Hecht v. Powell

240 Ill. App. 124, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 224
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 10, 1926
DocketGen. No. 30,329
StatusPublished

This text of 240 Ill. App. 124 (Hecht v. Powell) 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
Hecht v. Powell, 240 Ill. App. 124, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 224 (Ill. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Taylor

delivered the opinion of the court.

At the April term, 1921, the plaintiff, Joseph Powell, filed a claim in the probate court of Cook county, in the estate of Frank A. Hecht, deceased, for $55,200, the alleged difference between the purchase price of 2,300 barrels of whisky on June 29, 1917, and the market price of the whisky on September 15,1917. On March 21,1924, after a hearing, at which evidence was presented, the probate court allowed the claim in the sum of $48,300. From that order there was an appeal by the executors of the estate of Frank A. Hecht, deceased, to the circuit court of Cook county. There was a trial de novo in the circuit court, without a jury, and on March 10, 1925, a judgment was entered for the claimant and against the executors of the estate in the sum of $27,851.85. This appeal is by the executors from that judgment, and the claimant has assigned cross errors. Hecht died on November 20,1920, and the claim against his estate was filed by Powell in the Probate Court on May 7,1921. The claim alleged that it was based on a written offer made on June 29, 1917, by Hecht to Powell, which is as follows:

“I will sell you twenty-three hundred (2,300) barrels of Waterson 1912 & 1913 Whiskies, as evidenced by the receipt of the Pleasure Eidge Park Distilling Company, of Louisville, Kentucky, and will guarantee the whiskies in the warehouse of that company and delivery on presentation of warehouse receipts, storage and taxes to be paid by me to date of sale.

“Price — Twenty-Eight ($28.00) Dollars per barrel, option good until July 6,1917.”

It alleged that Powell accepted the offer and at the time mentioned, and thereafter, was ready, able and willing to perform his part, and so notified Hecht; that Hecht failed to deliver the 2,300 barrels of whisky on July 6, 1917, and thereafter, although delivery was demanded of him and payment tendered, and on September 15, 1917, Hecht notified him, Powell, of his refusal to carry out the contract and deliver the whisky.

Damages were claimed in the total sum of $55,200, being the difference between 2,300 barrels at $28 a barrel, the contract price, and at $52 a barrel, the latter being the market price on September 15, 1917.

At the trial in the circuit court, four witnesses were called by the claimant, Powell, and one by the defendant. The only witnesses who testified on the merits of the controversy were Bosenfield and Guyton, both called by the plaintiff. Powell, being ineligible under the statute [Cahill’s St. ch. 51, ¶ 2], did not testify.

The evidence of Bosenfield is to the following effect: He was an officer of the Sunnybrook Distilling Company. The document in question, the writing of June 29, 1917, he first saw on that date. He had known Powell for about 20 years. Powell, as soon as he got the written offer, came to him, the witness, and asked him if he would finance it, and he told Powell he would. He, the witness, was to advance the money and get Powell’s note, at seven per cent interest, and to receive the whisky receipts as collateral.

Powell asked him, as he, Powell, was very hard of hearing, to go with him to see and speak with Hecht, to act for him, Powell. He and Powell went to Hecht’s office, on July 5 or 6, 1917. He, Rosenfield, had with him a certified check, payable to Hecht, for $64,400, and Powell had the written offer. There were present at that meeting Hecht, Guyton, an employee of Hecht, Powell, and himself, the witness. He, the witness, told Hecht that he was there with Powell, who desired to exercise his option and. was ready to take it up. He had a certified check with him, and tendered it to Hecht. Hecht then? went through his papers and found certificates for about 500 barrels. He said the balance was in the bank and would come over tomorrow, and asked him, the witness, to come over tomorrow; that he had the papers in the Continental Bank. Hecht told him how he happened to have the whisky; that he was financing a man named Flexner, and wanted to get his money out. When he, the witness, showed him the certified check, he, Hecht, did not say anything about the quality of the tender. He, the witness, went back to his office and after talking, the matter over, his brother wrote on the bottom of the written offer the following: “7/6/1917. I herewith - extend the option for the purchase of the above described whiskey at price hereinbefore named until July 14, 1917.” The next day after the first meeting he, the witness, and Powell went again and saw Hecht, and showed him, the memorandum and said to him: “If you can’t deliver today, why don’t you set a date!” Hecht said: “No, I will deliver those warehouse receipts, but I cannot deliver them now”; that he was advised not to deliver “now.” He saw Hecht at various times thereafter about the delivery. After July 6, he talked a number of times with Hecht, at the request of Powell, on the telephone, the first time being about July 8 or 10, then again a week after, and two weeks after, and in August, and Powell used to call Hecht up about every other day. Hecht kept putting him off from day to day, and never set any specific timé. On. one occasion he said he did not have it in shape, to let it go for a while. Powell was with him, the witness, on the occasions when he saw Hecht. The substance of Hecht’s answers, until the middle of September, was VI cannot deliver,” and then about the middle of September he said, “I won’t deliver.” Prior to that Hecht had not said he would not deliver it. Hecht told him on one occasion that his lawyer advised him that he had better not sell the whisky; not to deliver, that his legal position was not such that he could.

The evidence of Guyton, Hecht’s employee, is to the following effect: Powell, whom he had known for many years, came to his, the witness’, desk sometime in July, 1917, and he took him to Hecht’s office. He did not remember exactly the conversation, but he saw the check tendered and heard some conversation about it, and heard Hecht say he could not deliver the whisky.

There was introduced in evidence for the claimant an affidavit of an employee of the National Bank of the Republic, which recited that on July 6, 1917, that bank certified a check for $64,400 drawn upon the Rosenfield account. There was, also, introduced in evidence for the claimant an affidavit of merits, sworn to and filed by Hecht in the municipal court in a suit by the claimant, Powell, against him for the same account. That recites that Powell did not, nor anyone for him, on July 6,1917, or at any time, accept his, Hecht’s proposition; that Powell was not on that date or at any other time, ready, able and willing to carry out the proposition; that he did not, nor any one for him, on July 6, 1917, or at any other time, notify him, Hecht, that he, Powell, was ready, able and willing to perform his part; that he did not at that time or at any time, offer or tender to him, Hecht, any money or thing of value, for the purchase price of the whisky, but abandoned whatever right he had; that he did not, nor any one for him at any time, demand a delivery of the whisky; that he did not on September 15, 1917, or at any time, notify him that he, Hecht, had refused to carry out his contract by delivering the whisky; that on July 6, 1917, he, Hecht, was ready, able and willing to deliver to Powell the warehouse receipts for the whisky and to- carry out the terms of his offer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
240 Ill. App. 124, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hecht-v-powell-illappct-1926.