George v. Pfeil

158 Ill. App. 261, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 126
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 18, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 158 Ill. App. 261 (George v. Pfeil) 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
George v. Pfeil, 158 Ill. App. 261, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 126 (Ill. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baume

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit in assumpsit by G. J. George, trustee of the estate of Henry Bridgman, bankrupt, against Walter L. and George W. Pfeil, partners as Pfeil Brothers, to recover the amount due upon a promissory note bearing date March 1, 1895, for $1,403, payable one year thereafter with interest at 7 per cent per annum from date. The defendants pleaded the general issue and payment in general terms, and gave notice under the general issue of set-off in substance as follows:

(1) To merchandise purchased from February, 1896, to May 21, 1907, for family supplies, as per bill of particulars attached ..............................$1,017.69

(2) Interest on said bill from January 1, 1901, average date of purchase......... 569.84

(3) Two-thirds of grocery stock taken over by H. A. Bridgman, estimated at 80 per cent of invoice price of "$600.00......... 320.00

(4) Interest on last item from September 15, 1895 ............................. 293.00

(5) Two-thirds of $919.47 in accounts and notes collected by H. A. Bridgman, or transferred to his account, being assets of Bridgman, Pfeil & Co., as shown by bill of particulars thereof attached..... 612.98

(6) Interest on accounts and notes collected and transferred to H. A. Bridgman from

March 1,1897, average date of collection 502.50 (7) Estimated balance of principal and interest on Wm. Neibold note, signed by Pfeil Bros, as surety, wrongfully negotiated by H.'A. Bridgman............. 113.50

Total............$3,429.51

Appended to said notice of set-off is a statement to the effect that in addition to the note sued- on the said bankrupt was entitled to credit on said set-off account as follows:

One-third net assets from general store taken over by Pfeil Bros. February 1, 1896, after equalizing overdrafts of partners ............................$ 480.17

Interest on same..................... 436.95

The note bore endorsements of the payment of interést for each of the several years from 1895 to 1905 inclusive, and also of payments of $208 on November 11, 1907, and $201.86 on December 26, 1907. The trial of the cause by the court without a jury resulted in a finding and judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants for $57.07, from which judgment the plaintiff has prosecuted this appeal.

Upon the trial the defendants disclaimed all of the endorsements of interest upon the note and denied that they ever paid interest or authorized Bridgman to credit any interest thereon. The defendants also abandoned the seventh item of their set-off.

It was admitted by the defendants that the two payments of $208 and $201.86 endorsed on said note were made by them to the First National Bank of Beards-town which held the note as collateral for a loan of $400 to Bridgman and which payments liquidated the amount due from Bridgman to said bank.

The uncontroverted facts in the case are substantially, as follows: Prior to September 15, 1895, Bridgman and the defendants as equal partners, conducted a general merchandising business at Arenzville under the firm name of Bridgman, Pfeil & Co. On that day by mutual agreement of all the partners an inventory •was taken of the grocery stock which was kept separate and apart from the other merchandise, and Bridgman thereafter assumed exclusive charge of and conducted the grocery business on his own behalf, continuing however as partner with the defendants in the dry goods and clothing business until February, 1896, when the defendants with the consent of Bridgman took over the stock of clothing and dry goods and thereafter conducted that branch of the business on their own behalf under the firm name of Pfeil Brothers. At the time the defendants took over the stock of clothing and dry goods no inventory thereof was taken, the last preceding inventory having been taken on January 1, 1896. After such practical although informal dissolution of the original partnership the defendants retained the partnership books, collecting some of the accounts, taking notes payable to the original partnership in liquidation of other accounts, and paying most of the indebtedness of the original partnership. A portion of the accounts owing to the original partnership was taken and collected by Bridgman who kept a portion of the proceeds and deposited a portion with the defendants. No settlement of the partnership business was ever had between Bridgman and the defendants and it has never been agreed or determined how much Bridgman owed to the defendants or they owed to him for the stock of merchandise or any part thereof, or for the notes and accounts due to the partnership, or for the indebtedness of the partnership paid by them or him. From February, 1896, when the defendants took over the stock of clothing and dry goods until November, 1907, Bridgman purchased from them upon an open account merchandise as family supplies to the amount of $1,017.69, which amount the plaintiff concedes to be a proper item of set-off against his claim upon the note, but plaintiff contests all the other items of set-off claimed by the defendants.

The method adopted by the trial court in arriving at its finding as to the amount due upon the note is not wholly clear.. Counsel for defendants suggests that such finding was arrived at by allowing to the defendants a credit of $320 as of September 15, 1895, for the stock of groceries then taken over by Bridgman, and by allowing to the defendants monthly credits for the merchandise account for family supplies purchased by Bridgman. It is conceded by defendants that the court refused to allow by way of set-off as a credit upon the note the item of $612.98, being two-thirds of the amount of partnership accounts and notes transferred to and collected by Bridgman, on the note, because the same arose out of an unsettled partnership account, and to the action of the court in refusing to allow said item of set-off no cross error has been assigned.

The only substantive evidence in the record bearing upon the defendants’ claim of set-off here involved is the testimony of the defendant W. L. Pfeil, which is, in substance, as follows:

“No direct payments were ever made on the note except those endorsed by Mr. Condit, which were $208, on Nov. 11, 1907, and $201.86 on December 26, 1907. "We never made any other payments on the note. We never authorized Mr. Bridgman or anybody else to make any of those endorsements of interest. The note was at the National Bank of Beardstown when we made these two payments. They notified me that they held the note for collection. As we had no final settlement of our business relations, I thought likely I might possibly owe him that much and without going into details of the matter thoroughly, I made those two payments. After the execution of this note on March 1,1895, we were together doing a partnership business in general merchandise, the stock consisting of clothing, dry goods and groceries. On September 5, 1895, we turned the stock of groceries over to Bridgman by an agreement of us three. An invoice of the grocery stock was taken by all three members of the firm.

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Bluebook (online)
158 Ill. App. 261, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-v-pfeil-illappct-1910.