Rauch v. Bankers National Bank of Chicago

143 Ill. App. 625, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 128
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 8, 1908
DocketGen. No. 13,966
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 143 Ill. App. 625 (Rauch v. Bankers National Bank of Chicago) 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
Rauch v. Bankers National Bank of Chicago, 143 Ill. App. 625, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 128 (Ill. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment by the Superior Court of nil capiat and for costs against the plaintiffs below (appellants here) in an action of assumpsit.

The suit was brought on six checks, in regard to each of which there were two special counts in the declaration.

The first of these counts in each case described the check as drawn by one Max Belitz on The Bankers National Bank (the defendant and appellee) and delivered by said Belitz to the plaintiffs, and then averred that on, to-wit: April 9, 1903, the plaintiffs presented the said check to the defendant, for payment thereof, and demanded payment thereof, and that at the time when said last mentioned check was so presented and payment demanded, the defendant had on general deposit in its hands sufficient moneys of the said Belitz subject to said check to pay it.

The second count in each case described the check in the same way, but then averred that after delivery of the same to the plaintiffs on to-wit, at some date (different from the others in each case), the defendant accepted the same. In each of the counts the conclusion is that by means of the matters alleged in it, the defendant became liable to pay the amount of the check described to the plaintiffs.

The following is a list of the checks thus declared on with the date of the alleged acceptance of each one (alleged under a videlicet):

Alleged

No. Date. Amount Acceptance.

154 Dec. 17, 1901. $213.56 December 19, 1901.

250 June 16, 1902. 71.00 June 20, 1902.

128 July 12, 1902. 128.00 July 14, 1902.

400 Aug. 11, 1902. 36.65 August 13, 1902.

405 Sept. 30, 1902. 70.00 October ' 2, 1902.

736 March 7, 1903. 80.00 March 10, 1903.

To these special counts the common money counts were added, including one for “money had and received for the use of the plaintiff.”

The defendant pleaded the general issue of non assumpsit. The cause was submitted to a jury, who found for the defendant, and the judgment followed after a new trial had been denied.

There were no instructions given to the jury. Those offered by the plaintiffs, except a peremptory one to find the issues for the plaintiffs, were presented in contravention of a rule of the Superior Court after the argument to the jury, and were declared by the Court to come too late and to be refused for that reason. The peremptory instruction in favor of the plaintiffs was asked in time at the conclusion of" the evidence, and denied.

The defendant also asked a peremptory instruction, which was refused.

The facts involved in the case, as claimed by the defendant, are that the plaintiffs, F. A. Bauch & Co., in 1901 and 1902, and the early part of 1903 (and for ten or twelve years before) had in their employ a salesman and collector named Bugenhagen. Bugenhagen was not authorized to indorse checks for the plaintiffs, but was expected to turn over to them any checks and all cash collected by him from their customers. He did not do so, however, but embezzled during the time of his employment a considerable sum of money— $1,500 seemed to be his own estimate and several thousands the plaintiffs’. Among the customers of F. A. Bauch & Co. was Max Belitz, who was a depositor with the defendant, The Bankers National Bank of Chicago. Bugenhagen collected from Belitz, for the plaintiffs, at various times between December, 1901, and March, 1903, and they gave him on or about the days before mentioned as their dates, the various checks sued on, running to the order of the plaintiffs. Bugenhagen, without authority, first indorsed them “F. A. Bauch & Co.,” then added the indorsement of his own name, and sold and transferred them to various parties, who again transferred them by deposit in various banks or otherwise, and they were all finally paid by The Bankers National Bank, on which they were drawn, to the various banks presenting them.

Out of the $599.21 which the checks aggregated, Bugenhagen turned over to the plaintiffs, on account of Belitz’s indebtedness to them, $344.95, for which Belitz was given credit by them. The rest he embezzled. The plaintiffs discovered in March, 1903, that Bugenhagen had been embezzling from them, and his manner of doing it. They proceeded to check up their accounts with their customers from whom Bugenhagen had been collecting, in order to ascertain the amount of money he had misappropriated, and these customers turned over to them various checks which had been given to Bugenhagen, and which had been returned to them by their respective banks. Among them were' the checks of Belitz which have been sued on, and another of $10, and with these checks, or some of them, and others, the plaintiffs confronted Bugenhagen in their private office on March 17, 1903. The embezzlement was confessed by Bugenhagen, and the amount of it on the Belitz account determined to be $254.26, for which Belitz was given an additional credit by Bauch & Co. That is, all other money which Belitz had paid in checks had evidently been reported and turned over as cash to Bauch & Co. and credited by them to Belitz on his account. It was only this amount of $254.26 of the payments by him for which he had not up to that time received credit on Bauch & Co. ’s books, and when it was thus discovered that he had actually paid that amount more than he had been given credit for, a credit entry was made in his account, under date of March 23, 1903—“W. B. $254.26”—in-dicating that although Belitz was entitled to an additional credit of that amount, Bugenhagen had embezzled it. It does not appear how the $254.26 was made up. There are, however, four of the seven checks which together make $254.65.

On the evening of March 18th there was another meeting between Bugenhagen and Bauch and his partner, Lamping, at Core’s hotel. At that time an agreement was presented to Bugenhagen, reciting his shortage and containing an undertaking on his part to pay F. A. Bauch & Co. $700 in two years, $700 in three years, $800 in four years, and to turn over a mortgage of $800 held by his wife, to make up the sum of $3,000, at which sum a settlement for the shortage had been arranged. Bugenhagen did not have the mortgage with him, and agreed to bring it the following day, but signed and delivered the agreement and notes evidencing the payments described in it.

Bugenhagen did not, however, keep his promise to bring the mortgage on the 19th, and Bauch & Co. sent for him. He went to see them on March 26th, told them he had taken the matter up with his wife and was going to bring the mortgage later. They said it was too late and destroyed the notes in his presence but retained the agreement.

The plaintiffs’ counsel question this statement of facts in some particulars. They say that it does not appear from the evidence that any of the money derived from the Belitz checks was turned over to F. A. Bauch & Co. But there was evidence which certainly justified the jury in drawing this inference, and if it were material we should have to hold that it inhered in their verdict that they did so find.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 Ill. App. 625, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rauch-v-bankers-national-bank-of-chicago-illappct-1908.