Weakly v. Firebaugh

269 Ill. App. 123, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 694
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 16, 1933
DocketGen. No. 8,662
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 269 Ill. App. 123 (Weakly v. Firebaugh) 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
Weakly v. Firebaugh, 269 Ill. App. 123, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 694 (Ill. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Eldredge

delivered the opinion of the court.

Earl Weakly, plaintiff in the court below and appellee here, brought an action of replevin against C. C. Firebaugh and C. Walter Jones to recover the possession of certain personal property and obtained a verdict and judgment not only for the possession of the property but also a money judgment in the sum of $325 under a count in trover. Firebaugh alone prosecutes this appeal.

Prior to October 15, 1930, the plaintiff, Weakly, had been operating a farm in Shelby county, part of which he owned and part of which he had leased from another party. On the above date Weakly ceased to personally operate the farm and took up his residence in the City of Shelbyville, leaving his live stock and farming implements upon the farm. Sometime in February, 1931, he entered into negotiations with the defendant Jones by which the latter was to move on the farm as a tenant. Jones moved onto the farm on March 1, 1931, bringing with him some live stock and equipment which he owned. Weakly testified that the original agreement was that Jones was to operate the farm under a “50-50” basis which was done for a few weeks. A new agreement was reached between the parties on or about March 28, 1931, when Jones offered to buy the personal property owned by Weakly then on the farm and to operate the farm on his own responsibility as a tenant. Weakly at this time was apparently operating a gasoline station in the City of Shelbyville and testified that his wife handled all the accounts pertaining to the farm for him. There were a number of cows on the farm and as Jones sold the milk from these cows Mrs. Weakly kept the accounts in regard thereto and paid Jones his portion of the receipts from the milk or cream so sold by him. This was while Jones was operating the farm upon the “50-50” plan. When the negotiations commenced between Jones and Weakly for the purchasing of the personal property of Weakly which was on the farm, Mrs. Weakly, with the approval of her husband, made out a list of such property together with the valuations thereof which were fixed by appellee showing the amount which Jones was to pay for the property. This list is as follows:

“Stock and Tools:

3 cultivators.............$ 25.00

Mower ................. 25.00

Corn Shelter ............ 2.00 C. Walter Jones

Wagon ................. 25.00

Gas Engine ............. 25.00 Earl Weakly

Harrow ................ 5.00

Plows .................. 30.00

Disc ................... 10.00

Planter ................ 75.00

Roller .................. 10.00

Oats seeder ............. 25.00

Harness ................ 25.00

Cows, 9................. 675.00

Horses, 3 ............... 200.00

Calves, 3 ............... 30.00

Sows, 3................. 150.00

Corn, 300 bu............. 180.00

Oats, 90 bu.............. 25.20

Hay, 6 ton @ $12.00 per.. 72.00

Seed Beans, 8 bu. @ $2.00 per .................. 16.00

$1630.20

Pasture rent............ 200.00

$1830.20

“1st half payable Sept. 1, 1931, 2nd half payable January 1, 1932.”

J ones agreed to purchase the property mentioned in the said list at the prices therein fixed by Weakly. Thereafter on April 14, 1931, Jones and Weakly went to a lawyer in Shelbyville for the purpose of having a lease drawn up and executed for the farm land. They went to the lawyer’s office.in the evening of that day. A written lease of the land was executed by Jones and Weakly. The subject of the purchase of the personal property was also discussed at that time. The total price of the personal property which had been agreed upon in accordance with the schedule heretofore mentioned was $1,630.20. The lawyer suggested that Jones give his note for this amount payable to the order of Weakly, due one' year after date with interest at seven per cent. This note was executed by Jones. It was then agreed that Jones should also execute a chattel mortgage on the property so purchased by him from Weakly to secure the note. The chattel mortgage was drawn up and signed by Jones. The chattel mortgage, however, was not acknowledged at that time because the justice of the peace before whom it had to be acknowledged was not obtainable on account of the lateness of the hour but it was tentatively agreed by the parties that Weakly and Jones would come to the office the following morning when Jones would acknowledge the chattel mortgage. The papers were left by the parties in the lawyer’s office at that time. Neither Jones nor Weakly appeared the following day nor at any other time and the chattel mortgage was never acknowledged by Jones, and the papers, including the lease, note and unacknowledged chattel mortgage remained in the office of the lawyer for a considerable length of time, though the note and lease were in some manner subsequently delivered to Weakly. The lawyer met Weakly several times and called his attention to the fact that the chattel mortgage had never been acknowledged nor recorded and advised him to have these things done, and on each occasion Weakly replied in substance that some day he would attend to the matter. Jones proceeded to operate the farm and the milk checks received for the sale of milk were turned over to Weakly as payments on the note and were so indorsed on the note by either Weakly or his wife. These indorsements were as follows: “March 31, 1931, milk checks 28.59; April 30, 1931, milk checks, 33.18, May 31, l'931, milk checks $32.16.” Thus it is evident that the parties considered that the sale of the property was effectuated at the time they made their oral agreement March 28, 1931, as Jones is given credit on the note for the milk checks turned over to Weakly on March 31, 1931. When the assessor went to Weakly to obtain his schedule of personal property for taxation, the latter told him that in regard to the personal property on the farm in the possession of Jones, “It is a little agreement between ourselves, kind of like 50-50.” Weakly thereupon filled out the tax schedule as the property of Jones and signed Jones’s name thereto. On June 29, 1931, Weakly had judgment entered against Jones on the note given by him in payment for the property and execution was issued on said judgment.

Appellant, Firebaugh, is president of the Commercial State Bank at Windsor, Illinois and it appears that Jones was indebted to said bank in the sum of $1,173.20. On May 27, 1931, Jones executed his promissory note for said amount payble to Firebaugh nine months after date with interest at seven per cent per annum and on the same day executed a chattel mortgage to secure the same which embraced the same chattel property in controversy. This chattel mortgage was acknowledged by Jones and recorded in the recorder’s office of Shelby county on the .same day.

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Related

Northland Associates v. FW Woolworth Company
362 F. Supp. 75 (N.D. Illinois, 1973)
Ellman v. Ianni
157 N.E.2d 807 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1959)
Reynolds ex rel. Jones v. Weakly
12 N.E.2d 689 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
269 Ill. App. 123, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weakly-v-firebaugh-illappct-1933.