Simonoff ex rel. Simonoff v. Granite City National Bank

202 Ill. App. 631, 1916 Ill. App. LEXIS 1025
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 13, 1916
StatusPublished

This text of 202 Ill. App. 631 (Simonoff ex rel. Simonoff v. Granite City National 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
Simonoff ex rel. Simonoff v. Granite City National Bank, 202 Ill. App. 631, 1916 Ill. App. LEXIS 1025 (Ill. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court.

An action in assumpsit was brought by plaintiff in error for the use of Illio Simonoff, his brother, against the Granite City National Bank, defendant in error, at the October term, 1915, of the Circuit Court of Madison county, to recover the value of 7,700 francs according to the rate of exchange on July 18, 1914.

The declaration as originally filed consisted of the common counts and a special count, which special count was afterwards withdrawn by plaintiff in error. Thereafter on the trial of said cause had by the court, the jury being waived, a special count was filed by leave of court. A demurrer was sustained to said special count, thereby leaving only the common counts, to which there had been filed the plea of the general issue.

The court found the issues in favor of plaintiff in error, and rendered judgment against defendant in error for $1,378.30, from said judgment plaintiff in error prosecutes this writ of error, cross errors being also assigned by defendant in error.

On May 16, 1914, the Simonoffs purchased at defendant in error’s bank at Granite City, Illinois, three checks or bills of exchange on Paris, for 4,000, 2,000 and 1,700 francs respectively, making a total of 7,700 francs. Illio Simonoff, the beneficial plaintiff, paid for these three bills of exchange $1,507.22, and on his direction said bills of exchange were-made payable to Sotir Simonoff, who was about to depart for his home country in Macedonia.

The evidence further discloses that on the arrival of plaintiff in error in Macedonia he was drafted into the military service of his country, and thereafter gave said hills of exchange to one Theodore Illoff, who was about to leave that country for Granite City, Illinois, with directions to deliver the same to Illio Simonoff, the beneficial plaintiff. The checks were delivered by Illoff to the beneficial plaintiff about July 14, 1914. Said bills of exchange had never been indorsed by plaintiff in error and had never by him or any one else been presented to the bank at Paris, on which said bills of exchange were drawn, for payment.

The record further discloses that when said bills of exchange were purchased, defendant in error’s bank advised its New York correspondent, the Hoover National Bank, of the issue of said bills of exchange, with, direction to said bank to protect the same with the drawee bank in Paris, and credit was given by the defendant in error to the Hoover National Bank for the amount received for said bills of exchange, less some $12 charged for issuing the same.

The record also discloses that on July 18,1914, being some two or three days after said bills of exchange were delivered to the beneficial plaintiff by the witness Illoff, he, said beneficial plaintiff, applied to defendant in error bank to have returned to him the money which he had paid therefor. This the defendant in error did not do. The evidence is conflicting as to just what transpired between the beneficial plaintiff end the officers of the defendant in error bank. The fair preponderance of the evidence tends to prove that the beneficial plaintiff was insisting on defendant in error taking up said bills of exchange and returning to him the full amount he had paid when said bills of exchange were purchased.

Bequests for a return of the money paid by him for said bills of exchange were made by the beneficial plaintiff from time to time, covering a period of- from July, 1914, to September, 1915. The beneficial plaintiff testified that on one occasion in the year 1914 he applied to defendant in error for a return of the money which he had paid for the bills of exchange, and that he was told by one of the officers of the bank that he should come back in six or seven months and get his. money, and on another occasion that they would have to write to New York and that when the officers of the bank could hear from New York they would return him his money. Plaintiff in error is corroborated to some extent by witnesses who accompanied him, as to these conversations. On the other hand, the officers of the bank testified that they never agreed to ¡return to the beneficial plaintiff the money which he had paid for said bills of exchange, but that they agreed to take the same up at their then valuation, but that the beneficial plaintiff was not willing to dispose of them on that basis.

The evidence further discloses that on account of the European war, Paris exchange dropped several points, and that at the time of the trial the 7,700 francs for which $1,507.22 had been paid were worth only $1,378.30, the amount for which the trial court gave judgment.

The principal ground relied on by plaintiff in error for a reversal of the judgment in this case is that the trial court erred in not rendering judgment in his favor for the value of the three bills of exchange computed at the rate of exchange on July 18, 1914, with interest thereon from that date to the date of the trial, instead of rendering judgment for the value of said bills of exchange on the date of the trial, as was done by the trial court. On the part of defendant in error, it is urged that the court erred in rendering judgment against it.

We will take up the proposition made by defendant in error first, for if it is right in its contention, on the pleas as they now stand, plaintiff in error must show his right of recovery on the common counts, as both of the special counts are out of the case, the first being voluntarily withdrawn and a demurrer having been sustained to the second. It is necessary, therefore, to determine the rights of the legal plaintiff, the payee, in said bills of exchange against defendant in error, the drawer thereof.

Under the provisions of section 61 of the Negotiable Instruments Act (J. & A. ¶ 7700), the defendant in error, as the drawer of the bills of exchange in question, undertakes that said bills of exchange will be accepted and paid by the drawee bank in Paris, and if not so accepted and paid and the necessary proceedings of dishonor be taken, defendant in error as the drawer of the said bills of exchange will be compelled to pay the amount thereof to plaintiff in error, the payee thereof.

No contention is made by plaintiff in error that he has complied with the provisions of said statute. It is, however, insisted by him that this is not necessary, and that he has a right, notwithstanding the provision of the statute, to demand and enforce payment against defendant in error without having presented said bills of exchange for payment as provided by statute. The law as codified governing this question is practically the same as was the law in this State prior to the codification, made in 1907. Montelius v. Charles, 76 Ill. 303; Industrial Bank of Chicago v. Bowes, 165 Ill. 70.

In Montelius v. Charles, supra, at page 306, the court says: ‘1 The law is settled, by an unbroken line of decisions, that all drafts, whether foreign or inland bills, must be presented to the drawee within a reasonable time, and in case of nonpayment, notice must be given promptly to the drawer, to charge him.” In Industrial Bank of Chicago v.

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Related

Montelius v. Charles
76 Ill. 303 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1875)
Industrial Bank v. Bowes
46 N.E. 10 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1897)

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Bluebook (online)
202 Ill. App. 631, 1916 Ill. App. LEXIS 1025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simonoff-ex-rel-simonoff-v-granite-city-national-bank-illappct-1916.