Merchants & Farmers State Bank v. Sheridan

156 Ill. App. 25, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 348
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 28, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 156 Ill. App. 25 (Merchants & Farmers State Bank v. Sheridan) 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
Merchants & Farmers State Bank v. Sheridan, 156 Ill. App. 25, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 348 (Ill. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Baume

delivered the opinion of the court.

The complainant, Merchants and Farmers State Bank of Sullivan, filed its hill in equity against W. W. Sheridan and B. M. Peadro to foreclose its alleged lien upon a certain diamond which formerly belonged to the defendant Sheridan, and was claimed by him to have been deposited with the complainant for safe keeping, and the title to and right of possession of which was claimed by the defendant Peadro under and by virtue of a bill of sale therefor from said Sheridan while the same was in possession of complainant under its claim that the diamond was delivered to it by Sheridan in pledge as security for the payment of certain indebtedness owing to it by said Sheridan and his mother, Carrie Sheridan, as copartners doing business as W. W. Sheridan. Upon issues joined on the separate answers of said Sheridan and said Peadro to said bill of complaint and complainant’s replications to said answers the cause was referred to the master in chancery to take the proofs therein, and upon a hearing upon said proofs the chancellor entered a decree dismissing said bill for want of equity. To reverse such decree the complainant prosecutes this appeal.

The right of the complainant to invoke the remedy sought was unchallenged by the defendants either by demurrer to the bill or by their answers thereto.

The uncontroverted facts established by the evidence are substantially as follows: On July 1, 1906, W. W. Sheridan and Carrie Sheridan, his mother, as co-partners, conducted a retail clothing business in Sullivan under the name of W. W. Sheridan, and- said co-partnership was then indebted to the complainant in the principal sum of $2504.23 represented by notes aggregating $2100 and an overdraft for $404.23. On or about said date, W. A. Steele, the president of complainant bank, interviewed the defendant Sheridan in his place of business relative to the overdraft of $404.23 and requested that it be “fixed up.” Sheridan then gave to Steele the diamond in question, which was claimed by Sheridan to be worth from $600 to $700, but which appears from the evidence to have been worth from $350 to $400, and on the same day or within a day or two thereafter Sheridan gave to the complainant a note that covered the amount of said overdraft. In September, following, said co-partnership was further indebted to complainant in an overdraft for $42.-95, and thereupon the complainant obtained judgments by confession upon said notes against said co-partnership for the aggregate amount of $2667.40, upon which judgments executions were issued and levied upon the stock of goods belonging to said co-partnership. Shortly thereafter the Sheridans employed the defendant, E. M. Peadro, an attorney at law, to institute their voluntary proceedings in bankruptcy, and on September 30, 1906, said W. W. Sheridan executed to said Peadro, in consideration for legal services, a bill of sale for said diamond, and also executed a written order addressed to W. A. Steele directing him to deliver the said diamond to said Peadro. In October 1906, before Peadro had completed the preparation of the necessary papers with reference to the contemplated voluntary proceedings in bankruptcy, creditors of said co-partnership other than the complainant, instituted involuntary proceedings in the United States District Court to have said co-partnership adjudged bankrupt, and thereupon the sale of the property under the executions issued upon the judgments by confession in favor of the complainant was enjoined by said court, and said property came into the possession of the trustee in bankruptcy appointed by said court. The complainant filed its claim against said bankrupt co-partnership with the referee in bankruptcy, as being unsecured, and the same was allowed as an unsecured claim. Thereafter, a composition agreement, the details of which are not here necessarily involved, was entered into by the creditors whereby they were to-receive 33^-% of the amount of their claims, which composition agreement was approved and confirmed by the court.

The only controverted question of fact in the case relates to the purpose for which the defendant, W. W. Sheridan, gave to complainant or to W. A. Steele, its president, for it, the diamond in question. Steele testified that upon the occasion when he went to see Sheridan with reference to “fixing up” the overdraft for $404.23, Sheridan took the diamond from his pocket and handed it to him, saying in substance, “I will give you this as security for the $400 note,” referring to a note for that amount signed by W. W. and Carrie Sheridan; that he told Sheridan he did not know anything about the value of the stone and didn’t want it, and Sheridan replied, “Ton take it, it will stand as security, and you sell it as soon as you can;” that he took the stone to the bank where he thereafter kept it in the safe; that Sheridan subsequently frequently asked him if he had made any sale of the diamond.

Z. D. Whitfield, teller of complainant bank, testified that he saw Sheridan who asked him if Steele had shown him the “sparkler” which he (Sheridan) left with Steele for. security, and upon his replying that he didn’t know anything about it, Sheridan told him he had given it to Steele as security to cover the overdraft; that he thereafter heard Sheridan tell Steele to sell it for $350 or $400, but not to take less than that; that Sheridan was in the bank several times and asked Steele whether he had done anything with the diamond.

Hugh Lindner, a witness called on behalf of the defendant Peadro, testified that upon one occasion while he was clerking for Sheridan he heard a conversation between Sheridan and Steele with reference to the diamond; that he heard Sheridan ask Steele if he (Steele) didn’t want to buy a diamond and Steele replied, “No,” but he would take it and sell it for him; that Sheridan gave Steele the diamond and Steele took it with him; that he was 30 or 35 feet from Steele and Sheridan while they were conversing and did not hear all the conversation between them. Frank Moore, also a witness called by the defendant Peadro, testified that he was in Sheridan’s place of business and heard a conversation between Steele and Sheridan; that as Steele started out of the store Sheridan asked him if he did not want to buy a diamond and Steele replied, “He didn’t want to buy it but he might take it over and try to sell it for him;” that Steele then returned to the office in the storeroom where Sheridan was, and where Steele and Sheridan had some further conversation which he did not hear; that he did not see the diamond and did not see Sheridan give it to Steele. The defendant, W. W. Sheridan, did not testify as a witness in the case, but there is in evidence a letter written hy him to Steele under date of September 6, 1907, in which he says: “As you have sold the store formerly mine you no doubt have rec’d what monies you had invested, in which case you will express me by return mail the diamond I left in your keeping. This is no more than right, Mr. Steele, and I trust I will receive the diamond at once.”

The above and foregoing is all the evidence in the case bearing upon the controverted question of fact involved and in our opinion warrants no other conclusion than that Sheridan pledged the diamond in question to the complainant bank as security for the payment of the $400 note made to it by the co-partnership.

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Bluebook (online)
156 Ill. App. 25, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merchants-farmers-state-bank-v-sheridan-illappct-1910.