Miller v. Stanley

186 Ill. App. 340, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 896
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 15, 1914
DocketGen. No. 5,864
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 186 Ill. App. 340 (Miller v. Stanley) 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
Miller v. Stanley, 186 Ill. App. 340, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 896 (Ill. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

Abraham Miller and Edward Fehlman, payees in a note dated May 3, 1904, for the sum of $2,000, with interest at five per cent, per annum, and due two years after date, brought this suit against the seven signers of said note, and had service upon three only of said signers, namely, Alfred O. Stanley, Andrew S. Goo dell and John Pippert. The note contained the following provision: “It is understood and agreed by and between the parties hereto that if the Dixon, Bock Falls and Southwestern Electric Bailway is built to Hoop-pole, Henry County, Illinois, on or before the maturity of. this note, the said sum, including interest, shall be paid in stock of said Dixon, Bock Falls and Southwestern Electric Bailway Company at the rate of Eighty-five Dollars per share of stock, the par value of which shall be One Hundred Dollars.” There was indorsed on said note two payments, one of $535, on July 23, 1907, and one of $500, on April 25, 1908. On the day of the trial in the court below there was due on said note $1,692.60, unless it had been discharged in the manner hereinafter stated. Special counts of the declaration averred that said condition was not performed and that the road was not built within the time agreed, and the proof so showed. The defendants who were served filed three pleas, the general issue and two amended special pleas, which were each quite lengthy. The substance of the second plea was that both plaintiffs were residents of the village of Hooppole, and owners of farm lands near there and heavy shippers of produce, and that Miller conducted a general store there, and that Hooppole was without railroad facilities, being ten or twelve miles from the nearest railroad points, to which places it would be necessary to haul overland by team all merchandise and deliver all grain and farm produce for market; and that to procure better shipping facilities, Miller, on behalf of himself and Fehlman, agreed with said defendants that in consideration that said defendants, being directors of the railroad company named in said condition, would furnish funds towards the construction of a railroad from Tampico to Hoop-pole, and would, as such directors, and on behalf of said company, construct said railroad to Hooppole, and give Hooppole communication by rail with the market, the plaintiffs would cancel said note; and that said defendants did furnish funds and di'd construct said railroad from Tampico to Hooppole on or before September 1, 1910, and that said furnishing of funds and constructing said railroad was accepted by plaintiffs in full satisfaction of the promises made in said note, and in payment of all sums alleged to be due in the declaration and each count thereof. The third plea was in substance .the same, except that it averred that by the performance by defendants of said agreement to construct said railroad, the said sums alleged to be due on said note were paid and settled in full, and that plaintiffs agreed that no demand should ever be made for said moneys, or any suit ever instituted therefor against the defendants or their co-defendants, but that they were thereby released from all further obligation on.said note, and from all causes of action which plaintiffs then had against the defendants or either of them by reason of anything previous to that time. To the second plea, being the first special plea, said plaintiffs replied by denial that Miller made any such agreement with the defendants, and they denied that said defendants, in pursuance of any such agreement with Miller, furnished funds towards the construction of said railroad, and denied that the plaintiffs accepted any such action in satisfaction and discharge of the promises in the note sued on; and they filed a similar replication to the other special plea. Said defendants rejoined, averring that Miller did make such promise. Plaintiffs also replied to said special pleas the statute of frauds, to which defendants, instead of demurring, rejoined that said agreements were not such as were barred by the statute of frauds because not to be performed within one year. A jury was waived, there was a trial and a finding and a judgment for defendants, from which judgment plaintiffs below prosecute this appeal.

It is held in Lumberman’s Ins. Co. v. Preble, 50 Ill. 332, that one of several obligees may execute a valid release, by which the entire obligation will be discharged. In Harding v. Parshall, 56 Ill. 219, it is held that a payor or other obligor may pay either of several joint payees, and thereby become fully discharged. In Lyman v. Gedney, 114 Ill. 388, on p. 406, it is held that payment to one of two joint payees extinguishes the debt. In Austin v. Hall, 13 Johns. (N. Y.) 286, the headnote is as follows: “Where several plaintiffs must join in bringing a personal action, a release by one joint plaintiff is a bar to the action.” In 3 Eandolph on Commercial Paper, sec. 1446, it is stated that payment of a note may be made to either of several joint payees. We therefore conclude that appellees could settle this note with Miller.

Appellees, in support of their special pleas, proved by three witnesses that long after the maturity of this note and the entire violation of the condition above quoted therefrom, Miller applied to the defendants, who were directors of the railroad company, to be permitted to come in and be a director and an officer and assist in the construction of the road, and to have them put in more money so that it could be completed to Hooppole, and they told him that if they did take him in as a director and an officer, and did put more money in and complete the road to Hooppole, he would have to take care of this note, and that he replied that if they would put in money and get the road built to Hooppole he would take care of this note and the signers should never be pressed for it, and that the payees would never try to collect it. They further proved that they did then put in various large sums of money, amounting to much more than this note, and did make him a director and an officer of the road, and put into his hands the acceptance of each mile of the road as it was built, and that he acted in those capacities. They also proved two other interviews with him before the completion of the road, in which they inquired about the note, and in which he told them that he would take care of the note and that defendants would not be bothered any more about it, and that they were not to be called upon to pay it, and that so long as there was a road to Hooppole the plaintiffs were satisfied, and that it made no difference what kind of a road it was; that what the payees of the note wanted was something to take the freight out and in, and they would be perfectly willing to have an engine to start with. They further proved that they did complete the road to Hooppole, and that afterwards they asked him about the note and he said it would be taken care of; that the note was already taken care of; that it was already settled, and that they need not worry about it. They also introduced a letter from Miller to one of the appellees, dated September 13, 1910, in which he said: “We are into Hooppole, and feel quite good over the matter. We start from this end in the morning and meet the 9 a. m. train and meet the 4 p. m. and make two trips per day. You can ride to Hooppole now in case you come to Hooppole.” They also proved by a fourth witness that he had several conversations with Miller during the time the road was being built from Tampico to Hooppole, in which Miller told him that if the road was built into Hooppole this note was not to be enforced, but it was to be satisfied thereby.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 Ill. App. 340, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-stanley-illappct-1914.