Rice & Bullen Malting Co. v. International Bank

86 Ill. App. 136, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 200
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 14, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 86 Ill. App. 136 (Rice & Bullen Malting Co. v. International 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
Rice & Bullen Malting Co. v. International Bank, 86 Ill. App. 136, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 200 (Ill. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Windes

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee sued appellant in assumpsit to recover the value of certain malt claimed to have been sold by appellee’s agent, one Pank, on May 4, 1894, and recovered a judgment for $3,646.67, from which this appeal is taken. No question is made as to the amount of the judgment, but appellant contends that it was not liable in any event.

The declaration was the common counts, to which appellant pleaded the general issue. The jury found generally for the appellee and assessed the damages for the amount for which the judgment was rendered, and also made certain special findings as follows:

“ At the time of the making of the contract for the sale of the malt by J. H. Bank and the defendant, was anything said about malt of the International Bank, or belonging to the International Bank ?” “ No.”
“ At the time of the delivery of the National Storage Company’s receipt, numbered 3572, in evidence, to J. H. Pank, did the plaintiff, the International Bank, know that said Bank had made a bargain for the sale of malt to the defendant company ? ” “ Yes.”
“ At the time of the delivery of the National Storage Company’s receipt, numbered 3572, in evidence, to J. H. Bank, was such delivery made for the purpose of having said Pank deliver the malt called for by said receipt to the Eice and Bullen Company, pursuant to a contract which Pank had theretofore made with the defendant company for the sale to it of 25,000 bushels of malt at fifty-one cents per bushel?” “Yes.”
“ Did not the defendant company agree with J. H. Pank to purchase of and from said Pank about 25,000 bushels of malt at fifty-one cents per bushel, to be delivered F. O. B. cars by said Pank, and to make payment for said malt to the Fort Dearborn National Bank ? ” “ Disagree.”
“If you say that the defendant company did agree with J. H. Bank to purchase of and from said Pank about 25,000 bushels of malt at fifty-one cents per bushel, to be delivered F. O. B. cars by said Pank, and to make payment for said malt to the Fort Dearborn National Bank, was not the malt in controversy delivered under such contract before the defendant had any knowledge of any interest in or claim thereto by the plaintiff ? ” “ Disagree.”

The evidence shows that on June 9, 1893, Pank & Co. were doing business as malsters in Chicago, and in the course of such business received from the National Storage Company, which was doing business as warehousemen, a warehouse receipt, dated June 9, 1893, for 6,000 bushels of malt in bin No. 1 at the warehouse of said storage company, which malt, by the terms of said receipt, was to be delivered to Pank & Co. upon the payment of storage and charges and the surrender of the receipt properly indorsed. This receipt, with two others, each for 6,000 bushels of malt, was pledged to secure two notes of Pank & Co., one dated October 21, 1893, for $7,800, and one dated November 1, 1893, for $4,000, and both payable to Wakem & Marshall. Appellee purchased both said notes in good faith for value, and received the notes, together with the said warehouse receipts, during February, 1894, and in connection therewith received certain collateral security. This suit is to recover for the contract price of the malt mentioned in the first receipt which was delivered by the appellee to J. H. Pank, a member of the firm of said Pank & Co.-, as appellee’s agent, to sell the same to appellant. Prior to the delivery of the receipt to Pank, Pank & Co. had made an assignment for the benefit of their creditors to one Moeller as assignee. Moeller, on May 4,1894, requested, in writing, appellee to deliver to Pank the receipt in question “ for delivery on sale to ” appellant, and stated in the writing that he would hold himself responsible to appellee for the amount due it. This request was made at the suggestion of Lowenthal, assistant cashier of appellee, and.was delivered by Pank to appellee at the time he received the warehouse receipt.

Pank & Co. had also borrowed money of the Union National Bank, and were also indebted to the Fort Dear-born ¡National Bank, to secure which indebtedness they had pledged other like warehouse receipts of the ¡National Storage Company to them of certain malt, which receipts showed that the malt therein mentioned was stored in other bins in the warehouse of the storage company.

Pank sold the malt here in question to appellant on April 26, 1894, and also some 19,000 bushels more which was mentioned in the warehouse receipts held by the Fort Dear-born and the Union National Banks. There is some conflict in the evidence as to whether appellant knew at the time that the malt was received by it, as to whether the malt here in question belonged to appellee or to the Fort Dearborn Bank; but the evidence is clear that appellant knew, before it claimed to have paid to the Fort Dearborn Bank for the malt in question, that appellee claimed to be the owner of it and entitled to receive the proceeds thereof.

Appellant contends, and there is evidence to support the contention, though there is evidence to the contrary, that it purchased the malt here in question from Pank upon the understanding on its part that the purchase price thereof was to be paid to the Fort Dearborn Bank.

It is also claimed by appellant that appellee, by the delivery of the warehouse receipt in question, lost its lien on, or property in the malt; and in that connection it is further claimed that the National Storage Company did not in fact at the time in question have possession of the malt, but that the storage company permitted such possession to be in Pank & Co. and their employes. This latter contention is not sustained by the evidence, which shows clearly that up to the very time the malt was taken to be delivered to appellant it was in the exclusive possession of the storage company.

Appellee was, over the objection of appellant, allowed to show the agency of Pank for appellee to sell the malt, by oral evidence of the witness Lowenthal, assistant cashier of appellee, as to instructions given by him to Pank at the time the receipt was delivered to the latter.

On cross-examination of the same witness it appeared that appellee had received other warehouse receipts as collateral to its claim than the one here in question, and was asked what had become of them, to which objection that it was not cross-examination was interposed, and the court sustained the objection. The witness was, however, recalled before the close of plaintiff’s case and was fully cross-examined as to the amount due appellee.

¡Numerous objections are made as to the instructions given for appellee, those on behalf of appellant refused, and also as to the modification of certain instructions asked by appellant, which will be referred to hereafter.

We are of opinion that the evidence as to the agency of Pank was entirely proper. Indeed, we can not well see how it could have been established in any other way. The fact that no one representing appellant was present at the time Pank received his instructions as to the sale of the malt, can make no difference as to the competency of the evidence. Mechem on Agency, Secs. 81, 100, 106; Barker v. Garvey, 83 Ill. 184; R. R. Co. v. Willard, 68 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
86 Ill. App. 136, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rice-bullen-malting-co-v-international-bank-illappct-1899.