Graff v. Fox

204 Ill. App. 598, 1917 Ill. App. LEXIS 493
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 16, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 204 Ill. App. 598 (Graff v. Fox) 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
Graff v. Fox, 204 Ill. App. 598, 1917 Ill. App. LEXIS 493 (Ill. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion of the court.

Charles B. Graff brought this suit in assumpsit against Earl E. Fox, Edith M. Fox and Dan Gorman. The declaration consists of one count on a promissory note executed by the defendants for $1,500, dated at Jacksonville, Illinois, February 10, 1915, payable to the order of H. J. Bodgers one year after date with interest from date at seven per cent, per annum. The note recites that it is secured by a chattel mortgage and was indorsed by the payee to the plaintiff on February 8, 1916. Defendant Gorman filed the general issue and special pleas averring (1) that he was a surety on the note, which was known to the payee when the note was executed, and that when the note was delivered it was agreed that if he would sign the note as surety the payee would take a chattel mortgage on a crop of corn to be planted by the principal debtor and the surety should thereupon be released from all liability and that said mortgage was taken by the payee; (2) that he as surety was discharged by the failure of the mortgagee to apply the proceeds of the mortgaged property to the payment of the mortgage indebtedness; (3) that he was an accommodation maker and it was agreed that he should he released when a mortgage was taken on the principal maker’s corn crop; and (4) a plea of payment. Issues were joined on the pleas. The case was tried before the court without a jury. Judgment was rendered against all the defendants for $1,653.42. The defendant Gorman prosecutes this appeal.

There is no dispute concerning the following facts: On February 6, 1915, the First National Bank of Waverly, Illinois, held a judgment note for $3,000 against E. E. Fox and his wife, Edith M. Fox, and another for $1,500 against the Foxes and Gorman, on which judgments were entered on that day against the makers. Fox is a tenant farmer, who raised grain on shares, his landlord receiving one-half of the grain at the market. Gorman is also a farmer. They both reside between Franklin and Waverly. H. J. Rodgers is vice president of the Ayres National Bank of Waverly. Fox, after the entering of the judgments, went to Rodgers and asked for a loan of $5,500 to pay off the judgments, and offered to give a chattel mortgage on all his personal property. Rodgers declined to loan the money on the security offered, without additional security, and asked Fox if he could not get Gorman to sign a note with him. Fox got in communication over the telephone with Gorman, who lived nineteen miles from Jacksonville, and had him come to Jacksonville. Gorman refused to sign a note with Fox. Rodgers told Gorman that if he signed a note he would not be in any worse position than he was in already. The result was that Rodgers made the loan on a note of. $4,000 executed by Fox and his wife, and the note sued on in this case executed by Fox, his wife and Gorman. The notes bear the same date and became due one year after date. Fox and his wife at that time also executed to Rodgers a chattel mortgage, securing the two notes, on a field of winter wheat and all his personal property except Ms household goods. It was also agreed at that time that Fox should further secure the notes hy a chattel mortgage on the corn he should plant the next season. Rodgers, out of this loan, paid the sheriff $5,029.77 in satisfaction of the judgments, gave Fox a check for $413.13 and the remaining $57 was applied in payment of a small note that Rodgers held against Fox.

On June 2, 1915, Fox executed and delivered to Rodgers another chattel mortgage on 307 acres of corn growing on a farm rented by him described as the Moxon farm, securing the said two notes, and also a note for $1,000 made that day by Fox to Rodgers, due at the same time as the other notes. The $1,000 npte was given for $300 advanced to Fox by Rodgers May 1, 1915, and $700 the day the last note and mortgage were executed. Rodgers made further advances to Fox of $150 on September 21st; $100 on October 23rd; $100 on November 14th; $100 on December 13th, for which notes were taken and on January 29, 1916, he paid a life insurance premium for Fox of $82.20. Rodgers also was rurming a blacksmith shop in which work amounting to $105.43 was done for Fox. It thus appears that Rodgers advanced to Fox, in cash and blaeksmithing, $635.85 in addition to the $1,000 for which the note of June 2nd was given and which was secured by the chattel mortgage on the com.

The half of the winter wheat that belonged to Fox, that was covered by the mortgage dated February 10th, was sold for $949.88, Rodgers received $500 of the proceeds of the wheat and permitted $449.88 to he paid to Fox. The grain merchant, who bought the corn covered by the chattel mortgage of June 2nd, testified that he paid $2,058.99 of the proceeds of the com to Rodgers and $949.88 to Fox, and that Rodgers authorized him to make certain payments from the proceeds of the corn to Fox. The merchant states that he overpaid Fox but the sums paid to Rodgers and Fox are less by a small sum than the amount paid to the landlord. There is also evidence tending to show that Fox received $1,000 from the proceeds of the corn. The grain merchant may have quoted erroneous figures, when he stated the amount Fox received from the corn was identical with the total proceeds of the wheat. Rodgers also received from the foreclosure of the first chattel mortgage, not including the proceeds of the winter wheat, net $2,566.87.

. Rodgers applied the proceeds from the mortgaged com received by him, first to the payment of the notes taken by him for advances to Fox and interest thereon, the blacksmith bill, the insurance premium and the $1,000 note, and the balance $374.17 was credited on the $4,000 note. The moneys received by Rodgers from the sale of the wheat and the foreclosure of the first mortgage were also credited on the $4,000 note, leaving a balance of over $800 on that note and the entire $1,500 note and interest thereon, the note sued on, unpaid.

The note on its face stated that it was secured by a chattel mortgage, and under the statute appellee, as indorsee of the note, took it subject to all defenses existing between the payee and the payor. Jones & Addington Stat. jf 7602.

It is contended on behalf of appellee that Gorman was not a surety on the note as between Fox and appellee. The fact that a judgment had been rendered on the note held by the First National Bank of Waverly did not change the relationship between Fox and Gorman. It was said in Trotter v. Strong, 63 Ill. 272, which was a suit at law, that the judgment merely changed, the form of the obligation. The statements made by Rodgers to Gorman, when he said he would be in no worse position if he signed the note than he was already in, and to Fox, “Would Dan secure your note again?” show that Rodgers knew that appellant was a surety, and, in addition thereto, Fox was the party who applied for the loan and Rodgers gave him a check for $412.13 of the proceeds, and also applied $57 in the payment of a note held by him against Fox. We have no doubt from the evidence that appellant was only a surety for Fox and that Rodgers knew that fact. Appellant is therefore entitled to all the rights of a surety as against Rodgers.

The appellant introduced evidence that tended to prove the pleas, that at the time the note was made there was an agreement that the appellant should be released from liability, when a mortgage should be made by Fox to Rodgers on the corn to be planted by him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
204 Ill. App. 598, 1917 Ill. App. LEXIS 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graff-v-fox-illappct-1917.