Stevens v. Partridge

109 Ill. App. 486, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 351
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 109 Ill. App. 486 (Stevens v. Partridge) 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
Stevens v. Partridge, 109 Ill. App. 486, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 351 (Ill. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Bigelow

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action of debt brought by appellants against appellee as executrix of the estate of Joseph Partridge, senior, deceased. The cause was tried by a jury, who returned a verdict for the defendant, and judgment having been rendered thereon, plaintiffs below have brought this appeal.

The action is based upon a power of attorney and abond, which are set forth in the case of Stevens v. Partridge, 88 Ill. App. 665. Eighteen breaches were assigned on the bond; the cause was tried on the declaration and a stipulation, which provided that appellants assumed the burden of proving the breaches, and that appellee assumed the burden of proof as to any affirmative defense, and that all matters might be proven, the same as if they had been properly pleaded by special pleas.

The record in this case is voluminous, relating as it does to the acts of Joseph Partridge, Jr., as the financial agent of appellants in handling an estate of between $80,000 and $90,000 belonging to appellants, during a period of four or five years. Appellee’s testator signed the bond sued on, as joint principal with his son, Joseph Partridge, Jr., as may be seen from the bond; also Joseph Partridge, Jr., was principal, and appellee’s testator, the father of Joseph, was surety; because the condition of the bond provides for the faithful performance by Joseph Partridge, Jr., of the duties of financial agent. The defaults provided for in the bond did not relate to any acts done, or omitted to be done, by Joseph Partridge, Sr., and therefore his relation to the matters in issue could be no other than that of surety. But this relation, by reason of the structure of the bond, is by means of a position as joint obligor, which fact would authorize the acts and admissions of the financial agent to be given in evidence against bis surety, from the fact that the principal and surety are joint obligors, as held in the former opinion in this case. (88 Ill. App. 670.) Ho material evidence of that character was offered on the trial, therefore this point becomes unimportant in the disposition of the cause.

Joseph Partridge, Jr., on the 10th of August, 1892, received between $80,000 and $90,000 from appellants, Mary S. Stevens and Julia Campbell, which he divided into two equal parts, opening separate books of account with each. He loaned money for the appellants, collected interest, rented houses and real estate for them, bought and sold commercial paper.

The breaches assigned are, that as financial agent he took insufficient security for money loaned; that securities were converted to his own use; that he lost money in running a banking business in the city of Chicago; that he loaned money to an insolvent corporation, known as the Brownell Improvement Company, which was engaged in constructing a system of waterworks in the city of Effing-ham for a private corporation which had a franchise to build such works, his father, the surety on the bond, being the president of the corporation, and Joseph, Jr., being himself a stockholder and director therein. And it is further claimed that, as such financial agent, he took several thousand dollars of the money of appellants and invested it in a furniture factory of his own, and that such money, through mismanagement, was lost; that as financial agent he failed to keep books of account.

AYe have carefully examined the record, especially on the error assigned, that the verdict is contrary to the evidence. Joseph Partridge, Jr., testified fully, and for anything this court is able to see, truthfully, as to all matters, which were put in issue by the evidence, and appellants did not cross-examine him.

The defense made by appellee was that whatever money Joseph Partridge, Jr., lost for appellants was not lost in his capacity of financial agent, and that therefore the bond was not liable. All of the evidence taken bore more or less directly on this issue.

The testimony taken ranges itself under three leading sources of loss:

First. Improper bookkeeping, whereby the financial agent appropriated money to his use which did not justly belong to him.

Second. Money used in the Effingham Manufacturing Company, claimed to have been the private property of Joseph Partridge, Jr., the money being lost either because the enterprise was financially unsound or through mismanagement of the financial agent who controlled that business.

Third. Money lost in the purchase of a banking business in the city of Chicago, known as the Industrial Savings Bank, and money lost in making bad loans in the running of such business.

1. By the terms of his employment, the financial agent was to receive one-quarter of the net profits of the money handled. It is claimed by appellants that Joseph Partridge, Jr., credited to the profit and loss account moneys which were earned before he was employed as manager of their business; that rents from properties were credited to the same account in full, without deductions for repairs; and that interest was credited to the same account before it was in fact earned and collected; so that the claim is, in this way, a large sum came to his hands as compensation which he was not entitled to receive. If it should be admitted that the evidence tends to prove these claims, still we are of opinion that the record is not in condition to pass upon the questions presented, because they are raised here for the first time. Appellants themselves offered no evidence upon that issue; the deduction that wrongful bookkeeping has given their financial agent money he is not entitled to hold without a breach of his bond, is entirely based on the evidence of Joseph Part ridge', Jr., by the introduction of the ledgers containing the accounts of Mary S. Stevens and Julia Campbell.

No instructions were submitted to the court so as to raise the law questions which are claimed should control the facts shown by the ledger accounts and to give the jury an opportunity to pass upon the facts claimed to exist. The mere fact that there is evidence in the record which is capable of sustaining a tenable theory of a party, is no ground for review in this court, unless, it can be seen that the points sought to be made here were in fact litigated in the trial court. To hold otherwise would be to try a case here de novo, instead of reviewing the record on assignment of errors. Hafner v. Herron, 165 Ill. 242.

2. The Effingham Manufacturing Company was a corporation located in the city where all the parties to the controversy reside. Its business was the manufacture of furniture. It seems that the business never prospered; appellants had $4,000 of stock in the enterprise. In May, 1894, the directors of the corporation were unable to pay its indebtedness and a meeting of the stockholders was called at that time; by a majority vote the stockholders sold the plant and personal property to Joseph Partridge, Jr., who was to pay the debts of the concern as the consideration of the transfer. Appellants claim that their financial agent put something like $12,000 into this manufacturing busissne and the money was lost; and that inasmuch as the business was his own, it is immaterial whether he used due care in the management or not, and that his bond is liable for such sum of money.

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Bluebook (online)
109 Ill. App. 486, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevens-v-partridge-illappct-1903.