First National Bank v. George R. Barse Live Stock Commission Co.

64 N.E. 1097, 198 Ill. 232
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 64 N.E. 1097 (First National Bank v. George R. Barse Live Stock Commission Co.) 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
First National Bank v. George R. Barse Live Stock Commission Co., 64 N.E. 1097, 198 Ill. 232 (Ill. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hand

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was a bill of interpleader filed by Wood Bros, on June 16, 1898, against the appellant, the appellee, and A. tl. Wootters and T. F. Smith, in the superior court of Cook county, asking the direction of the court in the disposition of $2397.47 in their hands, the net proceeds of a sale of one hundred and fifty-five head of cattle which had been shipped to them from Gibson Station, Indian Territory. On October 22, 1898,, an interlocutory decree was entered in the cause sustaining the bill of inter-pleader, and decreeing that T. F. Smith and A. H. Wootters, who had each filed disclaimers, had no interest in the fund in controversy, ordering that the answers of appellant and appellee stand as interpleas or statements of their respective claims, and that the complainants deposit the fund, then amounting to $2334.47, with the clerk of the court, and that they be dismissed out of the cause, and upon the final hearing the issues were found in favor of appellee, and it was decreed to be entitled to the fund, which decree has been affirmed by the Appellate Court for the First District, and a further appeal has been prosecuted to this court.

The bill of interpleader alleged that complainants were engaged in the live stock commission business at the Union Stock Yards, Chicago; that on September 3, 1896, they received one hundred and fifty-five head of cattle from Indian Territory that had been shipped to them by A. H. Wootters; that said cattle were sold by them, as commission merchants, on the open market, and after deducting the expenses, commissions, etc., the sum of $2397.47 was realized; that ah itemized account of sales was promptly sent to said shipper on the third day of September, 1896, and that they received a telegram from A. H. Wootters, dated Wagoner, Indian Territory, September 3, 1896, instructing them to remit the proceeds to the National Bank of the Republic, St. Louis, for account of H. F. Moore, cashier, Crockett; that on Septemher 5, 1896, they received a letter from'A. H. Wootters confirming said telegram; that said H. F. Moore, referred to in the letter and telegram, was the cashier of the First National Bank of Crockett; that the First National Bank of Crockett notified the complainants it was entitled to the proceeds of the sale of the cattle under an alleged chattel mortgage executed by one T. F. Smith; that on September 11, 1896, the Barse Live Stock Commission Company brought an attachment suit in the superior court of Cook county, cause No. 177,115, in which A. H. Wootters was • named defendant and the complainants named as garnishees; that the said attachment suit was pending until June 3, 1898, when it was dismissed and complainants discharged as garnishees; that both the Bank of Crockett and the Barse Commission Company were claiming the money in the hands of complainants.

, Appellant filed an answer and interplea, alleging that it was entitled to the fund in the hands of the complainants by the terms of an agreement entered into by T. F. Smith in August, 1896, whereby Smith, being the owner of the cattle in controversy, agreed to ship the cattle in the name of A. H. Wootters but for appellant, and thereby to assign and transfer to appellant the cattle in question for the purpose of taking up an indebtedness of said Smith to appellant, which was due September 1, 1896; that the cattle had been shipped, in accordance with the said agreement, for appellant; that the delivery of the cattle to Wootters was a delivery to appellant, and that appellant was entitled to the fund.

Appellee filed an answer and interplea, claiming to be entitled to the fund under the terms of a chattel mortgage executed by T. F. Smith to appellee on October 25, 1895, said Smith being a resident of Crockett, Houston county, Texas. The cattle were located in the Creek Nation, Indian Territory; that the mortgage was filed for record in Houston county, Texas, October 28,1895, and on October 31,1895, was filed in the office of the clerk of the United States Court for the Northern District of Indian Territory, in accordance with the United States statutes,, and that consequently appellee was entitled to the fund.

Three points are urged on this appeal as grounds for a reversal of the decree, two of them being questions of law and one a question of fact, viz.: (1) The prosecution of the attachment suit against Wootters by appellee was a bar to a recovery in this action; (2) the mortgage of the Barse company was void as against the rights of appellant that accrued on August 31,1896; (3) at the time the cattle in controversy were shipped to Chicago they were in the possession of T. F. Smith, and not in the possession of the Barse company.

First — It is averred in the bill of interpleader that on September 11, 1896, an attachment suit was begun in the superior court of Cook county, wherein A. H. Wootters was made defendant and Wood Bros, were served as garnishees, for the purpose of reaching the proceeds of said cattle; that said attachment suit was dismissed June 3, 1898. The answer of both parties admitted the commencement of said attachment suit and its dismissal without prejudice on the date named in the bill, and the evidence shows that the suit was dismissed, on the stipulation of the parties thereto. We are of the opinion the mere bringing of the attachment suit by the Barse company, which suit did not proceed to judgment but was dismissed upon written stipulation without prejudice, did not constitute an election, nor estop the Barse company from setting up its claim to the fund in this case. In Gibbs v. Jones, 46 Ill. 318, it was held when an action of trover is brought, an action in assumpsit between the same parties, brought to recover the value of the property and which was dismissed without prejudice, cannot be specially pleaded in bar of the action of trover. And in Floioer v. Brumbach, 131 Ill. 646, it was said: “The circumstance of a party having elected one of several remedies by action will not, in general, preclude him from abandoning such suit, and after having duly discontinued it he may adopt any other remedy.” To the same effect are Stier v. Harms, 154 Ill. 476, and Barchard v. Kohn, 157 id. 579. In Johnson Brinkman Commission Co. v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co. 126 Mo. 344, (47 Am. St. Rep. 675,) it was held an attachment suit brought by a vendor of personal property against his vendee, if dismissed before final judgment, does not estop him from subsequently maintaining an action of replevin to recover the chattels, in the absence of any intervening rights, injury or change of position by reason of the attachment.

The word “election,” as applied to remedies, is but another term for “estoppel.” There is no element of estoppel by record, as the attachment suit was not prosecuted to judgment; and there is no estoppel in pais, for neither Wootters nor the bank has taken such action, in consequence of the suing out of the attachment, that they will receive detriment, in a legal sense, from the conduct of plaintiff. There were no intervening fights in the case from the time of suing out the attachment until suit was dismissed. Nor does it appear that the bank was, by reason of the commencement of said suit, induced to change its position with respect to the fund in controversy.

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Bluebook (online)
64 N.E. 1097, 198 Ill. 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-george-r-barse-live-stock-commission-co-ill-1902.