Western Cottage Piano & Organ Co. v. Burrows

168 Ill. App. 120, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1097
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 13, 1912
DocketGen. No. 5458
StatusPublished

This text of 168 Ill. App. 120 (Western Cottage Piano & Organ Co. v. Burrows) 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
Western Cottage Piano & Organ Co. v. Burrows, 168 Ill. App. 120, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1097 (Ill. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

On December 16, 1904, plaintiffs in error executed and delivered to defendant in error a promissory note payable to the "order of defendant in error three years after date, for the principal sum of $30,045 with interest at 5% per annum. No part of said note was paid. On December 26, 1907, defendant in error brought this suit against the maters of said note and filed a declaration containing a special count upon the note and the common counts. The principal defenses are that the transaction out of which the note arose was ultra vires, and that the signing of the note by plaintiffs in error was without consideration, and that the only purpose of the note was to properly adjust the books of the company for the time being, with no intention 6n the part of any one that the note should ever be enforced. There was a jury trial and a verdict in favor of defendant in error for $39,146.07. Motions by plaintiffs in error for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were denied. Defendant in error had judgment on the verdict, and the defendants below prosecute this writ of error to review said judgment.

The note here sued upon was given in final liquidation of a debt which was originally evidenced by a note dated December 24, 1902, due on or before five years after date, in the principal sum of $30,000 with interest at 5% per annum, payable to the order of A. H. Merrifield, signed by plaintiff in error, Thomas W. Burrows, and endorsed upon the back by L. B. Merrifield. We conceive it to be a material question who was the primary debtor in that transaction, and there is a direct conflict in the evidence on that subject. The matters here litigated are set forth and discussed to a considerable extent in Western Cottage Piano & Organ Company v. Burrows, 144 Ill. App. 350, and Merrifield v. Burrows, 153 Ill. App. 523. L. B. Merrifield died April 15, 1903. He was the president of defendant in error, and for many years lie and liis immediate family had been the owners of a majority of the stock in defendant in error, and in a prior like corporation whose legal existence had expired by limitation of time. He was seriously ill for a long time before his death. He had a wife, Mary C. Merrifield, a son, Louis W. Merrifield, and a daughter, Lilla M. Wood, the wife of George B. Wood, a clergyman. Thomas W. Burrows was a physician in active practice and was in attendance upon L. B. Merrifield during the long illness which resulted in his death, and had also acted as physician for all the other members of the family. Jarvis B. Burrows was a lawyer; had been receiver of a street railway corporation in which L. B. Merrifield. owned a large interest; and had been attorney for L. B. Merrifield and for L. W. Merrifield and for defendant in error in various matters. L. B. Merrifield during his long illness had great confidence in the Burrows brothers and their relations were very intimate, and L. B. Merrifield came to believe that it would be highly advantageous to himself and to his family to have the Burrows brothers associated with him in the ownership of the capital stock of defendant in error, of which, as before stated, L. B. Merrifield and his wife and his son and daughter and son-in-law owned a decisive majority, the rest of the stock being owned by A. H. Merrifield and 0. 0. Merrifield, brothers of L. B. Merrifield, and by several other persons. It was proposed that a holding company be organized under the laws of New Jersey and that all the stock which could be obtained be placed in the hands of that company and voted by it, and such a company was organized in New Jersey, but the plan was found to be impracticable and was abandoned. It was decided that all the capital stock held by others than the L. B. Merrifield family should be bought in; that the stock of the L. B. Merrifield family should be valued at $100 per share; that the outstanding stock when purchased should he valued at what it cost to huy it; that the stock should be equally divided between L. B. Merrifield and the members of his immediate family on the one hand, and the Burrows brothers on the other (the total number of shares of the capital stock of defendant in error being 1,000); and that the Burrows brothers should pay to L. B. Merrifield a sum sufficient so that the stock which they obtained, so purchased in, should cost them as much as the Merrifield stock was valued at under this arrangement.

A. H. Merrifield owned 140 shares, and he sold them for $33,600'. He was paid $3,600 in cash and received for the balance the note for $30,000 already mentioned, which transaction was consummated on December 24, 1902. It is the claim of plaintiffs in error that L. B. Merrifield conducted the negotiations and bought this stock from A. H. Merrifield and that it was his stock and his debt, but that L. B. Merrifield feared that if A. H. Merrifield knew that L. B. Merrifield was the buyer he would not sell at that price, and therefore Dr. Burrows was represented to A. H. Merrifield by both L. B. Merrifield and Dr. Burrows as the purchaser of this stock, and the papers were made so to read. There is testimony in the record to that effect, but there is a very great preponderance, both of oral and documentary evidence, that this was a purchase from A. H. Merrifield by Dr. Burrows. Dr. Burrows drew three papers that were executed that day.' He signed the note for $30,000 thereby making himself on the face of the papers the principal debtor. No adequate reason is shown why he would consent to give his note for another man’s debt. He testified that L. B. Merrifield wrote his name across the back of the note and then told Dr. Burrows to sign it as maker. There is oral testimony that Dr. Burrows told a witness that when he bought this stock, A. H. Merrifield refused to accept his unsecured note for $30,000 and that therefore he found it necessary to procure the endorsement of L. B. Merrifield upon the note. Dr. Burrows gave his personal check to A. H. Merrifield for $3,600 the cash payment. Dr. Burrows drew and took from A. H. Merrifield on that day a receipt wherein A. II. Merrifield acknowledged that he had received from Thomas W. Burrows $33,600 in full for 140 shares of the stock of defendant in error. He also took from A. H. Merrifield a bill of sale to Dr. Burrows of 140 shares of the stock of defendant in error. A. H. Merrifield assigned the certificate in blank. There is evidence that this was temporarily left with L. B. Merrifield to secure him for his liability as endorser on the note. What afterwards was done with it will appear hereafter. That stock has ever since been owned by one of the Burrows brothers and is a part of the 500 shares which they now possess. Dr. Burrows testified that in 1903, when he was alone with L. B. Merrifield in the home of the latter a little over a month before L. B. Merrifield died, they had a settlement in which L. B. Merrifield agreed to pay this $30,000 note. If that were true, it would be a serious abuse of the confidential relations existing between Dr. Burrows, the trusted physician and friend, and this very sick man, to have a transaction involving perhaps $200,000 closed without the presence of any member of the family of L. B. Merrifield, and it would be very strange that L. B. Merrifield should consent to transact alone so important a matter with any one when he had other members of his family near at hand, and when his son, L. W. Merrifield, lived about a block away. The evidence, however, is clear and convincing that the son, L. W. Merrifield, and the son-in-law George R. Wood were both present at that interview, and that Mrs.

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Related

German Fire Insurance v. Grunert
1 N.E. 113 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1884)
Evans v. Howell
71 N.E. 854 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1904)
Western Cottage Piano & Organ Co. v. Burrows
144 Ill. App. 350 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1908)
Merrifield v. Burrows
153 Ill. App. 523 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1910)

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Bluebook (online)
168 Ill. App. 120, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1097, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-cottage-piano-organ-co-v-burrows-illappct-1912.