Rogers Grain Co. v. Tanton

136 Ill. App. 533, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 657
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 6, 1907
DocketGen. No. 4,842
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 136 Ill. App. 533 (Rogers Grain Co. v. Tanton) 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
Rogers Grain Co. v. Tanton, 136 Ill. App. 533, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 657 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion of the court.

T. O. Tanton, trustee of an estate, lives at Peoria and had charge of some real estate in Livingston county. John Heeren was a tenant of Tanton. L. B. Slyder was the agent of Eogers Grain Company at Graymont. On January 27, 1905, Tanton wrote to Heeren to sell the rent com and deliver before March first, if he could get forty cents. Heeren sold the com to the Eogers Grain Company for forty cents. The corn was not delivered in March. In May Tanton again wrote to sell the com. The corn was delivered June 5th, to the Eogers Grain Company. June 5th a check was sent to Tanton for the corn figured at forty cents, but it was not accepted in full payment. Suit was brought to recover an additional eight cents per bushel. The jury found for the plaintiff $151.68 on which finding judgment was rendered, and the grain company appeals.

It is first assigned for error that a challenge for cause to a juror was improperly overruled. A juror stated upon his examination that he was a stockholder in a farmer’s elevator company doing business at Campus in Livingston county, a station at which the appellant did not have an elevator, although the appellant bought grain at several places within a few miles of Campus. The juror also stated he did not know appellant, and that he could fairly and impartially try the case. Appellant interposed a challenge for cause on the ground that the juror was a competitor and interested in a rival company. If such a cause should be sustained as a ground for challenge then no farmer could be a juror when a farmer was interested in a suit; neither could a merchant be a juror in any suit that any other merchant in the same county was interested in, even though unknown to the juror. The assignment of error cannot be maintained for the further reason that it appears from the record, that appellant challenged the juror peremptorily, and as far as is shown by the record this was the only peremptory challenge used. The record fails to show that appellant was prejudiced in any way by the court disallowing the challenge for cause, in as much as he was challenged peremptorily, and appellant was not forced to keep any juror that was incompetent. Graff v. People, 208 Ill., 312; Spies v. People, 122 Ill., 1.

The facts in controversy in this case are as to what authority Heeren had in the matter of making the sale, and what occurred on February 23rd that caused the grain not to be delivered at that time when Heeren was prepared and ready to deliver the corn, and was the contract of sale made in February broken or waived by appellant and a new contract of sale made in May ?

In the letter written by Tanton to Heeren January 27th he instructed Heeren, “If the corn gets so you can sell for forty cents and deliver before the first of March you may sell our rent. Whenever you sell have them take it just as soon as possible.” Heeren testifies that he showed the original to Slyder, the agent of appellant. If Heeren did not show the letter to appellant at the time of the sale in February, still appellant buying the grain of an agent who had only authority to sell by virtue of the letter, it was bound at its peril to know the extent of the agent’s authority. Baxter v. Lamont, 60 Ill., 237. On February 15th Heeren, under the authority of the letter of January 27th, sold the corn to the appellant at Graymont for forty cents, through its agent Slyder. Graymont is three and one half miles from the Heeren farm, where the tiorn was cribbed. On February 23rd Heeren had a corn sheller and teams engaged to shell and deliver the corn on that day. On that morning a message came to Heeren through Mrs. Henry Obert, who lived forty rods from Heeren, that appellant could not receive the com. Heeren testified that he went immediately on horseback to Graymont and asked Slyder what was the reason he could not take the corn and that Slyder replied, “It’s too bad, Johnnie, we can’t take your corn, we ain’t got no cars.” Slyder denies making this reply, but says Heeren did come to see him and told him he was going to shell that afternoon, and that he replied, “It looks as if it is going to rain. I wouldn’t think your haulers would want to haul in the rain.” He also says that he knew it was rent corn, and that they had plenty of room in the elevator. Heeren says that as a result of this conversation he stopped the sheller and teams that he had engaged from coming. In May, Tan-ton again wrote to Heeren to sell the corn, and Heeren testifies he was offered forty-seven and one half cents by the Farmers’ Elevator, and that he went to appellant’s office and told Slyder what he was offered, and Slyder said “Well, bring it in for forty-eight cents and don’t say nothing,” and that he delivered the com under this contract. Slyder denies this conversation, and says he repeatedly demanded the delivery of the corn between February 23rd and June, but Heeren denies that any demand was ever made.

Appellant knew that the corn sold was the property of Tanton. It was bound to know the extent of Ileeren’s authority, and that authority was limited to a sale and delivery before March first. That being the fact, if appellant prevented the delivery before that time, it had no claim on the corn after March first. It was a question of fact for the jury to decide whether they would believe Heeren’s or Slyder’s version of the occurrences of February 23rd, and whether a sale was made subsequently at forty-eight cents. The jury believed appellee’s evidence, and we cannot say that they were mistaken.

Appellant insists it was error to admit in evidence the letters written by Tanton to Heeren. They were admitted for the purpose of showing the extent of the authority of Heeren and were competent for that purpose. Without them Heeren had no right to sell the com. Appellant, knowing it was dealing with an agent, was bound to know the extent of the agency. The authority being in writing, appellant must take notice of its terms. Peabody v. Hoard, 46 Ill., 242; Blackmer v. Summit Coal M. Co., 187 Ill., 32.

Henry Obert, a neighbor of Heeren, living forty rods from him, testified that as he was driving past Slyder’s elevator, Slyder came out to his wagon and wanted to know if he was going right home, and he told Slyder no; that Slyder said he wanted to know the quickest way to get word to Heeren that he could not shell corn, that he could not take his corn; and he told Slyder that he, Obert, had a telephone, and that to telephone to Mrs. Obert would be the quickest way to get word to Heeren, and he, • Slyder, said he would do so. This conversation between Slyder and Obert was corroborated by another witness. Mrs. Obert was permitted to testify to a conversation had over the telephone on the same day that the conversation occurred between Obert and Slyder, with a person who said his name was Slyder. She did not recognize his voice, never having talked with him before. She testified that he said he Avas Mr. Slyder and he “asked me if I would go to Mr. Heeren and tell him he could not shell; lie could not take his com that afternoon; he had no room for it,” and that she conveyed this message to Heeren. Heeren testified that immediately after the message conveyed by Mrs. Obert he Avent to Graymont- to Slyder’s office and told Slyder what Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
136 Ill. App. 533, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-grain-co-v-tanton-illappct-1907.