Watkins v. Dunbar

232 Ill. App. 1, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 50
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 10, 1924
DocketGen. No. 7,650
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 232 Ill. App. 1 (Watkins v. Dunbar) 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
Watkins v. Dunbar, 232 Ill. App. 1, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 50 (Ill. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Heard

delivered the opinion of the court.

Grover C. Watkins, son of appellee, is a farmer near Mt. Auburn, Christian county, Illinois, and was largely indebted to the Mt. Auburn State Bank on judgment notes given by him to said bank. On the 26th day of September, 1921, a judgment by confession was entered in the circuit court of Christian county upon said notes in favor of the Mt. Auburn Bank against said Grover 0. Watkins for the sum of $2,782.75 and execution immediately issued to the sheriff of said county thereon. On the 28th day of September, 1921, a motion was filed by Grover C. Watkins in the circuit court of said county to open up the judgment and for leave to plead in said cause and by agreement of the parties levy of the execution was stayed until a hearing of said motion. On the 12th day of December, 1921, this motion to vacate the judgment was withdrawn and the parties consented that the amount of the judgment be reduced by the sum of $37.50 which had been included as attorney’s fees and a judgment by agreement was entered on that day for the original amount of the notes with interest to date which amounted to the sum of $2,784.90. Thereupon the court directed that the former execution be recalled and the former judgment vacated and set aside. An execution was issued upon the new judgment to appellant, as sheriff of said county, and he thereupon returned the former execution to the clerk of the court. On March 11, 1922, appellee, as sheriff of said county, levied said execution upon the property in question and advertised it for sale on the 21st of March, 1922, the sale to be held at the residence of Grover C. Watkins. The sale was thereafter continued until the 31st of March, 1922, and again to April 10, 1922, at which time it was continued to July 1, 1922.

On the 12th day of December, 1921, at 9:30 a. m., appellee, who is the father of Grover C. Watkins, filed for record in the recorder’s office of Christian county a chattel mortgage purporting to have been given by said Grover C. Watkins to appellee and covering all of the property in question. The mortgage was dated December 12, 1921, purporting to secure the promissory note of Grover C. Watkins to appellant for the sum of $4,000, dated December 12, 1921, which mortgage was prepared by the attorney for Grover C. Watkins. Appellee claims, to be the owner of the property in question by virtue of a foreclosure sale under said mortgage had on the 25th of March, 1922.

June 21, 1922, appellee brought suit in replevin for the personal property in question, and in his declaration alleged that appellant on the 11th day of March, 1922, took and unjustly detained the property in question. To this declaration appellant filed four pleas, viz.: non cepit, non detinet, property in the Mt. Auburn State Bank and á fourth plea of justification alleging that the appellant seized the property as sheriff by virtue of an execution issued in favor of the Mt. Auburn State Bank and against Grover C. Watkins. Issues were formed, a trial by jury waived and the cause was heard before the court, the issues found for appellee and judgment entered against appellant in the usual form in replevin, from which judgment this appeal is taken.

In a replevin suit a defendant who seeks to justify under a plea of being an officer with an execution and levying upon the property of a third person, must support such plea by evidence showing a valid judgment, a valid execution, that the property is subject to the lien of said execution and that he, the defendant, was a de jure officer unless the necessity of such proof is obviated by the pleadings in the case.

It is contended by appellee that appellant did not prove that he was a de jure officer and that, therefore, his defense of justification failed. Before the commencement of the trial it was stipulated that Dunbar was sheriff. Appellee’s replication to appellant’s fourth plea admitted that he was sheriff. When appellee was on the witness stand, in reply to an interrogatory of his attorney, he testified that appellant was sheriff, and when appellant was examined as a witness he testified, without objection, to his official capacity. While this evidence was not the best evidence under these circumstances, appellee cannot now be heard to urge that there was no proof of the official capacity of appellant. (Jones v. McGuirk, 51 Ill. 382.)

It is also urged by appellee that there is no evidence that the appellant ever took possession of the property in question. In his affidavit for replevin, appellee swore that appellant “wrongfully detains the said goods and chattels from this plaintiff” and in his declaration filed in the cause it is stated that appellant “wrongfully took and wrongfully detains” the goods and chattels in question. These were essential and material allegations of plaintiff’s declaration and were appellee’s contention true, we would be obliged to reverse the judgment on account of his failure to prove these necessary, essential elements. It is true that at the close of appellee’s case in chief, the evidence failed to show that appellee had ever taken possession of the property, but that proof was supplied by appellant.

It is claimed by appellant that the mortgage in question was void as to the creditors of Grover 0. Watkins. It is undoubtedly the law that a financial transaction involving the giving of a chattel mortgage by a son to his father, when the son is heavily involved financially and insolvent, should be closely scrutinized by the court especially when the action of such mortgage as held to be valid would defeat other creditors. Appellee introduced evidence tending to show an indebtedness on the part of his son to him, but while he introduced notes as evidence of such indebtedness, he was unable to give the items of the consideration of the notes or the amount in which his son was indebted to him. As a witness, he admitted that the mortgage was given for the purpose of preventing the Mt. Auburn State Bank from collecting the judgment which they had against the son.

The property in question was all upon the farm used and occupied by Grover C. Watkins and after appellee claimed to have taken possession of the property under his mortgage on March 10, 1922, it remained on that same farm up until the time of the alleged sale and while appellee claims that a hired man of Grover C. Watkins was appointed custodian of the property, there was no visible change in the possession of the property but it was used by Grover C. Watkins the same as before. At the alleged sale of March 25,1922, none of the property was purchased by persons other than appellee. After the alleged sale, the property remained in the possession of Grover C. Watkins, appellant testifying “that he loaned it to the boy to finish his crops with.”

In Martin v. Duncan, 156 Ill. 274, in passing upon the question as to what constituted taking possession of mortgaged personal property by a mortgagee, the Supreme Court said: “It was therefore important in this case, as sustaining the validity of the transfer to defendant in error, to show that he was in possession when the property was attached; that there had been a change of possession. Up to May 16, defendant in error had been in possession as agent of his brother, and if, on May 28, he was in possession for himself, the change in the character of the possession should have been indicated by such outward, open, actual and visible signs as could be seen, and known to the public, or persons dealing with the goods. (Claflin v. Rosenberg, 42 Mo.

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Watkins v. Dunbar
149 N.E. 14 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
232 Ill. App. 1, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watkins-v-dunbar-illappct-1924.