First National Bank of Lacon v. Bauer Poultry Corp.

103 N.E.2d 160, 345 Ill. App. 315
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 28, 1952
DocketGen. 10,540
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 103 N.E.2d 160 (First National Bank of Lacon v. Bauer Poultry Corp.) 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
First National Bank of Lacon v. Bauer Poultry Corp., 103 N.E.2d 160, 345 Ill. App. 315 (Ill. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wolfe

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by the defendant-appellant Bauer Poultry Corporation, from a judgment rendered by the circuit court of Marshall county, Illinois, in the amount of $3,002.85 and costs. The judgment was rendered in a case brought by the plaintiff bank, on a check drawn by the defendant, Bauer Poultry Corporation of Chicago, Illinois, payable to Frank Grampp & Son of Princeton, Illinois. The check was thereafter endorsed by Frank Grampp & Son and cashed at the plaintiff’s bank. The defendant stopped payment on the check before it was presented to the drawee bank for payment. The principal defense interposed, is that the check was obtained by Frank Grampp & Son by fraud on the defendant, and that it was thereafter paid and satisfied by Frank Grampp & Son to the bank.

The complaint filed on March 10, 1949, alleges that on February 11, 1949, at Chicago, Illinois, the defendant made and delivered to Frank Grampp & Son, a bank check in the sum of $3,000 drawn on the Exchange National Bank of Chicago, Illinois; that on February 14,1949, Frank Grampp & Son endorsed the check at the First National Bank of Lacón, Illinois, and the plaintiff bank paid Grampp & Son the sum of $3,000 in currency therefor; that the plaintiff in the ordinary course of business presented the check for payment to the drawee bank on February 17, 1949, and that payment was refused because the defendant had stopped payment thereon; that the plaintiff is the owner and holder in due course of the check, and that no part has been paid, and the plaintiff prays judgment.

The defendant on April 1, 1949, filed its answer admitting the execution of the check, but denied any knowledge of the endorsement thereon, or that the plaintiff presented the check for payment in the ordinary course of business. The defendant admits that it stopped payment on the check, but denies that the plaintiff is a holder in due course. The defendant further alleges that the check was obtained from it by the fraud and deceit of Frank Grámpp & Son by representing to the defendant that a shipment of merchandise valued at $3,000 was on the way to the defendant, and that Grampp & Son required immediate payment therefor; that the defendant issued a check in reliance upon this representation, but the same was false and untrue and no merchandise was being shipped by Grampp & Son to the defendant, and that the plaintiff bank at this time knew that Grampp & Son was in financial difficulty and perhaps insolvent, and that the plaintiff was acting as the agent of Frank Grampp & Son for the purpose of collection and handling drafts and checks, etc., for clearance. On April 13, 1949, the plaintiff filed its reply denying the affirmative allegations in the answer.

On May 16, 1949, the defendant filed its motion to dismiss the action, or in the alternative to transfer the venue to the circuit court of Cook county, Illinois, on the grounds that it appeared in the pleadings that the transaction out of which this cause arose took place in Chicago, Cook county, Illinois, and no part of said transaction took place in Marshall county, Illinois; that the defendant was a private corporation organized under the laws of Illinois, and that there was no allegation in the complaint that it had its principal office, or was doing business at any place in Marshall county. This motion was denied by the court. By leave of court, the defendant filed an amended answer by adding two affirmative defenses, the first that of full payment and satisfaction of all of the indebtedness. The second, which is an alternative defense, sets up partial payment and partial satisfaction of the indebtedness.

The facts as appearing from the record are substantially as follows: This is an action on a bank check in the amount of $3,000 brought by plaintiff bank, as the holder thereof, against the defendant, as the drawer of the check. The plaintiff First National Bank of Lacón, is a banking corporation operating a bank in Lacón, Marshall county,. Illinois. The defendant, Bauer Poultry Corporation, is a business corporation located in the city of Chicago, Illinois. Frank Gframpp & Son, the payee of the check in question, was a partnership doing business at Princeton, Bureau county; Illinois.

On February 11, 1949, at Chicago, Illinois, the defendant issued and delivered its check for $3,000 drawn ,on the Exchange National Bank of Chicago, payable to the order of Frank Grampp & Son for merchandise being purchased by the defendant from Grampp. Frank Grampp & Son obtained the check by representing to the defendant that the shipment of merchandise valued at $3,000 was on its way from Grampp & Son to the defendant. In reliance on this representation the defendant issued and delivered the $3,000 check involved in this suit. In fact no such merchandise was then being shipped and no such merchandise was ever received by the defendant. When the defendant did not receive the merchandise it stopped payment on the check.

On February 14, 1949, Frank Grampp & Son presented the check at the First National Bank of Lacón, endorsed it, and received from the bank the sum of $3,000 in currency. At the time the check was negotiated at the plaintiff bank, the bank had no knowledge of the fraud by which the check was obtained from the defendant. On February 14, 1949, the plaintiff bank endorsed the check and sent it to a Peoria bank from which it was sent to the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago on February 17, 1949. The check reached the drawee bank at Chicago at which time payment was refused because the defendant, having discovered the fraud, had stopped payment on the check. The check was returned in the reverse order of endorsment to the plaintiff bank.

By February 19, 1949, it was apparent that Frank Grampp & Son was in serious financial difficulties. On that date the First National Bank of Lacón, Illinois, was the holder of bank checks, drafts, and orders either drawn by, or endorsed by, the firm of Frank Grampp & Son in the total amount of $13,543.62, with protest charges added thereto in the amount of $9.52 making a total amount including the protest charges of $13,553.14. One of the checks included in this total of $13,553.14 was the $3,000 check drawn by the defendant on which this suit is brought.

On February 19,1949, G-rampp & Son was the owner and in possession of 13 motor trucks and 4 motor trailers. On that date, Grampp & Son signed in blank the certificates of title for each of said motor trucks and motor trailers and delivered said certificates, so signed, in blank to the plaintiff bank. At the time of delivering the certificates of title, a written agreement was made between G-rampp & Son and the First National Bank of Lacón which agreement was signed by the bank by Gerry D. Scott, its President. The agreement recites that the bank is holding bank checks, drafts, and orders of the firm of Frank Grampp & Son in the total amount of $13,500 which are presently in default, and that the bank has no security for said bank checks, drafts, and orders.

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Bluebook (online)
103 N.E.2d 160, 345 Ill. App. 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-of-lacon-v-bauer-poultry-corp-illappct-1952.