Scott v. Gilkey

49 Ill. App. 116, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 154
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 5, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 49 Ill. App. 116 (Scott v. Gilkey) 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
Scott v. Gilkey, 49 Ill. App. 116, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 154 (Ill. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court,

Pleasants, J.

This was an action of replevin brought by appellee for two notes of appellant, of January 14,1891, for $6,650 each, ■with interest at six per cent, payable to the order of the plaintiff, at the bank of Standiford Brothers in Chrisman, one on or before March 1, 1892, and the other on or before March 1, 1893. Failing to obtain them under the writ a count in trover was added to the declaration. The cause was tried on the general issue, with a stipulation for the admission of all evidence that would be proper under any appropriate pleading, and a verdict found for plaintiff for $13,8(53 damages. A remittitur of $40 was entered, defendant’s motion for a new trial overruled, and judgment rendered against him for the remainder. He here seeks a reversal of that judgment for the reasons assigned, that the finding was against the law and the evidence and that the court erred in the matter of instructions.

The facts deemed material are undisputed. Appellant was a cattle dealer, worth $50,000. On the 14th day of .January, 1891, he bought of appellee a 400 acre farm, giving therefor his check on the bank mentioned for $0,700, and the notes in controversy. At his suggestion they were made payable as they were because appellee had intimated that having now sold his farm he thought of going to California, where his son resided, fora visit of indefinite length, and appellant said he might want to pay them before maturity, if he should sell his cattle, and in the absence of appellee, and on the same day were placed and left in the bank by appellee, without indorsement.

About the first of May following, he bought out a drug store at Chrisman, and abandoned the idea of a trip to California. But near the last of August, he did go to Kentucky on a visit, and did not return until the first of October, when he was surprised to learn that in the meantime appellant had obtained possession of the notes from Standiford Brothers, and they had absconded.

Appellant was the only accessible person who knew how he obtained them, which he stated as follows : “ Standifords told me if I run short of money to come and they would try to supply me with what money I needed in my business. I went to the bank on the 4th day of September and asked them for $3,300, and they said I could have it and I got it. I borrowed the money there and took those notes and gave my check for the interest and my notes for the principal. I gave the notes to Standiford Bros., signed by myself. I paid in cash, I think, over $500, altogether. I have the checks in my pocket. One check was for $259.25 and the other for $264.50. For the notes in controversy I gave them, I think, one note for $5,000, one for $1,650 and one for $6,650. The notes that I paid off drew six per cent interest, and those other notes that I have drew five per cent interest from date. * * * Alexander Standiford gave me the notes, which I now have.”

It appeared, more particularly, that he got the first on September 8th, upon giving his check for the accrued interest and for the principal, his two notes of that date for $1,650 and $5,000, respectively, at six months, and the other on the 14th, giving his check for the accrued interest and for the principal, his note of the 12th (which was a Saturday), for $6,650, at one year. These notes were payable to the order of Standiford Brothers, and when produced on the trial appeared to bear interest at five per cent “from due.” He testified that when he gave them, no money was counted in his presence, and that he paid none nor gave any check except for the interest. It did not appear that he was credited with anything on account of those notes upon tho hooks of the bank, upon any pass hook, nor was there any evidence tending to show how much money was then in the bank; but the notes to appellee, then surrendered, were stamped by Standiford Bros, as “paid” and the amount credited on their books to appellee.. They sold and assigned each of the new notes to Bibo& Go., bankers at Paris, within twenty-four hours after they received it, and on the 26th of September disappeared. They had been doing a. banking business at Chrism an for about twelve years. Latterly, their character and standing had been discussed and questioned, and there was talk of starting a new bank there. Appellant testified: “ I couldn’t tell anything about whether the Standifords were weak financially. I had heard it talked about for over a year, but it seemed like nobody believed it;” and that appellee had expressed to him his confidence in them, and did his business there.

Soon after appellee learned that appellant had the notes in controversy he demanded them of him, and being refused, brought this suit.

It is clear that unless the transaction which took place between appellant and the Standiford Brothers, as stated, amounted to a valid payment of the notes in controversy as against appellee, he was entitled to recover. Until appellant got them in that transaction, the right of property and of immediate possession, were confessedly in the appellee; and though their subsequent actual possession by the maker after they had become payable, without further proof, would raise the presumption of payment, yet when the evidence disclosed the means by which he obtained them, his claim of right must rest upon the legal sufficiency of those means to establish it, and not at all upon any presumption from the mere fact of possession.

Upon the question of their sufficiency, appellee contends, first, that the bankers were not authorized to receive payment for him; that the notes were left with them for safe keeping merely, and that appellant so understood. He testified that he told appellant, when'they were being drawn up according to the latter’s suggestion and for the reason stated, that in case he should go to California, he would make an arrangement by which they could be paid in his absence if appellant wished to pay them, but that he made no such arrangement because he did not go to California. The scrivener who drew up the notes corroborated him as to this statement; and the fact that he did not indorse them is claimed to be strong evidence in support of his contention.

Appellant testified that when appellee left them at the bank he said to Standiford: “ Let Mr. Scott pay these notes whenever he Avants to, and put the money to my credit,” and was corroborated as to that by two other witnesses, against the positive denial of appellee.

This contradiction is solely upon the question of express authority, which we deem immaterial, since we think authority no less sufficient, was proved by the facts that the notes were made payable at the bank, were placed there by the payee, and there found by the maker at the time of the alleged payment, without due notice that they were not left for collection. Wallace v. McConnell, 13 Peters 150; Ward v. Smith, 7 Wallace (U. S.), 451. Ho further arrangement by appellee was required. The fact that the paper was then in the possession of the bankers was prima facie sufficient. Stiger v. Bent, 111 Ill. 338, and cases there cited; Yazel v. Palmer, 81 Id. 85; Story on Agency, Sec. 104. Without that, appellant could have done no more than, by depositing or tendering the amount due, exonerate himself from liability for costs of suit and interest for delay. Wood & Co. v. Merchants S. L. & T. Co., 41 Ill. 267, and cases there cited on p. 270; Yeaton v. Berney, 62 Ill. 61, and the Federal cases supra.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

DeGarmo v. Aldeco, Inc.
300 N.E.2d 270 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1973)
Continental Gin Co. v. Arnold
1915 OK 960 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 Ill. App. 116, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-gilkey-illappct-1893.