong; I will hold you liable for all damages.” This was before the proceeds of the sale had been paid to the defendant or the execution satisfied.

The question whether the judgment creditor levying an execution on property occupies the position of a bona fide purchaser for value and whether there is a distinction in that respect between an attaching creditor and a judgment creditor is the subject of argument by counsel, but the question is of no importance in this case, since a bona fide purchaser for value from Smith would not have acquired any title to the car. Whatever the legal status of a judgment creditor may be, the levy of the execution upon the car gave to the defendant a lien to the extent, and only to the extent, of the - ownership of Smith. It is a general, well established principle that no one can transfer a better title than he has. No person can by his sale transfer to another the right of ownership in a thing in which he has not the right of property, except in the case of cash, bank bills, checks and notes payable to bearer or transferable by delivery in the ordinary course of business to a person tak-> ing the same bona fide and paying value for it. (Fawcett v. Osborn, 32 Ill. 411; Burton v. Curyea, 40 id. 320; Gibbs v. Jones, 46 id. 319.) The purchaser of property wrongfully taken by his vendor from the true owner can obtain no more perfect title to the property purchased than the vendor himself possessed, and an innocent purchaser without notice of a wrongful taking can acquire no better title to property than his vendor had. (24 R. C. L. 374-) While that is true, an estoppel may operate against the person claiming what would otherwise be the better title, and this is based upon conduct of the true owner by which he allows another to appear as the owner of or having full power of disposition over property, so that an innocent third person is led into dealing with an apparent owner. The estoppel does not depend upon where the actual title is, but rests upon the act of the real owner, which precludes him from disputing the existence of a title which he has caused or allowed to appear to be vested in another. If a vendor of a chattel delivers it to a vendee or allows him to have possession of the chattel before payment of the purchase price and to have all the indicia of ownership, retaining, however, a secret lien for payment, he cannot assert his right against a judgment creditor of the vendee without notice before a levy is made.

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Bluebook (online)
135 N.E. 780, 303 Ill. 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drain-v-lagrange-state-bank-ill-1922.