Indiana Match Co. v. Kirk

118 Ill. App. 102, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 181
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 23, 1905
DocketGen. No. 11,706
StatusPublished

This text of 118 Ill. App. 102 (Indiana Match Co. v. Kirk) 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
Indiana Match Co. v. Kirk, 118 Ill. App. 102, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 181 (Ill. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

To dispose first of the cross-errors assigned by the appellee Carr in this appeal, it is sufficient to say that the only alleged errors which could affect the decree, so far as Carr is concerned, viz., that the Superior Court erred in holding the transaction between Kirk and himself usurious, and in refusing to allow him $100 for services in making the loan to Kirk, are waived by not being argued or insisted on in this court. But there is nothing in the record which seems to us to sustain them. His remaining assignments are identical with some of those of the Indiana Match Company, and can be considered therewith. They involve the matter of the alleged cancellation of Mrs. Kirk’s assignment, and of her right to the priority she was given.

The Indiana Match Company raises, by its assignments of error and its argument, in addition to these questions, one of the improper admission of secondary evidence to prove the assignment to Mrs. Kirk. We have carefully examined the evidence in this regard, and think that the chancellor was right in holding that sufficient foundation was found in the testimony offered on behalf of Mrs. Kirk concerning the loss of the original paper, to entitle her to furnish this secondary evidence. But it is not, in our view, worth while to discuss this proposition with reference to the objections made to-it in the able argument of the counsel,for appellant, for there can be no escape from the conclusion that all such objections are futile in consideration of the fact that in behalf of their client, they themselves' proved, without objection, the execution and contents of the assignment in question to Mrs. Kirk. “ I recall the fact,” says Edgar W. Kirk in his deposition, taken and offered on behalf of the appellant, “of having executed and delivered.to her an assignment dated March 16, 1900, of an interest in my distributive share of my mother’s estate, a copy of which is set out in her answer.” Counsel for appellant insist that as the trial court had already admitted—in their view erroneously—secondary evidence of the contents of this instrument, before they undertook to prove the alleged subsequent cancellation or abrogation of' it, the error in admitting that evidence, if it were an error, should still be available to them. To prove that the paper had once existed, was the only prudent course for them under the circumstances, they say, but the only effect of the whole deposition, by which they made that proof, was to show that the copy of it which Mrs. Kirk had produced as a true • one, was not correct, in that it did not bear on its face certain words of cancellation. This argument is not convincing. It was undoubtedly the only prudent course for counsel to adopt to make the proof in question, but having chosen that course they must abide by its legitimate results. To prove the subsequent cancellation of a paper, it is necessary to prove its existence, but the court cannot, after such proof is made, shut its eyes to the fact thus admitted, because it was not proven by the party on whom the burden first rested. Nor would justice be thereby secured. The burden of proof did indeed rest on Mrs. Kirk in the first instance, to establish her assignment, but justice required that if it had an existence uncancelled at sometime precedent to the appellant’s assignment, that fact should come to the knowledge of the court. The rules concerning the burden of proof, necessary as they are to the orderly administration of justice, do not find their justification in any purpose of the law or of courts to keep unproven that which is true and material, although sometimes through the natural imperfection of all human institutions they may work that result. When once the precedent existence of Mrs. Kirk’s assignment was by any means established, the burden naturally and properly fell on the appellant to prove that cancellation or abrogation of it which was asserted by it and denied by her. This burden the appellant undertook, and it claims that it has successfully carried it. Before discussing this question, however, we shall consider briefly the proposition advanced by the appellant’s counsel, that without reference to such alleged cancellation, the assignment to appellant should be held as giving equities in the fund involved, superior to those given by that of Mrs. Kirk.

The general rule, quipotior in tempore potior injure, they argue has but a limited application in equity, and they say that priority of vtime should be as a ground of preference last resorted to. Only in case the court should find the equities of Mrs. Kirk and appellant equal, it is urged, should the priority in delivery of her assignment be allowed to have weight. Counsel disclaim, in their reply brief, any reliance on an equitable estoppel, although their sixth assignment of error claims such estoppel.

It is conceded that in furnishing the goods on which its claim is based, appellant was not influenced by any act or representation of Mrs. Kirk, and that she is not by any conduct on her part in equity precluded from asserting her claim as against appellant. But it is said she was a volunteer who parted with nothing on receiving her assignment, while appellant gave up its goods on the faith of the one made to it; that she did not record her assignment in the Probate Court, while appellant took that precaution; that she surrendered the evidence of her assignment soon after she received it, and at the same time requested the executors to disregard it to the extent of half at least of the fund covered by it; and that in connection with dealings of her husband with others than appellant, between the date of her assignment and of appellant’s, she was not vigilant in the assertion of her rights, while appellant has in no respect slept upon or conceded any of its. For all these reasons it is argued that her equities are not equal to those of the appellant, and that priority of time in her assignment should not be allowed a controlling influence. We do not agree with this position. It is true that in equitable claims on a fund, stronger equities may overcome the advantage given by priority of time, but they must be really and substantially stronger, their superiority being based on solid legal grounds—not fancied or sentimental ones. Counsel have cited to their point that priority of time is the ground of preference to be last resorted to, the opinion of Vice Chancellor Sir Richard Kindersley in Rice v. Rice, 2 Drewey 73, quoted by Pomeroy in his work on Equity Jurisprudence in section 414. In a note to a subsequent section, 708, Mr. Pomeroy, as we understand him, declares the language of the Vice Chancellor in Rice v. Rice too strong. However this may be, our Supreme Court and this court are committed to the rule that “Each successive assignee of a chose in action takes it subject to the existing equities between the original assignor and his immediate assignee.” Commercial National Bank v. Burch, 141 Ill. 519, 529; Luecht v. Pearson, 101 Ill. App. 236. This priority in time is fortified in the matter now under discussion, by the fact that while the assignment to Mrs. Kirk is by its terms of $10,000 of the assignor’s interest in his mother’s estate, that to the Indiana Match Company by its terms is of “ the remaining unassigned part ” of such interest, a difference not to be considered without significance when giving effect to these successive assignments.

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Sanford v. Finkle
112 Ill. 146 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1884)
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Luecht v. Pearson
101 Ill. App. 236 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1902)

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Bluebook (online)
118 Ill. App. 102, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indiana-match-co-v-kirk-illappct-1905.