Reid, Murdoch & Co. v. Northern Lumber Co.

146 Ill. App. 371, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 363
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 26, 1909
DocketGen. No. 14,310
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 146 Ill. App. 371 (Reid, Murdoch & Co. v. Northern Lumber Co.) 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
Reid, Murdoch & Co. v. Northern Lumber Co., 146 Ill. App. 371, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 363 (Ill. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Smith

delivered the opinion of the court.

Defendant in error, Beid, Murdoch & Company, a corporation, brought suit in attachment in the Municipal Court of Chicago against the plaintiff in error, The Northern Lumber Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Michigan, to recover the sum of $809.90 on an open account for goods sold and delivered and upon an assumption of an account against one W. J. Boss. The plaintiff had judgment for $809.90 and costs of suit, and this writ is prosecuted to reverse the judgment.

The evidence in the record tends to show that in the fall of the year 1905, the plaintiff in error was engaged in manufacturing lumber at Birch, Michigan, and made a contract with one W. J. Boss to cut and deliver at the mill of plaintiff in error at Birch some five million feet of logs. Boss entered upon the performance of his contract and continued to work under it until the following spring. From time to time the plaintiff in error paid to Boss and advanced him money on the contract.

In the winter of 1905 and 1906 Boss, it is claimed, represented to plaintiff in error that he had upwards of four million feet of logs cut and on skidways ready for delivery to its mill, and plaintiff in error paid him, accordingly. When the scalers measured up the logs in the spring of 1906, it was found that Boss had less than two million, nine hundred feet of logs, and that he had been paid on his false representations as to the amount of logs cut, about $5000 more than he was entitled to receive. Upon discovering this Boss abandoned his contract.

Negotiations for an adjustment were had between plaintiff in error and Boss. The latter had given two chattel mortgages on his lumbering outfit to a bank at St. Ignace to secure payment of $1,300. A settlement was had about May 1, 1906, by which Boss turned over his lumbering outfit to plaintiff in error which paid the bank $750 in full settlement of the mortgages and allowed Boss $1,700, including the amount paid the bank in full for his outfit, and was given credit for that amount on the books of plaintiff in error.

At the time of the settlement Boss owed defendant in error for groceries and supplies sold and delivered to him at Birch from November, 1905, to February, 1906, $428.29, and as a part of the settlement it is claimed that plaintiff in error orally agreed with Boss that it would pay to defendant in error this debt. This promise is denied by plaintiff in error. As to the item of $381.61 for goods sold and delivered by the defendant in error to plaintiff in error, it was admitted on the trial that plaintiff in error owed that amount to defendant in error.

Defendant in error was not present or represented at the settlement made. The agreement on the part of plaintiff in error to pay the $428.29, the indebtedness of Boss to defendant in error at the settlement between Boss and plaintiff in error, was proven by the testimony of Hoffman and of Boss. McKnight, secretary and treasurer of plaintiff in-error, denied in his testimony that such an agreement was made. In our opinion the evidence supports the finding and judgment of the lower court, and we cannot disturb the judgment on the merits.

It is, however, contended by plaintiff in error that assuming that said promise was made as alleged, it is a contract made in the State of Michigan and is to be construed by the laws of Michigan and that under the Michigan laws it is void and non-enforceable, under the statute of frauds of that state. It is too well settled to admit of question or discussion that the law of the place where a contract is made must govern the contract.

Section 54 of the Act creating the Municipal Court of Chicago provides that that court shall take judicial notice of “all laws of a public nature enacted by any state or territory of the United States.” No evidence was offered of the statutes or laws of Michigan. Assuming, however, that under that statute this court is required to take judicial notice of all laws of a public nature enacted by any state or territory of the United 'States in cases brought by writ of error or appeal to this court from the Municipal Court of Chicago, and that the statutes of Michigan are properly before us, we find that section 2, of the Michigan statute of frauds provides:

“In the following cases specified in this section, every agreement, contract and promise shall be void, unless such agreement, contract or promise, or some note or memorandum thereof be in writing, and signed by the party to be charged therewith, or by some person by him hereunto lawfully authorized, that is to say:

1. Every agreement that, by its terms, is not to be performed in one year from the making thereof:

2. Every special promise to answer for the debt, default, or misdoings of another person.” (Compiled Laws of Michigan Vol. 3, Chapter 258, p. 2907.)

When a statute of another State is before the court, the court will look to the reports of the decisions of that state construing it. McDeed v. McDeed, 67 Ill. 545; Van Matre v. Sankey et al., 148 id. 536.

The question then is, whether the agreement in question is within the Michigan Statute of Frauds as construed by the Supreme Court of that state, and therefore void.

It will be observed that the contract here made was between plaintiff in error and Boss, and the promise was made to Boss to pay his debt to defendant in error, as a part of the adjustment and settlement between them. The promise was not made to defendant in error.

In Green v. Brookins, 23 Mich. 47, the court say: “The promise in this case, by Green, as alleged in the declaration, was not collateral; not an undertaking to Green in relation to the doings or misdoings of any third person. It was a promise by Green to Brookins to find someone to take his place as member of the company and shareholder, and to save Brookins from expense and damage in consequence of his becoming shareholder, and giving the note pursuant to the agreement between the two. It seems to be settled by authority that a promise of that description is not within the statute.

“A leading case on this subject is that of Eastwood v. Kenyon, 11 Add. & Ell. 438. There the plaintiff was liable to one Blackburne, on a promissory note; and the defendant for a consideration promised the plaintiff to pay that note. Lord Denman said: ‘If the promise had been made to Blackbume, doubtless the statute would have applied; it would then have been strictly a promise to answer for the debt of another; and the argument on the part of the defendant is that it is not less the debt of another because the promise is made to that other, viz.: the debtor, and not to the creditor, the statute not having in terms stated to whom the promise contemplated by it is to be made; but upon consideration we are of opinion that the statute applies only to promises made to the person to whom another is-answerable’.” Continuing the court then says that the above case has been followed in England and in this country, and cites the decisions of courts of last resort in several states where the same view has been recognized.

The above case is cited with approval on this point in Pratt v. Bates, 40 Mich. 37, 39, 40.

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146 Ill. App. 371, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reid-murdoch-co-v-northern-lumber-co-illappct-1909.