Hanna v. Drovers' National Bank

62 N.E. 556, 194 Ill. 252
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 62 N.E. 556 (Hanna v. Drovers' National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanna v. Drovers' National Bank, 62 N.E. 556, 194 Ill. 252 (Ill. 1901).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Wilkin

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellants sued appellee in the superior court of Cook county in an action on the case. Upon the trial the court directed the jury to find for the defendant, and upon a verdict in obedience to that instruction entered judgment against the plaintiffs for costs. The plaintiffs appealed to the Appellate Court for the First District, where the judgment of the superior court was affirmed. To reverse the latter judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

The declaration consisted of four counts, setting out that defendant was on June 10,1890, engaged in the general banking business in Chicago, and that plaintiffs were on that date, and prior thereto, depositors in its bank, and on that date had on deposit in said bank an ample amount to meet all checks theretofore drawn by them on said bank; that plaintiffs were on that date engaged in the live stock commission business at the Union Stock Yards, Chicago, and received live stock by the car-loads to sell on commission, and were, as such firm, of good name, credit, reputation and business standing. It was set out in the three first counts, severally, that on June 7, 1890, plaintiffs drew a check in favor of Hess Bros, for $3300; on the same day one in favor of Rittenhouse & Embree for $32.32; another on June 9, 1890, in favor of Philo A. Otis for $40, which checks were duly presented to defendant by said parties for payment on or about said dates and payment refused in each case, although plaintiffs’ balance on deposit was then ample to pay such checks. The fourth count set out that plaintiffs were on said June 10 indebted to certain consignors of stock on consignments shipped to plaintiffs for sale, and that plaintiffs’ said deposit in defendant’s bank included proceeds of such sales of stock and held in trust for such consignors, which facts were known to defendant; that plaintiffs’ firm on that date had in bank sufficient to pay said indebtedness, and demanded of said bank the balance to their credit to pay said indebtedness to said consignors, and that defendant refused to honor said demand, and thereby caused plaintiffs’ said firm to be reputed unworthy of credit among their customers, and by reason of defendant’s said wrongful acts plaintiffs’ said business was wholly lost and destroyed.

The defendant filed the general issue and three special pleas of former adjudication. The substance of these pleas was, that in a certain cause in the circuit court of Cook county, wherein one Clemmer and others, consignors of the stock to Hanna, Son & Co., were plaintiffs, and plaintiffs and defendant in this action were defendants, a final decree was entered July 16, 1894, finding that the moneys on deposit in defendant’s bank to the credit of Hanna, Son & Co. on June 10, 1890, were the proceeds of sales of stock shipped to Hanna, Son & Co. by said consignors for sale, and in equity belonged to said consignors, and that the bank had knowledge of that fact, and decreeing that said bank pay said moneys to said consignors, and that the application of said moneys to the payment of the note, held by the bank, of John S. Hanna, William P. Hanna and S. W. Sinclair was unlawful and unauthorized. The decree set up in these several pleas is the same decree which was before this court for review in Clemmer v. Drovers' Nat. Bank, 157 Ill. 206.

To the plea of not guilty plaintiffs filed a similiter and replied to the several-special pleas, but afterwards withdrew the replication and filed a demurrer to those pleas, which was sustained by the court. The defendant then filed a plea of the Statute of Limitations, and notice of defense under the general issue, in which notice it set up the same decree described in the special pleas. To the plea of the Statute of Limitations a demurrer was sustained. The issues, therefore, upon which the trial was had were formed by a plea of the general issue and the special matters of defense set up in the notice.

It was proved upon the trial that checks were drawn upon the defendant as set forth in the first three counts of the declaration, and payments thereof refused, each being endorsed “no funds.” It also appears from the evidence that the balance in the bank to the credit of plaintiffs at the time the three several checks were drawn amounted to the sum of $3474.71, or $102.39 more than the aggregate amount of those checks; but the money was not, in fact, theirs, but belonged to G. G-. Glemmer and others, complainant and cross-complainants in the chancery proceeding which resulted in the decree set up in the notice filed by the defendant with the general issue herein. About the time the three checks were drawn the defendant bank attempted to apply said balance of $3474.71 upon an over-due note which it held against the plaintiffs and one S. W. Sinclair, and on June 10, 1890, notified Hanna, Son & Go. of that fact. Thereupon, William P. Hanna, a member of the firm, went to the bank and insisted that the money should not be so applied, but the cashier of the bank refused to yield the point. As a witness Hanna testified that he then demanded the money, and told the cashier, in substance, that it belonged to their shippers. He also testified that after that conversation “I went back to the office and had a conversation with my father. Then we telegraphed our shippers, whose proceeds were held by the bank. The next morning after I telegraphed, a number of the shippers, Mr. Clemmer and Mr. Felthouse, came in. They went over to the bank, I believe, and demanded their money. I saw them. Suit was commenced against the bank by Clemmer, I think.” It is conceded that the result of the telegrams to Clemmer and others was the bringing of the chancery suit, reported in 157 Ill. 206. That was a suit against both the bank and these plaintiffs, in which the latter maintained, and assisted in proving, that the money ($3474.71) was the money of the complainants and cross-complainants in that litigation. It was not claimed in that suit, nor is it in this, that either Hess Bros., Rittenhouse & Embree or Otis had or claimed any interest in or right to said balance, as consignors of Hanna, Son & Co.

It seems to be conceded that if the trial court properly admitted the decree set up in the notice, in evidence, and if upon that decree, together with all the other evidence in the case, plaintiffs had no cause of action, there was no reversible error in the direction of the judge to find the issues for the defendant. It is claimed the rulings of the trial court in admitting the decree in evidence were inconsistent with its judgment sustaining the demurrer to the special pleas. Not necessarily so, there being nothing here to show upon what ground the demurrer was sustained. But even if it were true that the rulings were inconsistent, it would not follow that it was error to admit proof of the decree. We think it perfectly clear that it was competent, and counsel have cited no authority nor assigned any sufficient reason to the contrary.

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Bluebook (online)
62 N.E. 556, 194 Ill. 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanna-v-drovers-national-bank-ill-1901.