Frorer v. Rowley

84 Ill. App. 446, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 124
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 20, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 84 Ill. App. 446 (Frorer v. Rowley) 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
Frorer v. Rowley, 84 Ill. App. 446, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 124 (Ill. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Wright

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a suit in assumpsit by F. S. Rowley and C. A. Rowley against appellant, for the use of the latter, C. A. Rowdey, wife of the former, to recover one-half of a certain promissory note for $2,056, dated March 1, 1897, executed by appellant and payable to the order of Mrs. C. A. Rowley and F. S. Rowley, her husband, in one year after date, with six per cent interest, indorsed on back, “ C. A. Rowley, F. S. Rowley, Jerome Rowley. Pay First Nat. Bk. Mt. Vernon, O. Fred D. Sturges.” Stamped on face: “ First National Bank, Lincoln, Ill., Sept. 10, ’ 97, paid.” To the declaration was pleaded the general issue, payment generally before the suit, and the second and third special pleas allege indorsement of the note sued on by payees and delivery to Jerome Eowley, March 18, 1897, and that afterward and before the beginning of the suit, the defendant paid to Jerome Eowley the full amount of the note. General and special replications were filed, traversing the allegations of the special pleas, which latter were verified by affidavit. A jury having been waived, the trial by the court resulted in a finding and judgment against appellant for $1,129.76, from which appellant prosecutes this appeal, insisting that the finding and judgment is against the law and the evidence of the case, and that the court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial.

It appears from the evidence that F. S. Rowley and C. A. Rowley were husband and wife, having been married thirty-eight years, and have three sons, aged respectively, thirty, twenty-eight and twenty-four years. Mrs. Rowley inherited in her own right about $1,200, which it seems the husband lost in business at Chattanooga, Tennessee, after which they lived upon a farm in Clark county, Ill., belonging to Jerome Rowley, the father of F. S. Rowley, who in 1884 conveyed it to his son, and the latter, after incumbering it with a mortgage, reconveyed it to his father, and in 1889, Jerome Rowley conveyed the farm to Mrs. Rowley, she contending, in which she is supported by the three sons, that the conveyance was made to her in consideration of the $1,200 of her separate property that had been lost by her husband, and that it might be a home for the family; while Jerome Rowley and his son F. S. Rowley contended, in which they were supported by various other witnesses who testified to verbal admissions of Mrs. Rowley, that the conveyance was made in consideration of a note for $2,500, executed and delivered by the husband and wife to Jerome Rowley, with the understanding that such note was to be paid if the farm should at any time be sold. This farm, consisting of 296 acres, was sold December 30> 1896, to appellant, Lloyd Ewing acting as his agent in the purchase of the same, for $G,900. At that time $500 of the purchase price was paid in cash, and the contract of sale and the deed of conveyance were placed in escrow in the hands of G. A. Conzman, cashier of Vigo County "national Bank, Terre Haute, Indiana, where the Rowleys then resided, to be held until March 1,1897, when appellant then paid in cash $1,450, executed his note for $2,056, due March 1, 1898, being the note in controversy, with mortgage upon the land sold securing it, he also assuming a mortgage of $2,800 already put upon the land by the Rowleys. The cash payment was deposited in the bank to the joint credit of C. A. and F. S. Rowley. Mr. Ewing, the agent of appellant, delivered the note of $2,056 and mortgage securing it, to C. A. Rowley, who, together with her husband and Ewing, left them with the bank, with instructions to hold, the note and mortgage until March 1, 1898, then collect it and deposit the proceeds to the joint credit of O. A. and F. S. Rowley, but that one of them would call later and get the mortgage and send it for record, after which it was to be returned to the bank and held as before stated. F. S. Rowley called to get the mortgage to have it recorded, and the cashier not knowing or remembering the note was also in the package, thus inadvertently gave to him both note and mortgage, neither of which was ever returned to the bank. F. S. Rowley stated in his testimony that he retained possession of the note from the time he took it from the bank, until the mortgage was returned from the recording office,and when so returned, that himself and wife assigned both note and mortgage to Jerome Rowley to be credited upon the $2,500 note held by the latter, and that he, F. S. Rowley, mailed the papers to Jerome Rowley at Mt. Vernon, Ohio. This note and mortgage with indorsements as they appeared, were sent by Jerome Rowley through First Rational Bank of Mt. Vernon, Ohio, to First Rational Bank of Lincoln, Ill., and were at the latter bank paid by appellant, September 10, 1897, about six months before maturity, and the proceeds thereof sent to Jerome Rowley. Upon the trial the principal contest centered around the genuineness of the $2,500 note and the indorsement of the $2,056 note made by appellant, so far as those matters affected the appellee C. A. Rowley. The evidence upon these issues, as it appears in the record, is irreconcilably conflicting. It is impossible to harmonize the evidence upon opposing sides,and where there have been no intervening prejudicial rulings of the court, either as to the admission of evidence, or in the application of the law to the issues being tried (and there are no exceptions or complaints in that regard in the case presented), the rule is elementary and of long and well establishment, that where the evidence of the side to which the verdict of the jury or finding of the trial judge was given, standing alone in the record, will support such verdict or finding, an appellate court will not disturb such verdict or finding, but will accept the same as decisive of the issue tried. Ho doubt can be entertained, after considering all of the evidence in this record, as we have done, that the evidence of the appellee, stan ling alone in the record, supports the finding of the trial court, and as we have already said it is impossible to harmonize the two sides of the evidence, and that being true, no good purpose would be subserved in its discussion, and we therefore feel compelled to and do accept the finding of the trial court as decisive of the facts.

It is said also by the assignment of errors that the finding and judgment of the court are contrary to the law of the case. This, however, is easily disposed of by a quotation from an opinion of our Supreme Court. It having been established that the indorsement of C. A. Rowley upon the note paid by appellant was not her indorsement, the quotation from the law is aptly in point. In the case of Ryhiner v. Feickert, 92 Ill. 305, the note in question was payable to “ Chas. & Wm. Feickert,” and Charles Feickert, representing that he and William Feickert were partners, sold the note and indorsed the same, before it was due, to Ryhiner and others, without special authority from William Feickert. The payees of the note were not partners, and William Feickert brought suit to recover for one-half of the note thus negotiated, and the Supreme Court, in deciding the case, said:

“ The possession of the note by Charles Feickert, under the circumstances, is of no significance. In all cases where notes are payable to joint payees, instead of partners, the actual manual possession of the notes must be in some one of the payees. It is impossible that it can be in all at the same time.

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Bluebook (online)
84 Ill. App. 446, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frorer-v-rowley-illappct-1899.