Mallers v. Crane Co.

92 Ill. App. 514
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 30, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 92 Ill. App. 514 (Mallers v. Crane Co.) 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
Mallers v. Crane Co., 92 Ill. App. 514 (Ill. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment in debt in favor of •appellee and against appellant. The suit was on a bond, and the judgment was for $8,404.37 debt, $7,443.49 damages. The date of the bond is October 15,1895, the penalty $8,404.37, and it purports to have been executed by the American Fire Extinguisher Co. and John B. Mailers. The condition of the bond is as follows:

“ The condition of this obligation is such that whereas, on the 15th day of October, A. D. 1895, the said American Fire Extinguisher Company granted, sold, conveyed and confirmed unto the same Crane Company the following goods and chattels, to wit:
“ 1st. The claim of the American Fire Extinguisher Company against the Standard Wheel Company of Terre Haute, índ., for moneys due and to become due shortly for sprinkler equipment and appliances, said claim being not less than $1,790.
“ 2d. The claim of the American Fire Extinguisher Company against the C. Gotzian Company, St. Paul. Minn., for moneys due and to become due shortly for sprinkler equipment and appliances, said claim being not less than $4,916.67.
“3d. The claim of the American Fire Extinguisher Company against the David Bradley Manufacturing Company, Bradley City, for moneys due and to become due shortly for sprinkler equipment and appliances, said claim being not less than $1,300.
“ And whereas, the said Crane Company has agreed and by these presents does agree and contract with the said American Fire Extinguisher Company that the said claims so assigned are to be settled, liquidated and collected by the American Fire Extinguisher Company in the ordinary course of its business, as' if the said goods and chattels were the property of the said American Fire Extinguisher Company.
“And whereas, the said American Fire Extinguisher Company has contracted and agreed and does hereby contract and agree with the Crane Company to collect the moneys due and to become due upon the said claims and to turn over and deliver to the said Crane Company all moneys and payments collected and received by the American Fire Extinguisher Company upon the account of said claims as rapidly as said payments and moneys are received.
“And whereas, the said American Fire Extinguisher Company has agreed and warranted to said Crane Company that the amounts of said claims will not be less than the amounts set forth in the aforesaid bill of sale.
“How, if it shall appear that the said claims are not less than the amounts so set forth as aforesaid, and if the said American Fire Extinguisher Company shall collect and receive payments and make settlements of said claims in the usual course of business and shall turn over and deliver to the said Crane Company all moneys so. received as rapidly as received, then this obligation to be void, otherwise to remain in full force and effect.”

The American Fire Extinguisher Company, by written instrument of the same date as the bond, assigned to appellee the accounts mentioned in the condition of the bond, for the expressed consideration of $8,404.37. By agreement of the parties, the cause was tried by the court without a jury.

The assignment of accounts, the accounts and the bond were put in evidence, and there is evidence tending to prove that the American Fire Extinguisher Company collected from the David Bradley Manufacturing Co., October 21, 1895, $500; October 22,1895, $500; December 4,1895, $300. There was also evidence tending to prove that at the date of the bond there was not due or to become due, and since said date has not been due or to become due from O. C. Ootzian & Co., or from the Standard Wheel Co., respectively, to the American Fire Extinguisher Co., the amounts mentioned as due and to become due from them, respectively, in the condition of the bond, and also tending to prove that there is nothing due or to become due from either of said companies to the American Fire Extinguisher Company.

The grounds relied on by appellant’s counsel for a reversal of the judgment are, that there was no delivery of the bond to appellee; that the obligation of the bond is not that there was an indebtedness of the companies named to the American Fire Extinguisher Company, but only that the latter company had claims against them, and that the court admitted improper evidence for appellee. The evidence shows, without contradiction, that the bond was delivered to Oliver P. Dickinson, the credit man of the Crane Company, October 15, 1895, the day of its date. This is substantially testified to by Mr. Dickinson; and JohnB. Mailers, Jr., son of and a witness for appellant, testified that on or about October 15, 1895, he heard Mr. Dickinson say that he wished to take the bond and submit it to his attorney. Appellant’s counsel, however, contend that there was no delivery and acceptance such as the law requires. The evidence on the subject is substantially as follows: Charles B. Stafford testified that he was an attorney at law, and as such had acted for appellant; that appellee handed to him an agreement signed by Henry W. Brackett as the manager of the American Fire Extinguisher Co.; that he, the witness, drafted the bond, and it was signed by Mr. Mailers and handed to Mr. Dickinson, who represented the Crane Co., in his, witness’, presence; that Mr. Dickinson said he would not take the responsibility of accepting the bond, but would submit it to his attorney, and that he would like to have Mr. Mailers sign it, if agreeable, and he would take it and submit it to his lawyer, and if he should say it was all right, he, Dickinson, would accept it; that in two or three days thereafter Mr, Barnard, attorney for the Crane Company, called on the witness with the bond, and said he was not satisfied with it, and wanted witness to get Mr. Mailers to sign another bond, which he, Barnard, had drafted, and that witness told Barnard to leave the second bond with him, and that he would take it to. Mr. Mailers; that subsequently Barnard came to witness’ office several times to inquire whether Mr. Mailers had signed the second bond, and witness told him he had not; that while these negotiations were pending the American Fire Extinguisher Company went into the hands of a receiver, an.d Mr. Mailers refused to have anything more to do with the matter.

John B. Mailers, the appellant, testified that Dickinson came in and looked over the bond which was signed by Brackett and himself, and wanted to take it, and that witness told Mr. Stafford that the bond was signed and that to give it to' Dickinson would be a delivery; that Mr. Dickinson said that such would not be the case; that he simply Avanted to take it and submit it to his attorney, and if it was not satisfactory he would return it; that after that interview, there were several other interviews between Barnard, Dickinson, Stafford and appellant in the presence of appellant’s son, in every which interview they refused to take the bond, and they notified witness that they did not accept the bond.

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Bluebook (online)
92 Ill. App. 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mallers-v-crane-co-illappct-1900.