Shaffner v. Edgerton

13 Ill. App. 132, 1883 Ill. App. LEXIS 26
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 27, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 13 Ill. App. 132 (Shaffner v. Edgerton) 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
Shaffner v. Edgerton, 13 Ill. App. 132, 1883 Ill. App. LEXIS 26 (Ill. Ct. App. 1883).

Opinion

Bailey, P. J".

Harvey Edgerton and Ambrose E. Sloan, the plaintiffs in this suit, at the time of the transactions in controversy, were copartners in the business of manufacturing and selling veneers, said business being carried on under the name of The Garden City Veneer Mills. Herman Shaffher and Abraham G. Becker, the defendants at the same time were copartners doing business as bankers under the firm name of Herman Shaffner & Go. This suit was brought to recover the amount of fifteen bank checks drawn upon the defendants by various parties, payable to the order of The Garden City Veneer Mills. The cause was tried before the court below without a jury, and a judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiffs for $552.71, the full amount of said checks and costs.

The business of the plaintiffs’ firm was managed and carried on exclusively by said Sloan and one E. A. Bnrch, said Edgerton being also the proprietor of a livery stable, and devoting his entire time to the management of that business. Sloan kept the books of the firm, and Bnrch made most of its sales and collections. The checks in question were received by Burch from various customers of the firm, in payment of their accounts for merchandise, and Burch, as each check was received, indorsed thereon the name of The Garden City Veneer Mills, and presented it for payment at the defendant’s bank and received payment thereof. The checks were thereupon canceled by the defendants, and returned to the various drawers, and were afterward obtained from the drawers by the plaintiffs.

It is claimed by the plaintiffs that Burch had no authority from them to indorse the checks, and, consequently, that his indorsement was void, and the payment to him ineffectual. The evidence is clear that Burch was an agent of the plaintiffs’ firm possessing very large powers. The mercantile transactions of the firm are shown to have been almost exclusively under his personal control. Sloan' testifies that he was employed to solicit orders, and to attend to any outside business the firm might wish him to do; that he had authority to make deposits for the firm in bank, and frequently made such deposits; that he sold nine tenths of all the goods manufactured by the plaintiffs; that all matter’s of discounts and differences between the plain tills and their customers were left to him for adjustment; that on some occasions in the absence.of the witness, he indorsed checks received from customers and deposited the same in bank to the plaintiffs’ credit. It also appears from the testimony of various of the plaintiffs’customers, that they dealt with Burch exclusively, and knew no other person as representing the plaintiffs, and there is evidence of admissions by Sloan, that Burch was Edgerton’s representative in the business; that because Edgerton could not give the business his personal attention, he had placed Burch there to represent him.

This testimony, it would seem, goes very far, to say the least, toward establishing competent authority in Burch to indorse the checks received by him in the collection of the firm accounts, and to present the same so indorsed for payment; but as we are disposed to rest our decision on other grounds, we do not deem it necessary to decide that question.

The evidence further show’s that, as to nearly all of said checks, Burch, after drawing the money, reported to Sloan the amounts as collected upon the accounts of the drawers, and handed over to him amounts of money corresponding with the amounts so reported as collected, a.nd that Sloan entered such payments to the credit of the several drawers of the checks, which, with some small collections afterward made by him, balanced said accounts. Said checks were of various dates, running from August 30, 1881, to March 1, 1882. A few days after the date of the last check, Burch left the plaintiffs, a defaulter to the amount of about $2,000.

It seems to us that this evidence, uncontradicted as it is, establishes the defendants’ defense of payment. Even if Burch had no authority to indorse the checks, still, if after having done so and drawn the money, said money was paid over by him to and received by the plaintiffs, they will not be permitted, while holding the money, to allege his want of authority, bnt will be deemed to have ratified his unauthorized acts.

But it is urged that the moneys paid over by Bnrch, may not have been the moneys received by him from the defendants, but other moneys which he had embezzled from his employers, and that the receipt of such moneys by the plaintiffs can not estop them from setting up his want of authority to indorse the checks. It may be conceded that if the moneys paid over by.Bnrch were in fact the plaintiffs’ moneys which Burch had collected from other sources, and was wrongfully withholding from, them, such payment can not be taken advantage of by the defendants. It would then he merely a delivery by Burch to the plaintiffs of their own money, with which the defendants had no concern,' and the fact that the plaintiffs applied it to the accounts of the drawers of the checks, under a mistaken notion as to its identity, can not affect their rights as against the defendants.

But the record, in ovtr judgment, wholly fails to establish the facts here supposed. It appears without dispute that Bnrch after receiving payment of the checks, reported his collection to Sloan and paid over to him the proper amount of money as the money collected, and that Sloan received it as such and credited it to the proper accounts. These facts standing alone admit of but one inference, viz.: that the moneys received by Burch from the defendants were in dne course of business paid over to Sloan. They at least raise a prima facie presumption to that effect, sufficient to throw upon the plaintiffs the burden of proving that the moneys paid over were in fact other moneys belonging to the plaintiffs which Burch was wrongfully withholding from them. Have they made such proofs?

. Ho attempt whatever was made by the plaintiffs to show from what source Burch derived the identical moneys paid over to Sloan, or to wdiat fund they belonged, although as we must presume all accessible proofs on that subject were in their own hands. That question was left to rest upon the declaration of Burch sworn to by Sloan himself that they vrere the moneys collected of the persons owing the accounts for which the checks were given. The only fact shown having any bearing upon the question is, that some days after the last check was collected and accounted for, Burch left and went to parts unknown, and that a subsequent investigation of his accounts showed him to be a defaulter in the sum of about $2,000. Blow the $2,000 was made up, or when or how it was taken by Burch, is nowhere shown. So far as appears, the entire defalcation may have taken place subsequent to the date of the last check, or the entire sum embezzled may have been drawn from sources entirely outside of the checks in question. It must then be assumed as the only proper conclusion to be derived from the evidence, that the moneys paid by the defendants to Burch on the checks, was by him handed over to the plaintiffs, and that it is still in their possession. Such being the fact, it would be the height of injustice to require the defendants to pay it to them a second time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 Ill. App. 132, 1883 Ill. App. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaffner-v-edgerton-illappct-1883.