Murray v. R. P. Smith & Sons

42 Ill. App. 548, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 310
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 3, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 42 Ill. App. 548 (Murray v. R. P. Smith & Sons) 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
Murray v. R. P. Smith & Sons, 42 Ill. App. 548, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 310 (Ill. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Boggs, J.

The plaintiff in error, as administrator of the estate of Margaret J. Murray, had in his possession a stock of dry goods, boots and shoes, rubber goods, etc., among them the articles here involved. The defendants in error, w.ho are wholesale boot and shoe dealers in Chicago, claimed that the deceased had, by false and fraudulent representations, induced them to sell certain of said goods t-o her, and that because of such fraud no title passed to her. They brought this, an action in replevin, to recover the possession of them, and to their declaration in replevin the appellant pleaded the title of his intestate and his possession as administrator. The goods were ordered of the defendants in error in June, 1890, and were shipped by them from Chicago to the deceased, August 6,1890. "

• The deceased was then and for some time before that had been engaged in the business of retailing dry goods, boots and shoes, etc., in Boodhouse, Illinois.

The goods so shipped to her were ordered in the regular course of business by her and when received were placed in her general stock, and sales made therefrom in the ordinary course of retail trade until the 81st day of August, 1890, at which date she died. Her husband, the plaintiff in error, was.appointed administrator of her estate, and as such took possession of the entire stock of goods, including those involved in this proceeding. The cause was submitted to a jury for trial, and a verdict and judgment against plaintiff in error followed, to reverse which the cause is before us. The defendants in error, plaintiffs below, to sustain the allegation that the sale of the goods by them to the deceased was void because of false and fraudulent representations, introduced Ed. E. Smith, a member of their firm, as a witness. His competency to testify as to any facts or transaction occurring before the death of Mrs. Murray was objected to, but the objection was overruled and he was allowed to testify as a general witness. He testified, among other things, that he came to Boodhouse, May 27, 1889, to learn the financial condition of the deceased and what she had to pay with; that he was then in charge of the credit and collection department of his firm; that on that day he went to Mrs. Murray’s store. She was not in, but her husband (the plaintiff in error) was; that the husband represented her in the business, did buying and selling for her and managed the business for her; that Mrs. Murray then owed his firm about $2,600; that he told Mr. Murray that he wanted a statement as to Mrs. Murray’s financial condition, and that Mr. Murray consented to make it; that he, the witness, produced a blank form for such statements; that Murray gave him the figures and he “filled them” in the blank with a pen-' cil, and that Mr. Murray signed the name of the deceased to the statement; that Murray told him then that Mrs. Murray intended to confine her mercantile purchases to the witness’ firm and Wear, Boogher & Co., of St. Louis; that the goods in controversy were shipped to the deceased on the faith of this statement; that at the time of the shipment his firm had no information that the financial condition of the deceased had changed; that Mr. Murray told him on the day that the statement was made, that the statement showed all that Mrs. Murray owed, and that the liabilities were for goods that were then in the store. The financial statement referred to by the witness was then offered in evidence and objected to, the grounds of the objection being that there was no competent evidence showing its execution by Mr. Murray, or that he had authority to sign the name of the deceased to it. This objection was overruled and the statement was read to the jury. .It is as follows:

“Statement made to B. P. Smith & Sons:
LIABILITIES.
Debts owing, due..' $ 700.00
“ “ hot due 3,500.00
Motes if any and when due, June 26, July 26,.... 1,000.00
Inc u-m hr a n c e on real estate...
Incumbran ce on stock in store
Judgment if any..
Suits pending....--
Total liability.... 5,200.00
Insurance on stock 6,000.00
“ on building
ASSETS.
Am’t of stock in store and value thereof........$ 8,000.00
Book account con- ■ sidered good.... 3,000.00
Am’t of stock in transit..........
Cash on hand......
Beal estate........
Personal property not exempt .... 200.00
Total assets,......$11,200.00
Liabilities,........ 5,200.00
As. over liabilities $ 6,000.00

The above is a true and accurate statement of my assets and liabilities, and is made for the purpose of obtaining credit with said R. P. Smith & Sons. Should any injurious changes occur in iny financial condition, I agree to notify R. P. Smith & Sons of the same before making further purchases.

M. J. Mueeat. [seal.]
Chicago, Ills., May 27, 1889.”

The false representations (if any) are to be found only in this statement and in other statements and verbal promises alleged by the witness, Ed. E. Smith, to have been made on the same day to him by Mr. Murray.

It should here be remarked that defendants in error claim that after the date of this statement an injurious change occurred in the financial condition of Mrs. M. JT. Murray and that they were not notified thereof according to the agreement to do so in the statement, and that for that reason they had the right to declare the sale of the goods in question to be void and to recover them by replevin. This last clause, whether it be good in law or not, rests alone upon the testimony of the same witness, one of the plaintiffs below. The change in the affairs of Mrs. Murray, which defendants in error complain of as injurious to them, is that she borrowed about §3,600 from a savings and loan company to build a store-house in Boodhouse. The evidence produced by the defendants in error shows that the store-house was built with her money and that the title to the property was in Mrs. Murray and remained so at the time of her death and was of value largely in excess of the amount loaned, which was the only incumbrance upon it.

The false and fraudulent representations complained of are, that Mrs. Murray did not, after the making of the statement, confine her mercantile indebtedness to the firm of the defendants in error and Wear, Boogher & Co., as the witness Ed. E. Smith, one of the defendants in error, testified that Mr. Murray, when the statement was made, promised, as her agent, should be done, and that the liabilities of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
42 Ill. App. 548, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-v-r-p-smith-sons-illappct-1891.