Gray v. Merriam

46 Ill. App. 337, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 365
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 11, 1892
StatusPublished

This text of 46 Ill. App. 337 (Gray v. Merriam) 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
Gray v. Merriam, 46 Ill. App. 337, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 365 (Ill. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shepard.

This is a suit brought by the defendant in error, Willard D. Merriam, against Elisha Gray, the plaintiff in error, and Samuel A. Kean, the surviving partners of the firm of Preston, Kean & Co., to recover the value of fifteen United States four per cent, bonds, for §1,000 each,' claimed to have been left with said firm for safe keeping, and lost through the negligence of said firm.

The firm of Preston, Kean & Co. was engaged in the general banking business in Chicago, and Merriam, the defendant in error, had for several years prior to 1819 kept a running deposit and check.account with them, and had at times borrowed money of them.

In February, 1819, Merriam purchased twelve of the lost bonds from, or through the agency of, the firm, and took them to his home in Iowa, and in the spring of the same year purchased in a like manner three other like bonds, which he directed the firm to keep for him.

In June of the same year he borrowed of the firm, §15,000, and sent them the twelve bonds he had at home to hold as collateral security, together with the other three bonds they already held for him.

Whatever, if any, other transactions by way of loans or renewals may have occurred between the firm and Merriam after that time, and before March, 1881, seem to have been settled, for on March 19 and 24, 1881, the firm wrote Merriam, sending him his canceled notes, and advising him that they “ hold in special deposit subject to your order fifteen one thousand dollar United States four per cent bonds—say $15,000.”

It does not appear that Merriam ever had all or any one of said bonds in his actual possession, or that he ever in fact saw them or either of them, after that time.

He did, however, after that time, borrow small sums of the firm—twice §500 and once $600—and a part or all of said bonds were, by the terms of the notes given by him for the money so borrowed, pledged to the firm as collateral security.

The record contains a copy of one of the notes for $500, wherein it is recited that Merriam has “ deposited with them as collateral, United States bonds,” and it maybe presumed from the evidence that the same or Avords of like import were used in the other notes. The effect of such general language would operate as a pledge of all the United States bonds belonging to Merriam in the possession of Preston, Kean & Go., if they chose to so treat them, and the presumption is that the latter treated the Avhole fifteen bonds as collateral to said notes. The three notes last referred to appear to have been made and paid in 1881, and subsequent to March of that year, and it does not appear that at any time subsequent to the year 1881 Merriam >vas indebted to the firm for borroAved money, or otherAvise.

The bonds were stolen by Frederick M. Ker, in 1882, while Ker was acting as assistant cashier or assistant manager of the firm in its banking business.

During the time they Avere held as a special deposit, the bonds Avere tied together and kept in one of the safes in the vault of the bank—the same safe in which the cash of the bank Avas kept, but in a separate compartment of the safe— and Ker, Mr. Kean, the managing partner, and Mr. Ware, the cashier, were the ■ only persons Avho had access to the safe.

The quarterly coupons, for interest on the bonds, as they matured Avere detached and collected by the firm, so long as the bonds remained in their possession, and the amount was credited to the general deposit account of Merriam with them, and was either remitted to him at his request in Mew York exchange, or lay subject to his check in the regular course of the firm’s banking business. Merriam was also, in fact, credited with, and paid by, the firm, the interest Avhich matured.on the bonds on January 1, 1883, a date subsequent to the time when they were taken by Ker.

Ker testified that he credited Merriam’s account in advance with the amount of the coupons maturing on January 1, 1883, knowing at the time that the bonds were not on hand, so as to anticipate any demand that Merriam might make for the coupons.

With reference to the coupons which matured October 1, 1882, at which time, according to the testimony of Ixer, it is uncertain whether the bonds were on hand or not, the firm wrote Merriam on October 6,1882: “ Yours received. We credit §150—coupons. The bonds give us no trouble at all. Glad to be of service to you.”

Ker had been in the employ of the firm for many years, and had risen by regular gradations to the responsible position of assistant cashier, assumed by him in Kovember, 1881. Very shortly .afterward, and in December, 1881, or January, 1882, rumors that Ker was speculating on the board of trade reached Mr. Kean, the active managing partner of the firm, and he spoke with Ker about it. Ker admitted he had been speculating some, but claimed that as he was operating with his own money, it was not an objectionable practice.

There is some contradiction between the testimony of Kean and that of Ker as to the number of conversations liad between them on the subject of Ker’s speculations, and as to what was said, but we fail to find in the testimony of either one, any forbidding, by Kean, of further speculation by Ker. The nearest approach to it is in the testimony of Kean that he asked Ker if he didn’t know it was against the rule, but he fails to state that he made any reply after Ker said he would stop if it was against the wishes of the firm.

The issue of fact for the jury was, were the defendants below guilty of such negligence in the care of the plaintiff’s bonds as to make them liable for their value % The degree of care required depended upon the nature of the possession of the plaintiffs in error.

It is strongly contended that the possession of the bonds by the firm was merely that of a gratuitous bailee, and therefore they are not liable for the loss; that the bonds were held as a special deposit merely, without compensation, and that no liability would attach except in the event of their loss having been the result of gross negligence.

The business of the firm of Preston, Kean. & Co., was that of general.banking, buying and selling exchange, bonds, etc. Merriam was one of their regular customers, keeping an ordinary deposit and check account with them, borrowing money of them and buying bonds of them. The bonds in question were at times held by the firm as collateral security to loans made to Merriam, and at other times were kept as a special deposit, subject to be taken away by him.

At the time they were stolen by Ker, they were not held by the firm as security, but were subject to Merriam’s call. During all the time the bonds were in their possession, the firm cut off and collected the interest coupons, giving Merriam credit for the amount in his general account, and in that way received a pecuniary benefit to the extent that a deposit of money in their bank was a benefit to them. One of the chief sources of profit derived by bankers is through their deposits.

Can it be said that a banker is without compensation who holds income-bearing bonds for his customers, and collects the income and deposits it with himself to the credit of his customers’ general account ?

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Bluebook (online)
46 Ill. App. 337, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-merriam-illappct-1892.