the Pressed Steel Equipment Co. v. Thornburgh Pressteel Co.

144 N.E. 6, 312 Ill. 359
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 1924
DocketNo. 15450
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 144 N.E. 6 (the Pressed Steel Equipment Co. v. Thornburgh Pressteel Co.) 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
the Pressed Steel Equipment Co. v. Thornburgh Pressteel Co., 144 N.E. 6, 312 Ill. 359 (Ill. 1924).

Opinion

Per Curiam :

The appellant brought an attachment suit in the municipal court of Chicago against the Thornburgh Pressteel Company as principal debtor and served the appellee, the Commercial Acceptance Trust, as garnishee. In the hearing on the attachment a judgment was entered against the Thornburgh Pressteel Company (hereinafter referred to as judgment debtor) in the sum of $5588, and in the issue made up on the garnishment proceeding, the court, on trial without a jury, entered a judgment against the Commercial Acceptance Trust (hereinafter referred to as garnishee) in the sum of $708.72. The judgment in garnishment was appealed to the Appellate Court for the First District. That court affirmed the judgment, issued a certificate of importance and granted an appeal to this court.

Appellant contends that the judgment against the garnishee should have been for the sum of $4622.55.

On the 15th day of March, 1919, the judgment debtor entered into a certain agreement with the garnishee, in and by which it is expressed, in substance, that the Thornburgh Pressteel Company is desirous of selling to the Commercial Acceptance Trust its accounts receivable, notes, acceptances, leases, mortgages, contracts and choses in action, therein designated as accounts, evidencing sales and deliveries of personal property usually dealt in by the Thornburgh Pressteel Company; that in consideration of the premises the parties agreed that the Commercial Acceptance Trust would from time to time during the continuance of the agreement purchase such of said accounts belonging to the Thornburgh Pressteel Company as should be acceptable to the Commercial Acceptance Trust and pay therefor one hundred per cent of the net face value of the accounts purchased, “less a charge equal to the legal rate of interest on the money outstanding thereon, of which seventy-seven per cent of the net face value thereof shall be paid in cash upon acceptance thereof by the second party, and the remaining twenty-three per cent, less any deductions and plus any over-payments by the debtors and less total charges as shown in lines 38 to 42 hereof, to be paid immediately upon payment of any such accounts to second party, provided that no payments of any such remainder need be made so long as any accounts purchased hereunder are affected by any breach or violation of warranty hereunder, but such remainder, and any moneys, accounts or property of the first party which may come into possession of second party, may be held and later applied to the payment of any accounts or any indebtedness.” The second clause of the contract provided for remittances to be paid at the office of the Thornburgh Pressteel Company, and that representatives of the Commercial Acceptance Trust might have the privilege of inspecting and auditing the books at the expense of the former. The third clause provided that the Commercial Acceptance Trust would place its collection department at the disposal of the Thornburgh Pressteel Company and upon request endeavor to collect direct. This clause also makes other provisions relative to the working relation between the parties. The fourth clause provides for the total compensation to be paid for such services rendered, as follows:

“Fourth — The total compensation to be paid by first party for all services and other considerations specified in lines 18 to 37 hereof, and for the charge as mentioned in line 11 hereof, it is hereby agreed shall be one-thirtieth of one per cent (1/30 of 1%) of the net face value of accounts for each day from date of purchase by and until paid to second party, plus five dollars per $1000 only on the first $100,000 of accounts purchased within any twelve successive months’ period.”

The fifth clause sets forth the warranties referred to in the first clause and provides that the Thornburgh Pressteel Company warrants that “(a) first party, and each debtor named in an account, is solvent and will remain so until maturity thereof; (b) there will be no suspension of business, request for general extension, bankruptcy petition, or any act amounting to a business failure by or against first party or any debtor; (c) every account purchased hereunder and any settlement received thereon will be paid in full at maturity in cash or Chicago par funds; (d) prompt payment will be made to second party of any allowance or credit offered for sale to second party; (e) each amount offered for sale to second party shall represent á bona fide sale and delivery of property usually dealt in by first party, and shall be for a certain, undisputed, liquidated claim or demand which is due or to become due on the dates set forth; (/) first party will not sell or assign any of its own accounts elsewhere without first giving ten days’ written notice to second party of such intention.” The sixth clause provides for an assignment in writing of all accounts thus sold and purchased, and that the Commercial Acceptance Trust may become subrogated to all the rights in each of said accounts of the Thornburgh Pressteel Company. The seventh clause provides that in case of breach of warranty the Commercial Acceptance Trust shall be entitled to receive damages arising out of such breach, including attorneys’ fees, expenses, court costs, etc. The eighth clause appoints attorneys in fact of the Thornburgh Pressteel Company, with power to receive, open and dispose of all mail addressed to it; to indorse its name upon any notes, acceptances, checks, drafts, money orders or other evidences of payment or collateral that may come into its possession as payments of or on accounts purchased under said contract. The ninth clause provides that no change shall be made in the contract except in writing, duly entered into by the parties.

In answer to interrogatories filed in the municipal court the garnishee set up this contract, and alleged that at the time of service of the writ, July 31, 1919, it was not indebted to the judgment debtor, but that after that time, and up to the time of filing its amended answer, on August 27, 1919, the sum of $1017.89 became due it from the garnishee on the accounts purchased under the contract. The answer was traversed, and on the trial the court found that on the date of the answer the garnishee owed the judgment debtor the sum of $1017.89, less $309.17 due it under the agreement, and entered judgment for the sum of $708.72 as the difference between the amounts.

It was on the trial admitted by the garnishee that it had collected, after the filing of the answer and before the hearing herein, (some two years later,) the entire twenty-three per cent referred to in the contract, amounting, less deductions, to the sum of $4622.55, which sum, less that admitted due by the answer in the garnishment proceedings, it had remitted to the judgment debtor. This is the amount claimed by appellant.

Appellee contends that as the trial was by the court and no propositions of law were submitted, no demurrer to the evidence or motion to find for appellant, and no question having been raised as to the admission and exclusion of evidence, no question of law is presented to this court for review and the judgment of the Appellate Court is conclusive.

It must be admitted there is some confusion in the decisions of cases coming to this court from the Appellate Court. American Exchange Nat. Bank v. Chicago Nat. Bank, 131 Ill. 547, was an action of assumpsit. After plea filed and issue joined the case was submitted to the court for trial without a jury.

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Bluebook (online)
144 N.E. 6, 312 Ill. 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-pressed-steel-equipment-co-v-thornburgh-pressteel-co-ill-1924.