Nelson v. Cook

19 Ill. 440
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 19 Ill. 440 (Nelson v. Cook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nelson v. Cook, 19 Ill. 440 (Ill. 1858).

Opinion

Breese, J.

This case has its origin as far back as June, 1848, at which date the plaintiff in error sued out an attachment from, the Cook county Court of Common Pleas, as creditors of Augustus E. Miller and David R. Clements, against the estate of said Miller and Clements, and instructed the defendant in error, then sheriff of Cook county, to levy the same on a stock of dry goods and groceries, and a store in Chicago, of the value of three thousand dollars, or thereabouts, and which stock and store were claimed by one Jacob Miller as his property, but which the defendant in error was directed by Graydon and his attorney to seize as the property of Miller & Clements, and which, about the 12th June, 1848, the defendant in error did.

At the February term, 1850, Jacob Miller, in a suit of trespass de bonis asportatis, instituted by him against the defendant in error, recovered a judgment against him for this act and seizure, of three thousand two hundred and thirty-sis dollars and twenty-three cents, which was affirmed by this court. 11th Ill. R. 610, Cook v. Miller.

The defendant in error then commenced his action by attachment, in the Lake Circuit Court, against the plaintiffs in error, in assumpsit, which, by change of venue, was tried in the Cook county Court of Common Pleas, at the September term, 1855. The issues were found for defendant in error, and a verdict and judgment in his favor for $2,603, from which, plaintiffs in error prosecuted a writ of error to this court, where the same was reversed and the cause remanded. Nelson et al. v. Cook, 17 Ill. R. 443.

The case is again brought here by writ of error, a judgment having been again rendered- in favor of defendant in error, for $3,611.32.

The errors assigned, are

1st. In admitting evidence for the plaintiff below.

2nd. In excluding evidence for defendants below.

3rd. In giving plaintiff’s instructions.

4th. In refusing defendants’ instructions.

. 5th. In modifying and altering defendants’ instructions, and in giving them as modified.

6th. In refusing a motion for a new trial.

7th. In giving judgment for the plaintiff instead of the defendants.

The pleadings on this trial are the same as in the first, ánd are noticed at length in 17 Ill. R. 443. The reversal of the judgment was caused, it seems, by a want of proof on the part of the defendant in error, that he did the act and made the seizure of the goods and merchandize by the direction of the plaintiffs in error. The points decided in the opinion therein delivered, are, that no right of contribution, as between tortfeasors and trespassers, exists, and that an express promise of indemnity, as against a trespass, crime or wrong, is void, and that there is no implication of indemnity to a sheriff for executing a process put into his hands, without there be an express direction to execute it in a particular-manner, and that when there be doubt as to the ownership of property, and when the act to be done is not on its face wrong, or known to be so, an indemnity for an act done in relation to it, may be implied, and an action will lie. It was therefore held, that the defendant in error was not entitled to recover under the proof, upon an implied indemnity, nor without showing an express promise, or particular directions about the levy. Ibid. 450.

On the second trial, the attempt is made by the defendant in error to come up to this ruling of the court, and with what success, and in order to a true understanding of the whole case, it is necessary the evidence should be examined.

On the part of the defendant in error, he exhibited the affidavit of plaintiffs in error, for the writ of attachment, in the suit of Nelson & Graydon v. Augustus Miller and David R. Clements, filed in the Oook county Court, for the sum of $>l,120xy¡y, on two promissory notes, and that Miller & Clements were about to depart from the State, with the intention of having their goods, and chattels, and effects, removed therefrom. Also, an attachment writ in said suit, and security for costs therein, and the indorsements and return upon said writ, showing service upon Miller & Clements, and others named in it, and the levy of the same upon a large amount of personal property, and also a store, “ which has been occupied by Miller & Clements and then introduced, to prove the levy was made by direction of defendants, the deposition of Samuel Rattles, as follows:

I know the plaintiff Cook, and Graydon ; knew them in 1848. I knew there was an attachment issued against goods of Miller & Clements, then claimed to he held by Jacob Miller. The att achment was issued by Nelson & Graydon. I was not here at the time the attachment was issued, but afterwards I was here. I had a conversation, after the attachment was issued, with Graydon, at the Sherman House, at his room. He said he had attached the property — a lot of groceries, etc. — upon the Saugan&sh block. Graydon said that he believed that Miller & Clements were fraudulently disposing of the property, and he or they — alluding to the firm — had attached it. Did not mention Cook or Beach’s name, as I recollect. He said he had caused it to be attached, and the store was then closed up. He asked me to go to Miller with him, and see if I could not get the matter closed up. I was sworn in the trial of Jacob Miller v. Isaac Cook. The same goods were in controversy in that suit that were referred to in this conversation with Graydon. I saw Graydon in Ohio, and he said he was coming up here to collect or secure his bill against. Miller & Clements. A few days after the attachment was issued, I came back to town, and then had the conversation with Graydon of which I have spoken. I think it was in 1848, but the papers will show.

And also the deposition of O. J. Rose, as follows:

Have resided in Chicago since 1843. Have known plaintiff since then. Have known the defendant, Graydon, since 1847. I knew the firm of Miller & Clements in the year 1848. They were merchants, engaged in general merchandising, a general assortment of dry goods, boots and shoes. They were located on Lake street, south side, between Eranklin and Market streets. I had a conversation with them about levying an attachment upon the goods in the store. It was, I think, in the fall of 1848, at Rose & Rattles’ store. The subject of the levy was spoken of more than once at our store. Graydon said that he believed the sale of the stock of goods by Miller & Clements to Jacob Miller was done for the purpose of defrauding their creditors, or preventing their creditors from collecting their debts out of the goods, and that he meant to seize the goods. These conversations were before any levy was made. I understood a levy was made on the goods of Miller & Clements by the sheriff, by.direction of Graydon, after the sale to Jacob Miller. Graydon said that Jacob Miller claimed the goods under an assumed purchase of Miller & Clements.

On his cross-examination, he says : I think this conversation was in the fall or winter of 1848. Graydon said he believed that the sale was made to prevent the New York creditors from making their claims ; that he believed it to be a fraud, and that he meant to try the legality of it.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Ill. 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-cook-ill-1858.