Strawn Farmers' Elevator Co. v. West

189 Ill. App. 213, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 306
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 13, 1914
DocketGen. No. 19,807
StatusPublished

This text of 189 Ill. App. 213 (Strawn Farmers' Elevator Co. v. West) 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
Strawn Farmers' Elevator Co. v. West, 189 Ill. App. 213, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 306 (Ill. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Strawn Farmers’ Elevator Company, a corporation of this State, doing business at Strawn in this State, as plaintiff, obtained in a case of the first class on July 16, 1913, a judgment in the Municipal Court of Chicago against Albert S. West, doing business under the name of John West and Company, in Chicago, for $1,563.19. The judgment was in a cause tried by the Municipal Court without a jury. From this judgment Albert S. West has appealed to this court.

The Strawn Elevator Company was- a corporation which a written agreement (in evidence) between it and one John W. Jordan, its employee as “manager” from April 11, 1907, to February 20, 1909, recites to-have been incorporated “for the purpose of buying, storing and selling grain in the Village of Strawn, Illinois.”

Albert West (as John West and Company), was a dealer in grain on commission and otherwise in Chicago and a member of the Chicago Board of Trade.

It is not disputed (it is indeed stipulated) that from May, 1907, to February 3, 1909, the Strawn Farmers’ Elevator Company, through Jordan as manager, consigned to John West and Company grain to be sold on commission by that concern; that it was so sold and that the proceeds of those shipments over all the proper charges of John West and Company and amounts already paid the Strawn Company by John West and Company were $1,563.19.

This grain so shipped by and sold for the account of the Strawn Farmers’ Elevator Company was purchased by that Company from the farmers in the country tributary to Strawn, which is a small town of three or four hundred people. The transactions in these shipments of grain between May 13, 1907, and February 4, 1909, on which this amount of $1,563.19 remained unpaid, amounted to almost $70,000.

The defense against this evident prima facie liability of the appellant is that these shipments and sales were not all the transactions between the Strawn Farmers’ Elevator Company and John West and Company which should be taken into account in this suit. The defendant West maintains that in another series of transactions through orders for purchases and sales for future delivery, on the Chicago Board of Trade, which, so far as the parties on the board were concerned, were afterwards settled and accounted for without delivery—“speculative deals,” that is—the Strawn Farmers’ Elevator Company acting through its manager, Jordan, became indebted to John West and Company (the defendant) between the two dates above mentioned in the sum of $1,597.25, thus wiping out what would otherwise have been the indebtedness of John West and Company to the Strawn Company.

The answer to this on the part of the Strawn Company is a denial on its part that any such alleged purchases or sales were made by, for, or on its account or with the knowledge or consent of it or its officers. It admits and stipulates that during this period J. W. Jordan, then manager of the Strawn Farmers’ Elevator Company, gave the orders in question to John West and Company, and that said orders were transmitted by said Jordan in the name of said Strawn Farmers’ Elevator Company by telegraph to the office of John West and Company, and that said John West and Company properly executed them with the pecuniary results alleged; but ‘it asserts that said transactions were not authorized by the Strawn Company expressly or impliedly; that they were not ratified or accepted or even known by the Strawn Company, and that it cannot be held liable for them, they being the individual speculations of Jordan, for the results of which he alone was liable; and that immediately upon the Strawn Company learning that Jordan had been giving such orders in its name» he was discharged from their employment.

To this the defendant West rejoins that Jordan had authority to make said speculative purchases and sales for future delivery, or at least was held out by the Strawn Company as its manager in such a way that it cannot deny said authority; and, moreover, that its officers and directors received constructive notice by the course of dealings and communications hereinafter referred to, of the carrying on by Jordan in its name of such speculative transactions, and not then objecting to them must be now held to have ratified them or at least to be estopped from repudiating them. The Strawn Company replies that Jordan had no such authority; that it never ratified any of said transactions, and never had any notice, actual or constructive, of them until after the last one mentioned, when it promptly discharged Jordan; and that there is no estoppel or presumed authority to be deduced from the evidence.

Although it is stipulated that the defendant West had no actual notice of the terms of the contract of employment between the Strawn Company and Jordan, it is evident that the starting point of an inquiry like the one in this cause is the actual authority given by the contract of employment of the agent whose actions are in question.

The present contract was in writing and has been construed as to the authority it gives by the Appellate Court of the Second District in a suit in which the Supreme Court refused a certiorari, making the decision of the Appellate Court final. Strawn Farmers’ Elevator Co. v. James E. Bennett & Co., 168 Ill. App. 428.

The statement of this case may be therefore more satisfactory if we give the document in full:

" This agreement made this 11th day of April, A. D. 1907, between John W. Jordan of the Village of Wapella, Illinois, party of the first part, and the Strawn Farmers’ Elevator Company, a corporation, duly incorporated under the laws of the State of Illinois, for the purpose of buying, storing and selling grain in the Village of Strawn, Illinois.
“Witnesseth: That the party of the first part covenants and agrees upon the performance of the covenants hereinafter mentioned as made by the party of the second part, to take charge of the elevator belonging to said party of the second part, in the capacity of manager for said second party, to conduct all business connected therewith in the way of buying grain and storing and disposing of the same, to fix prices paid for grain, to hire and pay out of his own money all employees necessary to the handling of said grain, to superintend the loading of the same on cars, to draw bills of lading, to receive and pay out all moneys and make all contracts necessary in the regular transactions in said business of buying, selling and storing grain, to draw drafts and issue checks in the name of said corporation, to keep such itemized books of account showing all business transacted as is customary with grain dealers, to keep, and to attend to the insuring of all grain belonging to said corporation also buildings and machinery.
“Said party of the first part further covenants and agrees to give a penal bond in the sum of Five Thousand Dollars with good and sufficient sureties -to be approved by the party of the second part, conditioned for his faithful performance of his duties as such manager.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Strawn Farmers' Elevator Co. v. James E. Bennett & Co.
168 Ill. App. 428 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1912)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 Ill. App. 213, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strawn-farmers-elevator-co-v-west-illappct-1914.