United States Cold Storage Co. v. Central Manufacturing District Bank

251 Ill. App. 279, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 496
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 30, 1929
DocketGen. No. 32,944
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 251 Ill. App. 279 (United States Cold Storage Co. v. Central Manufacturing District 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
United States Cold Storage Co. v. Central Manufacturing District Bank, 251 Ill. App. 279, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 496 (Ill. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Holdom

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this case the circuit court, at the close of the case of the plaintiff, on the motion of defendant, instructed a verdict in defendant’s favor, upon which a judgment of nil capiat and for costs was entered, to which action of the court plaintiff preserved the customary exceptions and made the usual motions, which entitle plaintiff to our review of the record and actions of the trial court which culminated in the foregoing recited judgment. Plaintiff comes here by appeal asking a reversal of the judgment and an entry of a judgment in this court in its favor for the total amount of the 50 checks in suit, with interest.

The case is what plaintiff’s proofs make it, no questions being raised upon the pleadings. The circuit court instructed a verdict on the theory that the proofs of the plaintiff, when it rested its case, raised only questions of law for the conclusion of the court and not of fact for determination by the jury. With this attitude of the court we are in harmony, but for reasons hereinafter set forth in this opinion, we disagree with the legal conclusions at which the trial court arrived in its finding and judgment. The material facts developed by plaintiff’s proofs are not in controversy.

These facts, as culled from defendant’s statement of the case, found in its brief, are substantially as follows:

The check's involved in this suit are 50; in number, and were all drawn by the United States Cold Storage Company, the plaintiff, in favor of various individuals, who, according to the testimony hereinafter recited, were plaintiff’s customers, to whom checks were given during the course of business, with the exception of the James check, as to which James stated that he never knew of any checks coming to him and never had any credit with plaintiff. Notwithstanding this statement of James, Newman, the vice president of plaintiff, testified that in their business dealings with James about that time he signed many checks to him and at the time of signing the particular check in question there was attached to it “a memorandum or data or information,” and that no other checks were produced to corroborate Newman’s testimony as against that of James. (However in the decision to which we have arrived the dispute between James and Newman is not material as the check was drawn to the order of “Edwin Gr. James.”)

It is in evidence that one Arnold P. Meister was plaintiff’s chief clerk and had charge of its office; that beginning with June 3,1923, Meister caused the names of the payees to be placed in the checks, although they did not have any of the amounts specified in the checks coming to them as disclosed by their testimony. Fifty checks were introduced in evidence bearing dates from June 3, 1923, to October 25, 1924. The names of all of the payees of the checks were forged by indorsement thereon by Meister, which after going through the hands of various parties reached the defendant bank, who paid them in faith of the forged indorsements being genuine, and the bank at the end of each month thereafter made a statement of its account to the plaintiff. This procedure covered a period of about 15 months, during which Meister worked his forgery scheme.

The method of plaintiff in making up and issuing the checks was as follows: There were several sources of origin in the office where the checks started. Whoever was on duty as writer of the checks, or vouchers as they are sometimes named, made out the checks on a typing machine; instructions were given to the typists by the voucher writer with authority; this person was usually Meister, the chief clerk; a carbon of each check was made and initialled by the department head, and on this initialling or O. K. the check was signed by those who had authority to do so. The checks that went through the office department came under Meister, and on them his initials were signed. No further investigation was made by the other signers except that on the vouchers there would be a memo of some sort showing some sign of whoever 0. K.’d them, and this information was supposed to be taken from the books of the company. Meister’s duty was to supply the name of the payee with supporting information taken from the company’s books; those who were authorized to sign checks did so on receiving the 0. K. by Meister and supporting data without any further inquiry, so that for this corporate act of plaintiff three persons acted, Meister in making out the cheeks, and two others in signing them. Albert D. Viele was the general bookkeeper and one of those authorized to sign the checks. The others were Trask, Allman and Newman, and two signatures out of the four were sufficient, but there had to be two. Viele’s duties were handling the general accounts, and making up profit and loss statements. He testified that he had no payable accounts and had no books for accounts payable; that he had no memorandum of any kind for accounts payable, and got the memorandum as to whom the money was coming from the departments which would bring bills for payment. The loan department handled advances for products coming into the warehouse to be stored for the account of others, and what was thus owed shows in the loan-ledger. Viele further testified that that is not where they got the data from to make checks to pay people. This leaves the information as to where Meister got his supporting data undisclosed. Viele made a permanent record of every voucher in their order on the voucher book. The check that goes to the customer has a memo attached as to what the payment is for. It is a conceded fact that the names of the payees in all of the 50 checks were indorsed upon the checks by Meister, and that such indorsements were forgeries committed by Meister.

Defendant argues in its brief: “So for the performance of this one act by the corporation it was necessary that three persons act, Meister who designated the payee, the two others who affixed the signature. If these two affixed the signature to a check where Meister did not O. K. it, their act would be outside of their authority.”

By parity of reasoning, so was Meister’s act outside of his authority when he made checks payable to persons to whom the plaintiff was not indebted. Meister’s authority was limited to the drawing of checks payable to the order of creditors of plaintiff. There is no evidence which would warrant the inference that Meister was authorized to draw checks to the order of anyone but those to whom the plaintiff was indebted. That was the limitation of Meister’s authority as shown by the evidence. And counsel further argues: “It follows, therefore, that the act of Meister in thus designating the payee, was the act of the corporation. ” This is not a logical deduction from the proofs. Meister had no authority to make checks payable to anyone to whom the plaintiff was not indebted.

Defendant contends in an effort to sustain the judgment in its favor that “the checks in question were payable to living persons not intended to have any interest therein and were, therefore, payable to bearer,’ ’ and cites section 9, Cahill’s St. ch. 98, If 29; and further contends that “the plaintiff drew these checks not intending that the payee should ever have possession thereof or any interest therein. The payees, therefore, were in law, fictitious persons, and the checks, being in law, payable to bearer, were transferable by delivery.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
251 Ill. App. 279, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-cold-storage-co-v-central-manufacturing-district-bank-illappct-1929.