Schumacher v. Edward P. Allis Co.

70 Ill. App. 556, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 625
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 26, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 70 Ill. App. 556 (Schumacher v. Edward P. Allis 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
Schumacher v. Edward P. Allis Co., 70 Ill. App. 556, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 625 (Ill. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Crabtree

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This cause arose upon a petition filed by appellee for leave to remove certain machinery from premises in the possession of appellants as assignees of the Illinois Biver Paper Company, The Marseilles Land and Water Power Company and Ferdinand Schumacher.

Upon a hearing in the County Court, the prayer of the petition was granted and leave given to remove the machinery in question, and from such order appellants prosecute an appeal to this court.

From the record we gather the following facts: Some time prior to the year 1895, one Ferdinand Schumacher, a capitalist of Akron, Ohio, became the purchaser of the property and capital stock of the Marseilles Land and Water Power Company, of Marseilles, Illinois, thereby becoming the owner of the water power at that place and also a large amount of real estate, paper mills and other mill property operated by water power at Marseilles. He also acquired the property and capital stock of the Illinois Biver Paper Company, another corporation located at Marseilles, and thereby became the owner of a large paper mill, which he afterward completed and equipped as a straw board plant, having a large capacity of production.

Hugo Schumacher, a nephew of said Ferdinand, and one of the appellants, appears to have been the confidential agent of the latter at Akron, O., and Bichard F. Knott was the superintendent of the works at Marseilles. Ferdinand Schumacher was president and Hugo Schumacher was secretary of both said corporations, viz., the Illinois Biver Paper Company and the Marseilles Land and Water Power Company, during the years 1895 and 1896. All the business that was done by both companies appears to have been transacted in the' name of the Marseilles Land and Water Power Company, which purchased the supplies, manufactured the product and received the proceeds. But one set of books was kept, and only one office was maintained, and no lease of its property appears to have been given by the Paper Company to the Land and Water Power Company.

On July 11, 1895, Ferdinand Schumacher borrowed, in Hew York City, $100,000, for which he executed his three promissory notes, each for one-third of the amount, and secured them by a mortgage deed of that date to Albert O. Beebe, upon the plant of the Illinois Biver Paper Company, at Marseilles. This mortgage was filed for record August 19, 1895.

In November, 1895, upon the suggestion of Mr. Knott, the superintendent, it was determined to put into the plant of the Illinois Biver Paper Company, a steam engine, boiler and machinery for use in operating the works in case of a failure in the water power, and in pursuance of this determination a contract was entered into between the Marseilles Land and Water Power Company and appellee, whereby the latter was to sell and deliver to the former, a Corliss engine and condenser, with the necessary equipment, according to specifications contained in the contract, and upon the conditions therein named, for the sum of $4,874, payable one-half cash on shipment, balance sixty days after shipment.

The contract also contained the following provision: “ The title and right of possession to the machinery we furnish remains in the Edward P. Allis Company until the same has been fully paid for in cash.”

On behalf of the Marseilles Land and WaterPower Company, this contract was executed by Ferdinand Schumacher, its president. In pursuance of this contract, the engine and condenser were delivered and accepted December 28, 1895, and the balance wheel, on February 8, 1896, Mr. Knott, as such superintendent, also purchased of appellee other apparatus to be used in the plant, at the agreed price of $1,068, one-half to be paid in cash and one-half in sixty days. But this was a matter outside of the contract for the purchase of the engine.

On January 13, 1896, appellee telegraphed to Hugo Schumacher for the amount then due on the engine, condenser and wheel. The next day Ferdinand Schumacher replied that they did not have the funds at present, but he sent a note for $2,000, due in sixty days-from January 13th, and expressed the hope that appellee might be able to get it cashed. This note not being paid when due, the Illinois River Paper Company, by Hugo Schumacher, its secretary and treasurer, sent a new note for $2,000 due in sixty days and also inclosed a check for $21 for interest. The old note was returned to Ferdinand Schumacher.

On March 5, 1896, Ferdinand Schumacher sent a letter to appellee inclosing a note for $3,040.33, dated March 5, 1896 and due in three months after date. This ■ note included a part of the purchase price of the other apparatus bought of appellee and not included in the original contract. Nothing has ever been paid on either of these notes, nor upon the contract for the engine, except the sum of $437, paid by check February 10,1896.

All the balance of the contract price for said machinery is still unpaid.

On May 9, 1896, the Illinois River Paper Company, the Marseilles Land and Water Power Company and said Ferdinand Schumacher each made a general assignment to appellants for the benefit of creditors.

On May 20, 1896, appellee filed its petition in the County Court of La Salle County, where the assignment proceedings were pending, for leave to remove the said engine and machinery in question. The two companies interested were made parties defendant, as well as Albert O. Beebe, the mortgagee. The only service of notice upon Beebe was by registered letter, which informed him of the contents of the petition and its prayer, and requested him to appear if'he desired to contest the claims of the petitioner. We think the evidence shows that Beebe received this notice and also that the counsellor the corporation interested in the loan of $100,000, replied that he would give the matter his attention. Appellants, as assignees of the two companies interested, appeared and defended against the petition, but neither Beebe, nor any one interested in the loan, made any defense against the claims of appellee, and they are in no way represented in this court, the only parties complaining of the action of the court below being appellants as assignees of the Illinois River Paper Company and the Marseilles Land and Water Power Company. The court entered an order granting the prayer of the petition.

There are four specific assignments, of error, which we will proceed to dispose of in their order.

1. “ The court erred in finding that the Marseilles Land and Water Power Company purchased said machinery as the agent of the Illinois River Paper Company.”

Whether the one company can be considered as the agent of the other or not, it is quite clear the same persons were the officers of both concerns, running and operating the two as if but one company. Ferdinand Schumacher, as president of the Marseilles Land and Water Power Company, contracted for the machinery to be placed and used in the plant of the Illinois River Paper Company, of which he was also the president, and he stood by and saw it put in the plant of the latter company, without objection, to be used and operated, presumably for the benefit of both companies.

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Bluebook (online)
70 Ill. App. 556, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schumacher-v-edward-p-allis-co-illappct-1897.