Evans-Montague Commission Co. v. Spaulding ex rel. National Live Stock Bank

133 Ill. App. 43, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 207
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 15, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 133 Ill. App. 43 (Evans-Montague Commission Co. v. Spaulding ex rel. National Live Stock Bank) 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
Evans-Montague Commission Co. v. Spaulding ex rel. National Live Stock Bank, 133 Ill. App. 43, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 207 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Creighton,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a proceeding by attachment, in the Circuit Court of St. Clair county, by the National Live Stock Bank of Chicago, against H. B. Spaulding, in which appellant was summoned as garnishee. Spaulding made default and judgment was entered against him in the sum of $14,543.19. Interrogatories to be answered by appellant as garnishee were duly filed and appellant filed its answer in response thereto. To this answer the plaintiff filed his allegations denying the truthfulness of appellant’s answer. The issues were tried by a jury, and the jury returned their verdict in open court, in form as follows: “We, the jury, find a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, the Live Stock Bank of Chicago, and assess the damages at seven thousand two hundred and fifty dollars ($7,250.00).” Appellant moved the court for a new trial. The court denied the motion, and put the verdict returned by the jury in form, so as to make it show the finding to be in favor of the defendant, H. B. Spaulding, for the use of the plaintiff, National Live Stock Bank of Chicago, for the amount of the indebtedness found by the jury as shown by the verdict to be owing from the garnishee, Evans-Montague Commission Company, to the plaintiff, and rendered judgment thereon as follows: “It is therefore ordered and adjudged by the court, that the defendant, H. B. Spaulding, for the use of the National Live Stock Bank of Chicago, have and recover of and from the garnishee, Evans-Montague Commission Company, the sum of seven thousand two hundred and fifty dollars ($7,250.00), the amount of verdict aforesaid, together with his costs in this behalf expended, and that execution issue therefor.” The garnishee excepted and brings the case to this court by appeal.

Counsel for appellant contend that the verdict returned by the jury was not responsive to the issues, and that the court had no power to correct it.

We are of opinion that counsel’s ■ contention with respect to the verdict and the power of the court, is not applicable to the issues and evidence in this case. In Law v. Sanitary District, 197 Ill., 523, the court says: “A verdict may be amended by the court or construed by reference to the pleadings and the évidence in the record, and in some instances from the notes of the judge, when the intention of the jury is apparent from the pleadings and the evidence. Courts adhere strictly to the rule that ‘where the intention of the jury is manifest, the court will set right matter of form.’ ‘In considering the verdict itself, with a view to its sufficiency, the first object is to ascertain what the jury intended to find; and this is to be done by construing the verdict liberally, with the sole view of ascertaining the meaning of the jury, and not under the technical rules of construction, which are applicable to pleadings. If the meaning of the jury can be ascertained and a verdict on the point in issue can be made out, the court will mould it into form and make it serve.’” Upon looking into the issues and evidence in this case, the meaning of the jury becomes perfectly apparent, and the trial court did not err in putting it in form.

The remaining questions raised on this appeal are in the main questions of fact. It is true that a number of propositions of law are suggested and insisted upon by counsel for appellant, but they are all based upon their view of what the evidence proves.

The evidence tends to prove that H. B. Spaulding, the defendant in attachment, was engaged on a very extensive scale in the cattle and cattle ranch business in Texas and Indian Territory, and that on November 10, 1902, he conveyed by chattel mortgage 6,171 head of mixed cattle to Strahorn-Hutton-Evans Commission Company-to secure the sum of $164,433.76, evidenced by negotiable promissory notes. The notes and mortgage were sold and indorsed to the ¡National Live Stock Bank of Chicago, the plaintiff in attachment. Default was made with respect to payment, and in November, 1903, an attempt was made to foreclose the mortgage and 3,438 head of cattle were found, taken into possession and sold, and after applying the proceeds to the mortgage indebtedness, a large sum remained unpaid, and 2,933 head of the mortgaged cattle remained neither found nor accounted for.

In October prior to the attempted foreclosure, Spaulding had made two sales of cattle, aggregating 1,214 head, to his nephew and former employee, J. A. Todd, but these sales did not include any of the cattle embraced in the above noted chattel mortgage.

In March, 1905, appellant, the garnishee defendant, was engaged in the live stock commission business, at the National Stock Tards, and had advanced money to J. A. Todd and held a chattel mortgage on Todd’s cattle as security therefor. Todd had shipped a number of consignments of cattle to appellant and appellant had sold the cattle and placed the proceeds to Todd’s credit.

In the meanwhile, that is, between November 10, 1902, and March, 1905, Spaulding had failed in business and become insolvent, and the National Live Stock Bank of Chicago was keeping up its effort to find the remainder of the cattle embraced in its mortgage, and having received information that certain of the cattle, 210 head, which had been consigned in Todd’s name, to appellant, were in fact a part of the cattle embraced in the mortgage and at. the time of such consignment and sale were in fact Spaulding’s cattle, subject only to that mortgage, thereupon commenced attachment proceedings against Spaulding and summoned appellant as garnishee, as above noted. Todd appeared in the attachment proceeding and obtained leave to interplead, but he does not join in the appeal and is not in any manner made a party thereto, neither is Spaulding in any manner a party to the appeal, except as nominal plaintiff in the garnishee branch of the proceeding.

Counsel for appellant contend that inasmuch as the chattel mortgage provides for possession in the mortgagee and designates an agent to hold such possession, while possession was in fact allowed to remain in the mortgagor, that this was a fraud per se and not subject to explanation, as to creditors and subsequent purchasers from the mortgagor, Spaulding. However this may be is not very important here, for with respect to the 210 cattle in dispute, the evidence tends to prove and the jury was warranted in finding that they were not included in Todd’s purchase from Spaulding, and it is not even claimed that either Todd or appellant were lien creditors of Spaulding.

Counsel further contend that appellant had a lien on the proceeds of the sale of the cattle in question, because of a mortgage from Todd to it. The verdict of the jury excludes the theory that the particular 210 head of cattle in question here were ever owned by Todd, and also, under the evidence, excludes the. theory that they went into Todd’s possession as a part of either of his purchases from Spaulding. And further, if it be true that Todd gave appellant a mortgage on any cattle, we have no proper proof of its contents. No such mortgage appears in evidence. In this connection counsel suggest that the answer of the garnishee is presumed to be true until such presumption is overcome by evidence, and that in appellant’s answer it is stated that “all said cattle, the sales of which have been detailed in answer to interrogatory number ten, were covered by chattel mortgage from the said J. A. Todd to the Evans-Montague Commission Company,” appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
133 Ill. App. 43, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-montague-commission-co-v-spaulding-ex-rel-national-live-stock-bank-illappct-1907.