Snydacker v. Blatchley

177 Ill. 506
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 177 Ill. 506 (Snydacker v. Blatchley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snydacker v. Blatchley, 177 Ill. 506 (Ill. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

M. E. Blatchley, in the year 1895 and for some years prior thereto, was engaged in Whitehall, Illinois, in the business of operating a flouring" mill and buying and shipping grain, and also in storing grain for others in certain elevators owned or operated by him. He owned or had control of a flouring mill and two elevators. The appellants, during the same period of time, were doing business as grain merchants in Chicago. On October 12, 1895, Blatchley applied to appellants for a loan of $3000, to be used in the purchase of wheat. Appellants consented to make the loan. Blatchley gave them two notes, one for $1700, due in three months, the other for $1300, due in four months, each bearing seven per cent interest. •He then had a quantity of wheat in his elevators,—6000 bushels, as he represented to appellants,—and executed and delivered to appellants an instrument in writing which they insist should be construed to be the “receipt of the keeper of a public warehouse of class B.” The notes given by Blatchley were renewed by other notes and then again likewise renewed, the last renewal of the $1700 note being on June 24, 1896, and the $1300 note on July 14, 1896. On the 30th day of July, 1896, Blatchley made a voluntary assignment, and appellee Stubblefield, his assignee, received 3461 bushels of wheat as the property of the insolvent. Appellants exhibited to the court in which the said assignment was pending, their petition praying for an order directing the assignee to deliver the wheat in his hands to them by virtue of the said written instrument denominated by them a public warehouse receipt. The prayer of the petition was denied, and the Appellate Court for the Third District affirmed the action of the county court, and appellants have prosecuted a further appeal to this court.

The instrument by virtue whereof appellants claim the ownership of the wheat in question is as follows:

“grain receipt.
“6000 bushels. October 12,1805.
“I have this day conveyed and delivered unto the possession of Snydacker, Fyffe & Co., of Chicago, Illinois, 6000 bushels of wheat, stored in good covered cribs, numbered ...., elevator ...., and located on lots numbered............, belonging to M. E. Blatchley and situate in the town of Whitehall, county of Greene, State of Illinois, each of said cribs being marked with the name............ The above mentioned wheat is free from all claims and encumbrances except those due Snydacker, Fyffe & Co., and this conveyance is made by way of mortgage, to secure the said Snydacker, Fyffe & Co. for their advances and interest on the same at seven per cent per annum until paid, and commission of no less than one-half cent per bushel, and insurance at least to the amount of their advances............ I agree, upon the request of said Snydacker, Fyffe & Co., to procure the said wheat to be shelled and shipped, consigned to them or their order, as may be directed by them, at my cost and expense, and I guarantee the quality to hold out as stated.
“Said Snydacker, Fyffe & Co. may sell said wheat in Chicago or elsewhere, and from the proceeds of such sales pay first the freight, inspection, insurance and interest on their advances, and their commission for selling the said wheat, and all expenses incurred on account of said............; second, their advances on said wheat and all sums owing them by me, so far as the balance of proceeds will go, and account to me for balance of proceeds, if any. If the net proceeds of sale of said wheat do not amount to a sufficient sum to pay Snydacker, Fyffe & Co. the charges, advances, interest and commission as aforesaid, I agree to pay such deficiency to them on demand.
“The said Snydacker, Fyffe & Co. may, at any and all times, deal with said wheat, and any and every part thereof, in all respects as their own, accounting to me only for the net proceeds.
“The receipt, if assigned by endorsement in blank, or otherwise, on the back thereof, will at once vest the holder with full title and ownership in the property mentioned, with all power herein contained, the same as if issued to the assignee or subsequent holder, subject only to a return of whatever the net proceeds may exceed the holder’s claim.
No____ M. E. Blatchley.”

The opening" sentence of the instrument would constitute a sale of the wheat to appellants, but it is followed by an express declaration the transfer of title is only by way of a mortgagee to secure the indebtedness due appellants. Then follows the agreement that Blatchley, upon request of appellants, shall ship and consign the wheat to appellants, and that they shall be authorized to sell the wheat in Chicago or elsewhere, and apply the net proceeds of the sale of the grain to the payment of their demands against Blatchley, and if such proceeds do not discharge such demand Blatchley shall pay the remainder, and if the amount produced by the sale exceeds the amount due appellants they shall account to Blatchley therefor. It is true, the instrument is denominated a receipt in its concluding sentence; but the legal effect to be given it is not to be determined from the name the party may have chosen to adopt, but from its terms, conditions and provisions. Judged by the facts disclosed by the evidence, or by the legal effect of the instrument executed by the parties, the transaction was not a sale or a transfer of title by means of a warehouse receipt, but merely an attempt to create a lien on the wheat then in the elevator and belonging to Blatchley, to secure the payment of a loan of money to be made by appellants to him. The instrument is a “conveyance of personal property having the effect of a mortgage,” within the meaning of those words as employed in section 1 of chapter 95 of the Revised Statutes, entitled “Mortg'ages.” Not having been acknowledged and recorded, as required by the provisions of subsequent sections of that chapter of the statute, and the possession of the property to be affected by it not having been delivered to appellants, the conveyance was without validity as against the rights and interests of third persons. As between the parties it created a lawful lien upon the identical grain covered by the writing. Whether such an instrument is good and effectual as against the assignee of an insolvent debtor need not be here considered, for the reason it was conclusively proven the wheat in the elevator when the mortgage was executed, and upon which it attached as between the parties, had been removed therefrom and disposed of by the debtor prior to the assignment and did not come to the hands of the assignee. Had appellants held a mortgage executed and acknowledged in strict conformity with the statute it would have availed them nothing, for the reason the assignee had not the property to which it attached. The instrument does not profess to operate upon any grain other than that then owned by Blatchley and then in his possession. Equitable interests in property subsequently acquired by a mortgagor are never declared except where the intent to bind after-acquired property is clearly expressed in the mortgage or writing relied upon to create the lien. Borden v. Croak, 131 Ill. 68.

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Bluebook (online)
177 Ill. 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snydacker-v-blatchley-ill-1898.