Economy Furniture Co. v. Chapman

54 Ill. App. 122, 1893 Ill. App. LEXIS 349
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 13, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 54 Ill. App. 122 (Economy Furniture Co. v. Chapman) 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
Economy Furniture Co. v. Chapman, 54 Ill. App. 122, 1893 Ill. App. LEXIS 349 (Ill. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellees are warehousemen, and as such received from one Mrs. Sturm a quantity of household furniture for storage in the month oE January, 1891.

A part of the goods so stored were covered by a chattel mortgage given bv- Mrs. Sturm to the appellants, who were furniture dealers, for the unpaid purchase price she had contracted to pay therefor, but that fact was not known to the appellees when they received the goods for storage. At the same time that the mortgaged goods were delivered to the appellees by Mrs. Sturm, other and different goods of a like general description were also delivered by her for storage.

About three days after the appellees received the goods, one Theodore Sonocson called at the appellees’ warehouse and had an interview with Mr. Barr, the manager for appellees, of their warehouse, concerning the goods in question.

The assignment of error chiefly relied upon by appellant is the admission of evidence, over its objection, as to what was said and done by Sonocson at the interview referred to.

The action was in trover against the appellees for the conversion by them of the goods.

If the evidence referred to was properly admitted, the jury might properly have found, as they did, that there had been no cqn version, and that the appellees were not guilty.

The conversion, if there was any, consisted in the refusal by the appellees to deliver up the goods except upon payment of the storage charges.

Whether they were justified in such refusal depends upon whether there was any arrangement, either express, or implied, between appellant and the appellees, whereby, after it became known to appellant that the goods had been stored by the mortgagor with appellees, they should be left on storage with the appellees for the accommodation of the appellant.

It was proved in the cr.se, and it is conceded by appellant, that Sonocson had previously been in the employ of the appellant as a collector, a.nd it was testified to by Barr, on behalf of the appellees, and his testimony on that point is not contradicted, nor was it excepted to, that at the time Sonocson came to the warehouse to inquire about the goods, he exhibited to Barr the chattel mortgage as his authority for making his inquiries.

The witness Barr further testified over the objection of appellant’s counsel, to the substantial effect that Sonocson showed the mortgage and notes to witness and asked to see the list of goods as it appeared upon appellee’s books, which ivas then shown him, and that he then said the goods Avere all there, and told the Avitness to keép them, and that unless Mrs. Sturm, the mortgagor, should pay. her notes as they fell due they would come and get the goods. Barr also testified that Sonocson asked what the storage charges were, and that he showed him on the books what the storage and cartage charges amounted to at that time. He further testified that Sonocson came to the warehoúse once or twice afterward, but that he never demanded the goods or said anything about taking them.

About three months later a replevin suit was begun before a justice of the peace, for the goods, and what is claimed to be a refusal by the appellants to deliver the property in response to a demand made upon the replevin writ then occurred. That suit was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction in the justice of the peace, and this suit in trover was then begun without any further effort to obtain the property.

As to what occurred when the demand on the replevin writ was made, there is a direct conflict in the testimony. Even the witnesses for the appellant do not agree, and if the jury believed the testimony on the part of the appellees and did not credit that in behalf of the appellant, they correctly came to the conclusion that appellees had not refused to deliver up the property, and hence that there was no conversion.

Where, as was shown on behalf of the appellees, property, consisting of a quantity of goods of a like general description, is stored in a warehouse at the same time and in a single lot, a part of which is described in a replevin writ, and another part of the same lot is not so described, so that an exercise of care and responsibility is required to determine and select the articles described in the writ from the others, a warehouseman is not required to take upon himself the risk of making the selection and delivery upon the writ. His refusal to do so does not constitute a conversion to his own use of the property demanded.

Barr, one of appellees’ witnesses, testified that he had handled the goods several times; that they were all stored together; that some of them not covered by the mortgage were like those described in it; that the difference was in the finish, some mahogany finish and some antique finish, and that he could not distinguish between one bed bought of the Economy Furniture Company, and another bed that Mrs. Sturm claimed as her own.

The appellee Frank M. Chapman testified that he offered the persons who came with the writ all the goods if they would pick them out; that the goods were mixed with a lot of other household goods belonging to the mortgagor, and that his firm could not select them, and would not take the responsibility of selecting them; that he told the parties having the writ that his firm would afford them all available facilities to select the goods from the pile, but that the parties were afraid to take the responsibility and declined to select the goods; that appellees insisted upon being paid the storage charges, but told the persons having the writ that if they declined to pay and Avould not do so, they might take the goods if they could pick them out, but they insisted upon appellees picking them out, and refused to do it themselves.

It is true that appellant’s witnesses testified to a different course of conduct and conversation on that occasion, and one which, if credited by the jury, would have led to a necessarily different result, but the jury saw and heard the several witnesses, and had the right to give credence to one or more of them, and to discredit others. We refer particularly to the evidence on the part of appellees only, for the purpose of showing that if the jury relied upon that as being the truth of the case, as they evidently did, their conclusion of not guilty was justifiable.

Of course, if the testimony of Barr concerning the conduct and conversation of Sonocson was properly admitted, then the jury wei’e further justified in arriving at the conclusion that appellees had not been guilty of a conversion of the goods. If Sonocson Avas the constituted agent of the appellant, to look after furniture which appellant had sold in the course of its business of selling household goods upon the installment plan, and upon which it held chattel mortgages for the unpaid part of the ■ purchase price, there can be no doubt but that such employment would carry with it the authority to him to incur incidental and necessary charges for storage. And having that authority, the proof need not be strong that, finding the mortgaged goods in a Avarehouse and leaving them there, he did obligate his principal to pay reasonable storage charges, so long as they might remain in the warehouse.

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54 Ill. App. 122, 1893 Ill. App. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/economy-furniture-co-v-chapman-illappct-1894.