Handwerk v. Oswood

23 Ill. App. 282, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 287
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 13, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 23 Ill. App. 282 (Handwerk v. Oswood) 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
Handwerk v. Oswood, 23 Ill. App. 282, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 287 (Ill. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

Baker, P. J.

This suit was brought by Handwerk, as assignee of MeEwen. against Joseph and Austin Oswood, for moneys claimed to be due upon a book account. The demand, with the exception of a small item of $13.05 for lumber, is for the recovery of cash advances made by the insolvent prior to his assignment, upon corn delivered by them to him. There was a trial in the Circuit Court, without a jury, and the assignee recovered judgment for $339.65, but not being content with the amount of the damages assessed, he took this appeal; and in this court various errors and cross-errors are assigned by the respective parties to the controversy.

In 1883, MeEwen was engaged in the grain business at Morris, and between the 8th day of September and 14th clay of ¡November, of that year, appellees hauled from their farm and delivered to him 4,352 bushels of shelled corn of the crop of • 1882, under an agreement that they should be allowed to come in at some future day and select a market price at which the corn should be settled for. The transaction was a sale and not a mere bailment, and the title to the property vested in MeEwen, and all that remained to be done was for appellees to fix the price of the grain under the option given them, by designating on some future day, the market price of that day as their selection. Lonergan v. Stewart, 55 Ill. 44; Ives v. Hartley, 51 Ill. 520; McEwen v. Morey, 60 Ill. 32.

It was contended by appellees upon the trial that 1,688 bushels of this corn was accepted as “rejected corn,” and the residue as “'No. 2” corn. The tickets that were issued upon the delivery of the corn would indicate that a larger proportion of it was inspected as “ rejected.” The Oswoods testified that the first four loads hauled were graded by MeEwen, against their protests, as “ rejected,” and so marked on the ticket; that- thereupon they began hauling their corn to Pcnsca, where it was graded “No. 2,” and MeEwen then agreed if they would sell their corn to him, he would take all their good corn, including the four loads previously marked “ rejected,” as “No. 2” corn; and further that certain loads of corn afterward hauled for them by their neighbors, and designated on the tickets as “rejected,” were in fact apart of the good corn, and that they spoke to MeEwen about it, and he said he would make it “ Wo. 2.” This testimony was objected to on the ground it was incompetent, because it tended to contradict the written grain tickets. These so-called “ ticket-; ” are not written contracts; they are mere memoranda made by the clerk of the amounts and quality of the corn hauled. With the exception of the ticket given at the first delivery, they are signed by no one. With respect to the ticket signed by McEwen, it was entirely competent to show by parol that he agreed, in consideration that they would haul the rest of their corn to him, to accept the four loads already delivered, as “ Wo. 2,” notwithstanding they had been marked “rejected” on the memoranda signed by him. And so, if the corn hauled by the neighbors had by mistake been designated as “ rejected ” on the memoranda given them by the clerk, no good reason is perceived why MJEwen could not verbally agree upon his attention being called to the matter, that such mistakes should be rectified, or why such agreement might not he shown by parol testimony. We see no error in the ruling of the court admitting this evidence.

It is admitted that appellees should be credited, in addition to the corn hauled from their farms, with 493 bushels and eight pounds, known as the “ Faxwell corn,” which had been hauled by one Faxwell, and stored in one of McEwen’s cribs, and was on March 31, 1883, sold by Faxwell to them. On the same day, appellees sold this corn to McEwen, and a preponderance of the evidence shows that he agreed to take it as “Wo. 2” corn.

There is much conflict in the testimony with reference to the ownership of what is known as the “ Jacobson ” corn. Between the 2d day of January and the 2d day of February, 1883, one John Jacobson stored in the warehouse of O. J. Nelson & Company, grain dealers, adjoining the premises of McEwen, 849 bushels and fifty-five pounds of corn; it was not sold to Nelson & Company, for the reason Jacobson wanted 50 cents a bushel for it, and they considered it worth only 47 cents per bushel.

On the 16th of March following, appellees bought this corn from Jacobson at 50 cents per bushel; and they claim that on the same day and before purchasing it they called upon MeEwen and he agreed to take the corn from them as “No. 2 ” corn, and give them the right to fix the price, when the market suited, and directed them to go over and tell O. J. Nelson & Company that the corn belonged to him. In view of the testimony of appellees and their brother and of Nelson, we are unable to say that the finding of the trial court that this corn was sold to MeEwen was against the weight of the evidence.

During 1883, the Oswoods drew from MeEwen, in money, $2,630. and got from him lumber to the amount of $13.05, making $2,643.05 in all. Appellant claims that he is entitled to interest upon this sum, and urges that for almost twenty years it has been the general custom of the grain trade in Morris to charge interest upon advances made on corn, and that persons dealing in any particular market will be taken to deal according to the known, general and uniform custom of that market. It would seem that where advances are made by a warehouseman on corn stored, or by the shipper to the owner on corn shipped for account of the owner, interest on such advances might, with propriety, be charged; but it hardly appears proper where corn is sold, and the vendee is vested with both possession and title, that interest should be allowed upon moneys paid by the vendee to the vendor on account of such corn. Such moneys would be regarded as payments on the property sold and delivered and not as loans.

But it is a sufficient answer to this claim of appellant to say that he is not entitled to interest in this casé by virtue of the grain trade usage in Morris, for the reason that the evidence shows that appellees, prior to the transactions here involved, had similar transactions with MeEwen, and that in such prior transactions, he did not charge them interest, and it must be presumed that these last deals between the parties were understood to be upon the same terms. .

■ The evidence shows that the corn crop of 1882 was of low grade and poor quality; and also that the inclination of the corn market from March, 1883, down to and until the date of the trial of this cause, was downward. On February 4, 1884, McEwen became insolvent and made an assignment for the benefit of his creditors. Appellees had not at that date designated a market price at which the corn should be settled for, nor did they assume, after the appointment of the. assignee, to make such selection. The agreement with reference to fixing a market price should receive a reasonaDe interpretation. It surely was not intended by the parties that 'appellees should have all future time in which to make their selection of a market price, or that they should have the privilege of looking back over the fluctuations of the corn market and making a retrospective choice.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Ill. App. 282, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/handwerk-v-oswood-illappct-1887.