Hight v. Sanner

71 Ill. App. 183, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 221
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 25, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 71 Ill. App. 183 (Hight v. Sanner) 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
Hight v. Sanner, 71 Ill. App. 183, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 221 (Ill. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was assumpsit by appellee against appellants. The declaration contained the common counts and several special counts, also an amended additional count. The latter averred that the plaintiff delivered into an elevator owned by John W. Walker 1,791 bushels of corn, worth twenty-five cents per bushel, which was stored there for the plaintiff, and was his property; that defendants, well knowing the facts, appropriated the corn to their own use, and thereby became indebted to the plaintiff for the value of the corn, and being so indebted, promised to pay, eto., etc.

The defendants plead non-assumpsit, and the issue being tried by jury, there was a verdict for plaintiff for $403, upon which judgment was rendered, and the defendants appealed.

It appears from the evidence that John W. Walker was engaged in the business of buying and selling grain, and that ■ he had an elevator in which he stored corn belonging to himself and corn belonging- to others deposited for storage. He charged and received compensation for such storage, but mingled his corn and th'at of depositors in a .common mass, so that when the depositor called for his corn, or gave an order to sell it, the number of bushels deposited would be taken out of the elevator and disposed of as required by the depositor. The appellants, defendants below, were bankers with whom Walker kept an' account. He was in the habit of depositing his drafts with them for grain sold by him, and of drawing checks on them for grain purchased and for other purposes. His account becoming largely overdrawn, J. L. Hight, one of the appellants, urged him to make his balance good, and asked him whether he could not. sell grain to raise what he owed them. Walker testifies that he-told Hight he had not much in the elevator that belonged to him, but that he would ship and sell all, including that of depositors', if they (the appellants) would pay the claims of depositors therefor; and that while Hight did not expressly say they would do so, he told him to go ahead, ship and sell.

Accordingly corn was shipped in large quantities and sold, the drafts therefor being deposited -with appellants, who collected the money thereon. The- appellee had at that time some 1,791 bushels of corn on store in the elevator, and there was a considerable quantity belonging to other parties, also on storage. These shipments were made without consulting the owners and without their-knowledge, as we infer from the proof. The appellee called on Walker for his corn, and was informed that it had been shipped, and that appellants had the money for it, and that they would, or at least should, pay- him the proper amount. Appellees deny that they agreed to pay for corn of depositors. E. L. Hight, who was present at the time of the conversation referred to by Walker, corroborates J. L. Hight in his version of it. They say that Walker did offer to ship and sell the corn on storage if they would pay the owners and that they declined to do so, and only Avished him to sell what belonged to him and give, them the proceeds. He says he told them that appellee had corn there, and they deny that the name of appellee was mentioned in that connection.

It is not to be doubted that Walker sold the corn of his depositors and turned the proceeds of it, or some of it, over to the appellants by depositing the drafts with them, but the question in dispute is whether the appellants received the money, knowing it Avas for corn belonging to depositors, and whether they did so Avith an understanding that they Avould satisfy the claim of depositors. There is no proof that they ever had any manual control of the corn, that they in fact handled it as charged in the amended additional count, but if the testimony of Walker is true, they received the proceeds of corn belonging to sundry depositors, of whom appellee was one, and agreed to pay for it to the proper owners, upon which state of facts recovery might be had under the common count for money had and received. As stated, however, this is vigorously denied by appellants. It is not easy to understand why they should make such an arrangement, what they were to gain by it, and Avhy they should incur the risk of trouble very likely to follow, but it is not impossible and it was a question for the jury.

Two special interrogatories were put to the jury at the instance of appellants, as folloAVs :

“1. Does the preponderance of evidence show that Hight & Son took and received the corn, knowing it belonged to Sanner ?
“ 2. If the money from the sale of Banner’s corn came into the hands of Hight & Son, does the preponderance of evidence show that Hight & Son at the time had notice that the money Avas the proceeds from the sale of Banner’s corn ? ”

The jury ansAvered both of these in the negative, and yet found the general verdict for plaintiff.

It is urged by appellants that the special findings are inconsistent .with, and must control the general finding, and that the judgment should have been accordingly. Appellee insists there is no inconsistency. The answer to the first interrogatory is inconsistent with the general verdict for' plaintiff upon the additional count, for that count, as well as the other special counts, involves the proposition that the defendants appropriated the corn, knowing it to be the plaintiff’s. The answer to the second is inconsistent with the general verdict if it was necessary to a recovery under the common count for money had and received, to show that defendants, when they received the money, knew whose corn was thereby represented.

It is forcibly argued that if defendants knew Walker was selling the corn of his depositors, which he had no right to do, and that the money was the proceeds of such illegal sale, it is not material whether they knew ' to whom it belonged. If they aided, or assisted, or co-operated with Walker in such an illegal disposition of the corn, no matter whether they knew who owned the corn, their action might be regarded as tortious, and the money coming to their hands by such means might be recovered under the common,count for money had and received. 2 Gr. Ev., Sec. 120. So also if there was no wrongful intent by them or by Walker if they promised him to pay out the money to the owners, whether they at the time knew who the owners were or not. In either of these supposable aspects of the matter there was no inconsistency between the special findings and the general verdict.

Some complaint is made of the ruling of the court in giving, refusing and modifying instructions, but after a careful examination of them we think the law of the case was, on the whole, fairly presented. Two instructions, the fifth and sixth, given at the instance of the plaintiff, were not applicable under the evidence because there was no proof that defendants appropriated the corn, but we think the defendants ought not to urge this objection when they asked the court to submit the first interrogatory to the jury, which, assumed there was evidence tending to show that they did take the corn.

A careful consideration of the case makes it apparent that the real question at issue was whether defendants knowingly received the proceeds of corn unlawfully sold by Walker.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hight v. Walker
78 Ill. App. 451 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 Ill. App. 183, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hight-v-sanner-illappct-1897.