Hantman ex rel. Larson v. West Side Trust & Savings Bank

249 Ill. App. 372, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 70
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 19, 1928
DocketGen. No. 32,337
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 249 Ill. App. 372 (Hantman ex rel. Larson v. West Side Trust & Savings Bank) 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
Hantman ex rel. Larson v. West Side Trust & Savings Bank, 249 Ill. App. 372, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 70 (Ill. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scanlan

delivered the opinion of the court.

In the municipal court of Chicago, the plaintiff, Joe Hantman, for the use of Marie Larson, in a trial before the court without a jury, obtained a finding and judgment against West Side Trust & Savings Bank, a corporation, garnishee defendant, in the sum of $501.48. This appeal followed.

The following are all the material facts in the case: On April 18, 1913, in the municipal court of Chicago, Emil A. Oettinger recovered a judgment against Joe Hantman and Meyer Levine in the amount of $240.85. This judgment was assigned by Oettinger to Marie Larson on May 1, 1913. On September 23, 1926, after the judgment had been revived, Marie Larson caused to be issued a garnishee summons against the West Side Trust & Savings Bank et al. as garnishees. The writ — served on the bank on September 17, 1926 — directed the garnishees to answer as to rights, credits, choses in action, effects, estate, property or money in their hands belonging to Joe Hantman. On October 4, 1926, the bank answered that it had no property, money, etc., in its hands belonging to Joe Hantman. Later, the plaintiff filed interrogatories to the garnishee and therein for the first time, so far as the record shows, reference is made to the principal defendant as “Joe Hantman, alias Joe Handman.” As to certain interrogatories the bank answered that it made a real estate loan to one Jacob Roitman, July 23, 1926, in the amount of $50,000; that in connection with that loan the bank opened an account with Roitman on August 11, 1926, and credited the same with the said sum; that on September 16, 1926, the bank received an affidavit signed by Roitman and containing (inter alia) the following:

“The following is a true statement of the names of sub-contractors, and material men, the amounts of all contracts made and all money due and to become due and unpaid to material dealers, sub-contractors or workmen in the employ of the undersigned on or about above described building, * * * Name — H. Dubin; Amount of Contract, 18,000.00; Amount Due and to Become Due, 10,750.00 * * * United Iron Works; * * * H. Bclofsky; * * * Belmont Stair Works; * * * United Glass; * * * J. Handman; Amount of Contract, 5,500.00; Amount Due and to Become Due, 3,500.00. * * * Barron & Shapiro; * * * Chas. W. Bussey; * * * H. Tr of an sky; * * * Kavansky Bros.; * * * Albany Park Tile Co.; # * * Public Light Co. * * *”

On September 28, 1926, Roitman signed an order, directed to the defendant bank, to “pay to Joe Hand-man Plastering Contractor Three Thousand & no/100 Dollars for Labor & Material and charge same to my loan account on building situated No. 1815 S. Ridge-way Ave. Chicago, Ill. * * * Balance due $500 00/100.” On October 1, 1926, Joe Handman presented the order, together with waivers of liens of materials and labor, to the bank, and it thereupon issued its check for $3,000, payable to the order of Joe Handman, and this check, indorsed by Handman and deposited by him in the Liberty Trust & Savings Bank, was paid by the defendant bank, through the clearing house, on October 2, 1926. On October 16, 1926, Roitman issued a written order, directed to the defendant bank, to pay to J. Handman $500, and the bank issued a check for $500 payable to the order of “J. Handman,” and this check, with the indorsement “Joe Handman,” was deposited by the latter in the Liberty Trust & Savings Bank and was paid by the defendant bank, through the clearing house, on October 19, 1926. The bank charged both of these payments to the real estate loan account of Roitman on. the dates of the respective checks. On October 1, 1926, and October 16, 1926, other subcontractors and material men presented similar orders from Roitman to the bank, and these were paid by the bank in the same manner as it paid Handman, and the respective amounts of the orders were charged to the real estate loan account of Roitman: The bank, in making real estate loans, required all applicants to give an affidavit such as was made by Roitman and it also required the production of waivers of liens on all building loans before payments were made thereon; “that when Waivers of Lien are tendered to the bank in connection with a real estate loan, the proceeds of the loan are paid to the maker; that frequently the Bank pays directly to sub-contractors and contractors for work performed and material furnished by them upon orders issued by the maker of the loan * * *; that unless Waivers of Liens are presented with said orders, and upon inspection of the premises it is found that said work has been performed, and material furnished, payments thereof are not made.”

The defendant contends that under the pleadings • in this case the burden was upon the plaintiff to prove that Joe Hantman, the principal defendant, and Joe Handman, subcontractor, to whom the bank paid the amounts in question, were one and the same person, and that the plaintiff failed in that regard. We will refer to this contention hereafter.

The defendant next contends that even if it be ■ assumed that the defendant Joe Hantman and the subcontractor Joe Handman were one and the same person, nevertheless, at the time of the service of the writ of garnishment and up to the time of the filing of its answer, the bank did not have in its hands rights, credits, choses in action, effects, estate, property or money belonging to the principal defendant and that therefore a judgment could not properly be entered against it as garnishee, and it further contends that, regardless of the merits of the first and second contentions, the process in a garnishment action must designate with clearness and accuracy the name of the judgment debtor whose funds the plaintiff seeks to reach and that the plaintiff in the present proceeding failed in that regard, and that as the proof does not show that the bank had knowledge that the name of the principal defendant was not correctly given in the process or had reason to suppose that the garnishment proceedings were intended to be against its creditor, judgment could not be justly entered against it in the instant case.

We will pass upon the last contention first. In German Nat. Bank of Denver v. National State Bank of Boulder, 3 Colo. App. 17, 31 Pac. 122, it was held that a garnishee is unaffected by a notice served on him, wherein the middle initial of the person named is different from that of a person to whom he is indebted, unless lie is shown to have had actual knowledge that his creditor and the person named in the writ are the saíne, and in announcing this rule the court said: “It is not intended to so broadly declare this doctrine as to necessarily make it applicable to grants and contracts where the identity of the persons may be the subject-matter of easy proof, nor to cases of pleading which are susceptible of amendment without detriment to the rights and interests of- third parties, but simply and solely to those writs and notices by which it is sought to hold third persons whose rights may be affected by the error, and whose situation has changed before they may have in any known legal way become charged with knowledge and notice of the identity of the individual described by the erroneous name.

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Bluebook (online)
249 Ill. App. 372, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hantman-ex-rel-larson-v-west-side-trust-savings-bank-illappct-1928.