New Netherland Bank of New York v. Harris

233 Ill. App. 378, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 201
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 25, 1924
DocketGen. No. 28,740
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 233 Ill. App. 378 (New Netherland Bank of New York v. Harris) 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
New Netherland Bank of New York v. Harris, 233 Ill. App. 378, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 201 (Ill. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Thomson

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff brought this action in the Superior Court of Cook County to recover the amount of two trade acceptances which it had discounted for a customer of the defendants, — Carl Dernburg & Son, Inc., —each being for the sum of $700.00. The issues were submitted to the trial court without a jury, resulting in a finding for the defendants and a judgment against the plaintiff for costs, to reverse which the plaintiff has perfected this appeal.

It appeared from the evidence that the plaintiff was a New York Bank and the defendants were engaged in the fur business in the City of Chicago. The defendants did business with Carl Dernburg & Son, Inc., of New York, with which firm the defendants had an open account. During the month of April, 1921, the defendants executed and delivered the two trade acceptances involved in the case at bar to Carl Dernburg & Son, Inc. One was due five months after date and the other six months after date. About the middle of May, Carl Dernburg & Son discounted these two trade acceptances with the plaintiff bank, with which this firm maintained its bank account. Later in the month of May, an involuntary petition in bankruptcy was filed against the defendants in Chicago. In due time, the defendants filed their schedules in bankruptcy, wherein they listed among their creditors ‘ ‘ C. Dernburg & Son,” stating that the nature and consideration of their debt was “merchandise sold and delivered” and that its amount was $4,120.50. This information was given in schedule A (3), which listed the creditors whose claims were unsecured. This schedule contains a column, at the top of which appears the following, “Nature and consideration of the debt and whether any judgment, bond, bill of exchange, promissory note, etc., and whether contracted as partner or joint contractor with any other person, and if so, with whom.” Under that column the only information given in the schedule, with reference to this item, read, “merchandise sold and delivered.” No mention was made of either of the trade acceptances and no mention was of course made of the plaintiff bank. Early in June, in the course of the bankruptcy proceedings, the defendants filed their petition, offering terms of composition to their creditors and early in August the district court confirmed this composition.

The plaintiff had no information regarding the bankruptcy proceedings involved, until some time in October, 1921. After the plaintiff had brought this action against the defendants on the two trade acceptances, it filed a petition in the bankruptcy proceedings, in the district court, seeking to vacate the order affirming the composition with the creditors, in so far as the plaintiff was concerned. Subsequently, that petition was withdrawn. In January, 1922, the defendants amended their schedule A (3), in the bankruptcy proceedings, naming the plaintiff as one of its creditors and giving the two trade acceptances as the nature and consideration of their debt.

In our opiinon the trial court correctly held that the order of discharge, which had been entered in the district court in connection with the bankruptcy proceedings involving the defendants, had the effect of discharging the defendants from all obligation on the trade acceptances here sued upon by the plaintiff bank, although the bank had not received notice of the bankruptcy proceedings prior to the filing of the petition for composition, nor until after the district court had entered an order confirming that composition.

The fact that the schedule filed by the defendants failed to mention the trade acceptances, but referred to the defendant’s indebtedness to Dernburg & Son as an open account, for merchandise sold and delivered, does not prevent the order of discharge ultimately entered in the bankruptcy proceedings from having the effect of relieving the defendants from the payment of all their account with Dernburg & Son, including that represented by the trade acceptances. Matteson v. Dewar, 146 Ill. App. 523.

In our opinion, the record does not support the contention of the complainant to the effect that the trade acceptances were not covered by any item shown by the defendants in their schedule. In support of their plea setting up their discharge in bankruptcy, in defense of the action brought by the plaintiff on these trade acceptances, it was incumbent upon the defendants to show that the indebtedness represented by the trade acceptances was scheduled by them. They introduced in evidence their schedule A (3) containing the item already referred to, naming Dernburg & Son as their creditor on an account for merchandise sold and delivered to the extent of $4120.50. At the end oí their schedule A (3) they made affidavit to the effect that such schedule contained a statement of all their debts. This was sufficient proof, at least prima facie, to the effect that the item referring to Dernburg & Son included these trade acceptances, which were outstanding at the time the schedule was filed.

The chief contention of the plaintiff in support of its appeal is to the effect that it was incumbent upon the defendants to show that they used due diligence in the preparation of their schedules in ascertaining who their creditors were, in their bankruptcy proceedings; that when they executed and issued these trade acceptances, they were charged with notice of the fact that they might be negotiated by Carl Dernburg & Son, to which firm they were delivered, and that before they filed their schedules in bankruptcy it was incumbent upon them to use due diligence to ascertain whether these trade acceptances were still in the hands of the firm to which they had been delivered, or whether that firm had negotiated them; and in the light of such investigation, it is contended that it was incumbent upon the defendants, in preparing and filing their bankruptcy schedules, to ascertain who were then the holders of the trade acceptances and to name such holders as their creditors, and that merely having named Dernburg & Son as a creditor, without any effort to ascertain whether the trade acceptances had been negotiated by them, and if so, who then held them, the defendants failed to make such showing as was necessary to support their plea of discharge in bankruptcy. In support of this contention the plaintiff has called our attention to several authorities, of which the one nearest in point is Irving Nat. Bank of New York v. New York Fibre Co., Inc., 203 App. Div. (N. Y.) 888, 196 N. Y. Supp. 933. The case cited may be distinguished from the case at bar for it appears that in that case the original creditor of the bankrupt was the Brodsky Company, on an account for goods sold and delivered and that the Brodsky Company held certain trade acceptances executed by the bankrupt and negotiated them prior to their maturity at the plaintiff bank. In connection -with the bankruptcy proceedings involving the debtor, the debt in question was scheduled as that of the Brodsky Company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
233 Ill. App. 378, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-netherland-bank-of-new-york-v-harris-illappct-1924.