Paine v. Sheridan Trust & Savings Bank

255 Ill. App. 250, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 387
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 31, 1929
DocketGen. No. 33,575
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 255 Ill. App. 250 (Paine v. Sheridan Trust & Savings Bank) 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
Paine v. Sheridan Trust & Savings Bank, 255 Ill. App. 250, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 387 (Ill. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Gridley

delivered the opinion of the court.

In an action in assumpsit, commenced in the circuit court on June 25,1927, to recover the proceeds of plaintiffs’ check for $3,303.85, dated May 11,1927, made payable to defendant’s order, and received by it in payment of a personal indebtedness of plaintiffs’ defaulting cashier, there was a trial without a jury, resulting in the court entering a finding in defendant’s favor. On April 15, 1929, judgment was entered on the finding against plaintiffs for costs, and subsequently they sued out the present writ of error.

Plaintiffs, copartners as Paine, Webber & Co., were engaged in a stock brokerage business in Chicago and elsewhere. Defendant was a corporation, doing a general banking business in Chicago. During May, 1927, and prior thereto, plaintiffs were acting as brokers for defendant anddts customers in the buying and selling of securities. On May 11, 1927, and for several years prior thereto, plaintiffs had in their employ as cashiers in their Chicago office C. E. Carlson and J. J. Collum, who were known by defendant to be such. In December, 1926, Carlson, at the request of Collum, borrowed from defendant $5,500, giving his (Carlson’s) note therefor, secured by the deposit with defendant of 600 shares of the preferred stock of the Julian Petroleum Corporation. Carlson borrowed said sum for the accommodation of Collum, and the stock, so deposited as security, was the property of Collum. About, the same time Collum, who personally had a checking account with defendant, borrowed a like sum from defendant, pledging as security for his note an additional 600 shares of said stock. Prom time to time thereafter Collum made payments on both notes to defendant, usually in cash but on one or two occasions by his personal check. On May 10,1927, there was due to defendant on each note a balance of $1,650, and the market value of the collateral thereto had so rapidly declined that defendant, determined to call the loans. On that day Joseph H. Hartman, a note teller for defendant, notified Collum (but not Carlson) by telephone that the balance due on both notes, $3,300, together with accrued interest of $3.85, must be paid at once. During this* telephone conversation Collum said to Hartman that if defendant would deliver the two notes, and the stock deposited as collateral, to the “cashier’s cage” in plaintiffs’ Chicago office, he (Collum) would give defendant a check for the amount due on the notes. On the following morning, May 11, Hartman gave to a messenger of defendant the two notes, and the 1,200 shares of said stock, with instructions to deliver them to Collum at plaintiffs ’ office upon receipt of a check for $3,303.85. Later in the day the mes- • senger returned with the check in question, which defendant accepted and applied the proceeds to the payment of the balance due on the two notes. The check is drawn by plaintiffs, viz., “Paine, Webber & Co.,” by “Walter Brunton” and “C. E. Carlson.” It is dated May 11, 1927, and it directs the drawee, the Standard Trust and Savings Bank of Chicago, to “pay to the order of Sheridan Trust and Savings Bank” (defendant) the sum -of $3,303.85. On the back is the indorsement “Sheridan, May 11, 1927”; and the further indorsement, “Sheridan Trust and Savings Bank; paid through Chicago Clearing House, May 13, 1927.” Perforated through the check are the words and figures: ‘ ‘ Paid, 5-13-27. ’ ’ Hartman testified that the first of these indorsements means that defendant received the check on May 11th; and that the second indorsement and the perforations mean that the check reached the clearing house ori May 13, and was on that day presented to and paid by the drawee bank.

Neither when defendant accepted the check, nor before it received the proceeds thereof, did it make any inquiry as to Collum’s authority to use a check of plaintiffs to pay his personal indebtedness. On May 11, plaintiffs did not owe defendant $3,303.85, but they did owe it the sum of $1,058.97, which sum they paid on the same day by another check, also accepted by defendant. We find no evidence in the record tending to show that Collum had authority to use plaintiffs ’ funds to pay his personal indebtedness, or. that plaintiffs ever said or did anything which could have led defendant to believe that Collum had any such authority. The evidence discloses that Carlson and Collum each had authority to draft and sign checks in payment of plaintiffs’ obligations. Such checks, however, were required to be signed also by either M. J. O’Brien (a resident co-partner of plaintiffs’ firm) or Walter Brunton (plaintiffs’ head bookkeeper) or C. J. Bridgen (plaintiffs’ office manager.) The evidence further discloses that Collum drafted the check in question, that he entered in the check register a false statement that the check was issued “in payment of 100 shares of Warner A” stock, that he obtained the signatures of Carlson and Brunton on the check by misrepresentations, and that as cashier he drew many of plaintiffs ’ checks each day. Brunton testified that, as head bookkeeper, he was accustomed to sign 100 to 150 checks every business day, that when he signed the check in question there “was nothing to attract my attention to it particularly, ’ ’ and that he did not then have any knowledge or suspicion of Collum’s misappropriations or embezzlements, as were exposed shortly thereafter.' The evidence further discloses that prior to May 11,1927, Collum had abused his authority to draft'and sign checks and had embezzled large sums of plaintiffs ’ money, that by making-false entries he had concealed his misappropriations, but that, on May 11, no one connected with plaintiffs ’ Chicago office had any knowledge or suspicion of these facts and Collum then was a trusted employee. On that day an audit of the accounts of plaintiffs ’ 'Chicago office was in progress, in charge of one Kelly, who, during the forenoon of May 12, discovered an irregularity in Collum’s accounts and who advised O’Brien thereof, and an investigation was immediately commenced. On the afternoon of May 13, during the progress of the investigation, Collum confessed to O’Brien that he was short in his accounts. Several days were consumed in the cheeking of accounts, etc., and finally the giving of the check in question, not in payment of any “Warner A” or other stock but in payment of Collum’s personal indebtedness to defendant, was discovered. On June 6, 1927, plaintiffs ’ attorneys by letter advised defendant of the discovery and requested information “as to the circumstances under which this check was used by Collum to pay his personal obligation.” About this time plaintiffs demanded of defendant that it return to them the proceeds of the check, $3,303.85, which demand defendant refused, and on June 25, 1927, plaintiffs commenced the present action.

Counsel for plaintiffs here contend that the trial court erred in entering a judgment against plaintiffs; and that, under the undisputed material facts, the court should have found the issues in plaintiffs’ favor and entered a judgment against defendant for the face amount of the check, together with legal interest thereon from June 6, 1927.

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Bluebook (online)
255 Ill. App. 250, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paine-v-sheridan-trust-savings-bank-illappct-1929.