Oakford & Fahnestock v. Fischer

75 Ill. App. 544, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 776
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 23, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 75 Ill. App. 544 (Oakford & Fahnestock v. Fischer) 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
Oakford & Fahnestock v. Fischer, 75 Ill. App. 544, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 776 (Ill. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion op the Court.

The Cambridge Co-operative Store, a corporation, was running a general store at Cambridge, in Henry county, and on Wednesday, October 20,1897, was indebted to Oakford & Fahnestock, a Peoria corporation engaged in the wholesale grocery business, in the sum of $1,545.49, upon an open account. George P. Millard, treasurer of Oakford & Fahnestock, came to Cambridge on that day for the purpose of getting payment of this account or security therefor. Elm, the secretary and manager of The Store, offered to pay $400 the following Saturday, but Millard refused the offer, as more than two-thirds of the account was past due. Millard insisted on some arrangement of the entire account, and proposed bankable paper secured by the stockholders. Elm took him before the board of directors then in session, to whom he made the same proposition, and it was refused. Then Millard asked where the car of flour was that Oak-ford & Fahnestock had recently sold The Store, amounting to about $700, and was told it was in the warehouse. Whether he first asked the company to turn that over and offered to take it on the account at the price at which it had been sold, or whether the president first suggested that he take it back on the account, is left in some doubt, but it is clear Millard was seeking payment or security and that he made the inquiry where the car of flour was with a view to seeing whether he could not obtain the benefit thereof on his claim. The president told him The Store would be glad to have him take that car of flour on the account. Millard then inquired about a car of salt The Store had recently bought, and it was finally arranged between Millard and the directors, that Millard would take at the invoice price, as payment on the account he was seeking to collect, all unbroken packages of goods in the warehouse and cellar, being the goods which had not been opened and placed upon the shelves of the store for sale. Millard told the directors if those goods did not cover the bill, he should expect a personal indorsement for the remainder. The manager then went with Millard and they examined the goods in the. warehouse and cellar and made up a list of the unbroken packages which Millard would so take, amounting at the invoice price to $945.49; and Elm, in the name of The Store, gave Oakford & Fahnestock a bill of sale of said property. Millard credited that sum upon the account, moved a part of the goods selected in the cellar into the warehouse and set the rest of the cellar goods apart from the other goods, and locked up the warehouse containing nearly all the goods so bought, and kept possession of the key. Elm turned out this property and made this bill of sale in obedience to the oral instructions of the directors at said meeting. By this time the meeting was over and the directors had gone away. Millard went to two directors and asked for their personal indorsement for the remaining $600, but failed to get it. He then made an arrangement with the president of the company for a chattel mortgage of the remainder of the goods and fixtures in the grocery department to secure the remaining $600. The president then prepared a paper consenting to the bill of sale already executed, and consenting that the manager should give a mortgage on all the groceries in the store to secure the balance due Oakford & Fahnestock. This paper was taken to and signed by each director. Elm then executed and delivered to Millard a chattel mortgage on the goods, wares and merchandise, furniture and fixtures in. the grocery department of the store, and Millard took possession at ©nee, obtained and kept the key to one of the doors of the store, put up notices on the grocery side of the store that the groceries were the property of Oakford & Fahnestock, hired two clerks and put them in charge. Millard also induced Elm to assign to him as collateral security a note held by The Store secured by a second mortgage on real estate. The president ratified this act and Millard carried away these securities. This all occurred on October 20th. On October 21st, 22d and 23d, these clerks hired by Millard sold part of said groceries, they being exclusively in charge of the grocery department, and they realized $425 from said sales, leaving unpaid $175 of the debt, and the expenses of so foreclosing the chattel mortgage. On Saturday evening, October 23d, The Store made an assignment for the benefit of creditors, and the assignee took possession, of all the goods so sold to Oakford & Fahnestock, and of all the goods mortgaged to that company which had not been sold by it, Oakford & Fahnestock petitioned the County Court, having jurisdiction of said assignee, for an order requiring him to return said property to Oakford & Fahnestock. The assignee and certain alleged creditors who were not parties to the petition answered, setting up that these transactions all took place after The Store decided to make an assignment for the benefit of creditors, and were unlawful preferences and" void. The assignee filed a cross-petition asking that Oakford & Fahnestock be required to deliver said note to the assignee and to pay him said. sum of $425. Proofs were heard and an order was entered finding that Oakford <fc Fahnestock never took possession of the goods; that the manager executed the bill of sale and chattel mortgage and delivered the note and mortgage without authority; *nd that at the time The Store was insolvent and had determined to make ah. assignment; and that these were unlawful preferences. Oakford & Fahnestock were ordered to deliver to the assignee the note and mortgage; the assignee was ordered to retain possession of all the property he had seized; and it was ordered that if Oakford & Fahnestock should file a claim against the estate, and it should be allowed and any dividends ordered paid thereon, the $425 should be applied on said dividends, and so much, if any, of said $425 as was not covered by the dividends allowed Oak-ford & Fahnestock, should be paid by Oakford & Fahnestock to said assignee. From this order Oakford & Fahnestock appeal.

Some parts of this order require but little discussion. The arrangement to sell to Oakford & Fahenstock at the invoice price all unbroken packages of groceries Millard would take, and to apply them as payment on the account, was made at a> meeting of the directors at which they were all present. The bill of sale merely carried out that arrangement, and even that was ratified in writing by each director. It is difficult to see what further authority could have been given the manager to execute the bill of sale. True, the board of directors made no record of their action, but their failure to do so can not affect the rights of Oakford & Fahnestock. The chattel mortgage was ratified in writing by each director, and we have no doubt it bound the corporation. The assignment of the note and delivery of the note and mortgage to Oakford & Fahnestock as collateral security were the acts of the secretary and manager, with the approval of the president. We do not doubt these officers could thus bind the corporation in a matter relating to the corporate business. Further, we think Millard had complete and exclusive possession of the goods in the warehouse, and that his possession of the groceries in the store and the goods left in the cellar was ample for all the purposes of this case. In all these respects the order is manifestly erroneous.

The assignee had never reduced the note and mortgage to his possession. They were in the exclusive possession of Oakford & Fahnestock before the assignment was made, and are still.

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Bluebook (online)
75 Ill. App. 544, 1897 Ill. App. LEXIS 776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oakford-fahnestock-v-fischer-illappct-1898.