Straus v. National Live Stock Bank

163 Ill. App. 310, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 442
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 5, 1911
DocketGen. No. 15,130
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 163 Ill. App. 310 (Straus v. National Live Stock 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
Straus v. National Live Stock Bank, 163 Ill. App. 310, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 442 (Ill. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

Much the larger portion of the • material facts involved in this cause are not in dispute between the parties, or are proven by such evidence that we may assume them, for the purposes of this review, to be practically incontestable.

We should be justified in reversing the judgment on the ground of its being contrary to the evidence only in two contingencies—one, that in view of these undisputed or incontestably proven facts, the verdict on which it is based cannot be sustained, even on the assumption that the disputed matters of fact were justifiably determined by the jury in favor of the defendant; and the other, one in which two conditions should concur, (a) that the determination of the disputed matters in favor of the defendant was necessary to sustain the verdict; and, (b), that the clear weight of the evidence was against such a determination.

If neither of these conditions exists we cannot disturb the verdict and judgment on the basis of plaintiffs’ contentions over the facts, and shall have only to inquire whether substantial and material error which, in our opinion, could have affected the ultimate result of the litigation has intervened in the trial which we are called on to review.

This last inquiry, in the view which we take of the cause, will be simpler and therefore can be more conveniently made after the questions before noted, involving the effect and weight of the evidence are disposed of. To this disposition a full review of the evidence is necessary.

Nelson Morris in 1902, when the transactions which are the subject of this litigation began, was and for many years had been a man of great wealth, engaged in many business enterprises connected with the raising, feeding, shipping, and killing and packing of cattle. He was not only engaged in such business personally and as a member of the firm of Morris & Company, but was the controlling factor in various corporations (some of them with and some without his family name in their title), carrying on their affairs in the same general business headquarters' at the Union Stock Yards of Chicago, and called in the testimony, genetically, the Morris concerns. He continued in this business and held this interest in the various concerns through which the aggregate of it was done up to and beyond November 1, 1905, when the transactions herein involved cub minated. He was known at all times as a very closely figuring, carefully calculating business man. In the course of the enormous business thus done by the Mor-, ris concerns a great number of drafts were drawn on them. Every business day, drafts, sometimes as many as fifty, were drawn on one or more of the Morris concerns, and as we read the evidence, any of them may have been refused, or may have been paid by the personal check of Nelson Morris or by the check of any one of the component parts of the Morris ‘ ‘ outfit, ’ ’ as it was denominated at some places in the testimony. The usual and customary method of presenting and collecting these drafts by the Banks in the Stock Yards through which they came is important, in connection with the theory on which this suit was brought.

The Drovers Deposit National Bank sent its collection clerk with the drafts on the Morris concerns, together with a list of them, to the office occupied by those concerns in the Exchange Building. This clerk carried, besides, such drafts as the Bank might have received on the other business houses in the same building. He would leave the “Morris” drafts themselves with or for the cashier or draft clerk of Nelson Morris, one James A. Bell, at about noon, in order that the different departments of the business might be communicated with and a decision reached as to each draft, whether it should be paid, accepted or refused. After the same collection clerk, one Harry P. Grates during the period of the transactions herein involved, had made the round of the other offices in the building, and before the close of banking hours, he would call again on Bell and take from him the rejected drafts and a check or checks for those that were paid, which then were duly surrendered to Bell.

The defendant herein, the National Live Stock Bank, had a slightly different method of collection. Its custom was to send over “the Morris drafts” (that is, the drafts on any of the Morris concerns) which it received on any particular day to the Morris offices during the forenoon and leave them with or on the desk of Bell. Later in the day, before the close of business hours, a messenger from the Morris offices would bring back to the Bank all these drafts. The rejected ones were of course kept by the Bank. For those that were paid a Morris check (the collection clerk of the National Live Stock Bank says it was usually a check of “Nelson Morris per I. Morris”) was brought by the messenger with the drafts. These paid drafts were then stamped by the collection teller “paid” and surrendered to the messenger. Divergence, however, from this course in the matter of the particular series of drafts described in the declaration is the occasion- of this litigation.

Samuel N. Hoffheimer was the son of a sister of Mrs. Nelson Morris, thus standing by marriage in the relation of nephew to Nelson Morris. In 1879, being then thirteen years old (according to his mother’s testimony), he went into the employment of Nelson Morris and in connection with the Morris concerns had occupied important if not confidential positions in the service of Mr. Morris up to within a comparatively short time before 1902. During 1902, 1903, 1904 and 1905, he was very often in and out of the office of Nelson Morris, almost daily there,—in the idiomatic English phrase, ‘‘ a tame cat about the place. ’ ’ So constant was he in this attendance that although from the testimony of Edward Morris and others it is quite plain that Hoffheimer was not an employe of Mr. Morris after about 1900, Mr. Bell declined to say more when first interrogated on the subject, than that he did not believe he was so employed in 1903-4 and 5, but did not know. Mr. Francis, who had general supervision of the office and knew that Hoffheimer was not employed there, said that he was there very often, and while he knew that he was there sometimes about the sale of ■cotton seed meal and hulls, it was impossible to say that he was not transacting other business there, “the office being very open and people coming in there all the time.”

The fact was, however, that Hoffheimer left the employment of Nelson Morris in or about 1900, and after.ward went into business on his own account. One small business he was conducting seems to have been the manufacture or mixture of poultry feed in a loft which he rented; another, the exact date of the beginning of which it is impossible from the evidence to fix, was a larger enterprise, in the manufacture of soap, which ' is a business in many cases connected with or allied to packing interests. This business developed into the incorporation of a Company called the Hoffheimer Soap Company, which in the Spring of 1905 built a factory. The extent of the business done by this Company, with which the plaintiffs as well as S. N. Hoffheimer were connected, and the amount of money which may have been lost in the enterprise, do not appear; but it does appear that the Company went into bankruptcy immediately on the culmination of the transactions which are the subject of this litigation, that its plant was foreclosed upon, and that its assets were practically worthless.

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Bluebook (online)
163 Ill. App. 310, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/straus-v-national-live-stock-bank-illappct-1911.