Illinois Bond & Investment Co. v. Gardner

249 Ill. App. 337, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 67
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 1, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 249 Ill. App. 337 (Illinois Bond & Investment Co. v. Gardner) 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
Illinois Bond & Investment Co. v. Gardner, 249 Ill. App. 337, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 67 (Ill. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wolfe

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action in replevin brought in the circuit court of Franklin county, at the June term, A. D. 1927, by the appellant, the Illinois Bond & Investment Company, against the appellees, H. F. Gardner, the Summers Motor Company and James S. Pritchard, sheriff of Franklin county, to recover the possession of a Nash automobile described in the affidavit, writ and declaration.

The declaration is the usual form in such cases. To which declaration, the appellees filed three pleas, viz: Non cepit, non detinet, and a special plea that Pritchard, the sheriff, held the said car under a legal execution. To these pleas the appellant filed separate replications and issue was joined.

The Illinois Bond & Investment Company is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Illinois, doing business in Salem, Illinois. The Southwest Nash Company is a distributor of Nash automobiles in St. Louis, Missouri.

The Summers Motor Company of Benton, Illinois, in May, 1927, applied to the Southwest Nash Company to purchase the Nash automobile in question. The Summers Motor Company being unable to pay the entire purchase price in cash, the Southwest Nash Company made a bill of sale of said automobile in favor of the appellant, the Illinois Bond & Investment Company, whereby they sold and transferred to the appellant the Nash automobile in question. They also caused a certain trade acceptance to be issued in favor of the Illinois Bond & Investment Company, signed by the Southwest Nash Company, drawer and distributor, and by the Summers Motor Company, as drawee; and also at the same time an application for renewal of the trade acceptance of said automobile was signed by the Summers Company; they also caused a trust receipt to be executed by the appellee, the Summers Motor Company, in and by which it acknowledged the receipt of the 'automobile in question from the Southwest Nash Company of St. Louis, Missouri, acting for the appellant, the Illinois Bond & Investment Company, according to the terms and conditions of said trust receipt, and attached to said bill of sale, trade acceptance and trust receipt, its draft on the National Bank of Commerce, of St. Louis, for the sum of $1,162.93 to the Illinois Bond & Investment Company, and signed by the Southwest Nash Company.

The same was sent through the National Bank of Commerce in St. Louis to the Salem National Bank of Salem, Illinois, where the said bill of sale, trade acceptance and trust receipt were taken up by the appellant, the Illinois Bond & Investment Company, upon payment of said draft.

In and by .the said trust receipt it wTas provided that the Summer¿Motor Company agreed to hold the said automobile in trust as the property of the appellant, the Illinois Bond & Investment Company, and to return the same on demand; that the said Summers Motor Company would not rent, lease, mortgage, pledge, incumber, use or demonstrate the same, but would drive it directly to its ulace of business and hold the same until paid for.

It was also provided in said trust receipt that the Summers Motor Company, upon the written order or release of the appellant, the Illinois Bond & Investment Company, might sell said automobile, but said sale should not be made except on the written order or release by the appellant, and then only for cash, and for no less than the sum mentioned in the written order or release previously obtained from the appellant,

The Summers Motor Company upon receipt of the said Nash automobile drove it directly to its place of business on North Main street in the city of Benton, Illinois, and there stored and displayed the same. While the said automobile was being so stored and displayed by the said Summers Motor Company, and without the knowledge of the appellant and without any written order or release as specified in the' trust receipt from appellant, Eagle Summers, representing the Summers Motor Company, sold and delivered said Nash automobile to appellee H. F. G-ardner, who paid the said Summers Motor Company for the same.

The agent of the appellant soon after this found the ear had been removed without the knowledge of the appellant. Upon inquiry he learned that it was in the possession of the appellee H. F. Gardner, and immediately the agent of the appellant made demand upon the appellee H. F. Gardner to surrender the automobile to the appellant as owner of the same. Gardner refused to surrender the automobile to the appellant, who took steps to replevin the car. In the meantime, appellee James S. Pritchard, sheriff of Franklin county, having a legal execution on a judgment, levied upon said automobile in the possession of H. F. G-ardner and took the same into his possession. Thereupon the appellant instituted a replevin suit against all of the defendants to recover said automobile.

On the trial of said cause appellant introduced in evidence, before the jury, appellant’s bill of sale, trade acceptance, etc., claiming the title and right of possession to the said automobile, and also gave evidence of the demand made upon the appellee H. F. Gardner and James S. Pritchard, sheriff of Franklin County, to surrender possession of the car to the appellant; also the facts of the storage of the automobile in the Summers Motor Company’s place of business in the city of Benton and the taking of the same from the salesroom and delivery thereof to the appellee H. F. Gardner, without the knowledge or consent of the appellant.

The appellee H. F. Gardner testified on behalf of the appellees as to the purchasing of the automobile and paying the Summers Motor Company for same, as above stated; that the car was in the Summers Motor Company’s sale and storage room where this car and a number of other cars were stored and displayed. C. B. Dollins testified that Eagle Summers of the Summers Motor Company was engaged in the sale of the Nash automobiles and the location of the place of business of the Summers Motor Company; that it had a storage and salesroom and there were a number of cars in said room. The record of the judgment of H. J. Renner against Eagle Summers and the execution issued upon the same in the hands of the appellee Pritchard, the sheriff, upon which the levy had been made, was also introduced in evidence. This was substantially the evidence offered in the case and there was very little dispute in regard to the facts as disclosed by this evidence.

At the conclusion of all the evidence the court, on motion of the appellee, excluded the evidence from the jury and gave .a peremptory instruction to the jury to find the (appellant not guilty, which the jury did. The court entéred judgment upon the verdict in favor of the appellees and against the appellant, ordering and directing that said automobile be returned to the appellees and also entered judgment against the appellant in favor of the appellees for the costs of the suit. Exception, appeal, etc.

It is the contention of the appellant that by virtue of the bill of sale executed to it by the Southwest Nash Company of St.

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249 Ill. App. 337, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-bond-investment-co-v-gardner-illappct-1928.