Hessing v. McCloskey

37 Ill. 341
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 37 Ill. 341 (Hessing v. McCloskey) 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
Hessing v. McCloskey, 37 Ill. 341 (Ill. 1865).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Breese

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was an action of trespass de bonis asporiaiis, brought in the Superior Court of Chicago by appellee against appellant.

The issues were made up on the plea of not guilty, and four special pleas, by which the defendant sought to justify the taking, by virtue of four different writs of attachment in his hands as sheriff of Cook county, against the goods and chattels of Thomas and Cyrus M. Bellamy.

The jury found the defendant guilty, and assessed the damages at two thousand and four hundred and seventeen 50-100 dollars, for which the court, on overruling a motion for a new trial, rendered judgment.

The controversy, therefore, is between the vendee and the creditors of the vendor, for the value of the goods and chattels, which consisted of clothing and some piece goods.

The leading question before the court and jury was, as to the validity of the sale from Cyrus M. Bellamy to appellee. There was much testimony on the point, which is all carefully preserved, and which we have considered, and which, in our judgment, establishes the validity of the sale.

The only question, therefore, before us, is, was the case fairly submitted to the jury, by the instructions of the court ?

The appellant insists it was not so submitted, and complains that the court gave this instruction for the plaintiff, numbered three:

Although the jury may believe, from the evidence, that the possession of the goods at McGregor, Iowa, was in Cyrus M. Bellamy, and not in the possession of George T. Bellamy, as the agent of the plaintiff, yet the right of recovery for these goods being in Chicago, is not necessarily thereby affiected; and if the jury believe, from the evidence, that the sale in. Hew York was a fair one, and the possession of the goods in Chicago was in the plaintiff" or her agent, then in that case, the plaintiff might recover for these goods in Chicago, although she might not have been enabled to have recovered had she sued for a seizure of the goods at McGregor.

To understand the bearing of this instruction, it is necessary to state, that on the sale being consummated in Hew York, the agent of the plaintiff had them boxed up in a large number of boxes, and marked to one Counts, at McGregor, Iowa. Some of the boxes arrived there, and were taken into the possession of George T. Bellamy, the brother and agent of the plaintiff, whilst these in controversy were seized at Chicago, in their transit to McGregor. There was some testimony tending to show that the goods which reached McGregor came into the possession of Cyrus M. Bellamy, the vendor. We think, under this state of facts, that if so, the goods seized at Chicago could not and ought not to be affected by it. They were in the possession of the plaintiff’s agent at Chicago, and stood unembarrassed by any difficulties which might have surrounded that portion of the goods which reached McGregor. The court did not intimate, in this instruction, as the counsel for appellant argues it did, that appellee could not have recovered for the goods at McGregor, had they been seized. The language used by the court is súseeptible of no such meaning. It simply told the jury, that although the plaintiff might not have been enabled to recover those goods which reached McGregor, had she sued for a seizure of those goods, still that did not prevent her from recovering those goods which were taken out of the possession of her agent at Chicago, if the sale in Hew York was a fair one. If there be a fault in this instruction, it is against the plaintiff, and injured her case, if injury it did in any quarter. The truth of the matter is, if the sale in Hew York was a fair sale, we do not see how the goods could have been seized at McGregor, and taken out of the possession of her agent there.

But to place the whole matter in the clearest light possible, the court, of its own motion, gave to the jury the following instruction, and numbered four :

The court instructs the jury that the mam question in this cause is as to the honesty and good faith of the alleged transfer of the goods in question, from Cyrus M. Bellamy to the plaintiff. If that sale was in good faith, for an adequate consideration for the purpose of paying a debt or debts, which he owed to her, and if the possession of the goods was delivered to her, or to Mr. Shuard, or George T. Bellamy, acting for her, by her authority, for her use, then no subsequent acts or declarations of Cyrus M. Bellamy, as to the goods that arrived at McGregor’s Landing, would affect her title or right to recover for the taking of .the goods in question, and therefore, if the jury believe, from the evidence, that the goods were so transferred as above mentioned, and' if the jury further believe, from the evidence, that the defendant took the goods in question, under the attachments against Cyrus M. Bellamy, after such transfer and delivery, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover as damages in this action, the value of the goods at the time of such taking, with interest from that time to the present, at the rate of six per cent, per annum. But if on the contrary, the jury find, from the evidence, that such transfer was not in good faith, for an adequate consideration as before mentioned, or that the possession was not delivered as before mentioned, and if the jury find, from the evidence, that the defendant, as sheriff of Cook county, Illinois, took the goods under writs of attachment against Cyrus M. Bellamy, in favor of persons who were creditors of Cyrus M. Bellamy, upon debts existing at the time of such transfer, then the plaintiff is not entitled to recover in this action.

Here is the whole ease narrowed down by this instruction to a very small compass, rendering any other instruction wholly unnecessary. Büt the counsel for appellant take exception to this instruction, and because the court introduced the name of George T. Bellamy into it, as receiver of the goods as agent of the plaintiff, it was erroneous, for the reason, there is no evidence connecting him with ■ the delivery of the goods.

About this, the counsel are certainly mistaken. Mr. Shuard testifies that George T. helped to pack the goods in Hew York, and to mark them for McGregor’s Landing. He also stated on his recall and reexamination, in reply to the question, what arrangement was made between him and plaintiff in reference to who should take the custody of the goods from the time of their leaving Hew York, he answered, the arrangement was, that her brother, George T. Bellamy, was to go on with the goods, and should go West, and. attend to the sale of the goods, and if he needed any specific instructions, he was to stop on his way, and see Mr. Townsend, who had charge of her matters, and he would direct him. It was also proved by the testimony of Cyrus M. Bellamy, that the plaintiff had executed to G-eorge T. a power of attorney to act for her, which was produced and read on the trial. This is sufficient evidence to justify the court in connecting George T. Bellamy with the transaction in the mode it was done by the court, and is not obnoxious to the criticism bestowed upon it by appellant.

But it is further insisted, the instruction was improper, because it did not tell the jury what was good faith in a contract of sale, and what was, in law, an adequate consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
37 Ill. 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hessing-v-mccloskey-ill-1865.