Wing v. Beach

31 Ill. App. 78, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 361
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 21, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 31 Ill. App. 78 (Wing v. Beach) 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
Wing v. Beach, 31 Ill. App. 78, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 361 (Ill. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Pleasants, J.

This was an action of assumpsit brought by defendants in error against Dwight L. Wing and Hamilton F. Downing, partners under the firm name of D. L. Wing & Co., as indorsers of six bills of exchange, differing only in date and amount, of the first of which the following is a copy:

“ Office of Wing Milling Company, §3,000. Litchfield, Ill., June 2, 1884.
Ten days after date pay to the order of D. L.Wing & Co., three thousand dollars, value received, and charge to account of Planet Mills.
To Wing Milling Company,
406 Chamber of Commerce, St. Louis, Mo.,:

On the face of each appeared the following acceptance:

“ Accepted, payable banking house of Beach, Davis & Co., Litchfield, Ill. D. L. Wing, Tr.” And on the hack the following indorsements:
“ Pay Beach, Davis & Co., or order. D. L. Wing & Co.”
“ Oct. 8, 1884. Credit by cash, by interest to Dec. 1, 1884, at rate by agreement of 8 per cent per annum, $111.99.”

Each of the others was accepted and indorsed in like manner, except that on the second one the amount of interest credited was $408.21, and on all the others the amount was credited generally and not as intefest.

Besides the common counts, the declaration contained special counts on the several bills and indorsements respectively, alike in form, m.utatis mutandis, and averring that the Wing Milling Company was incorporated under the laws of this State, doing a milling business and resident at Litchfield; that the “ Planet Mills ” was only the name under which the local business of said company was done at that place ; that said company and the Planet Mills were one and the same in all respects; that said D. L. Wing was president and treasurer of said company and also the active and only resident partner of said firm of D. L. Wing & Co. in said county and State; and that the defendants, both before and after said bills of exchange became due, waived demand, and protest and notice thereof.

As to the defendant Downing the summons was returned “ not found.” Wing pleaded the general issue, under which the trial was had, resulting in a verdict for plaintiffs for $38,-118.09. Of this amount they entered a remittitur of $500 and after a motion for a new trial overruled, judgment was entered against him for the remainder. He prosecutes this writ of error.

It appears that for some time before these bills were made the milling company transacted its financial business through the defendants in error, who were bankers at Litchfield. In September, 1883, it was owing them about $50,000. Upon their so insisting, D. L. Wing, as its president and on its behalf, agreed in writing to reduce the amount, give them the indorsement of D. L. Wing & Co., and put up $75,000 of its second mortgage bonds, secured on its property at Litchfield, as collateral security for its paper and renewals thereof which should be held by them, from time to time, all of which he did, and under this arrangement the business relations and transactions of the parties were continued. The regular course of this business was, when a bill became due to take it up with another for the same amount, at ten days, the interest being charged in current account of the company against current deposits. For that purpose, and to avoid delay in renewing, D. L. Wing & Co., by D. L. Wing, indorsed bills in blank, which he left with his brother, Carlos JEL Wing, the cashier and general manager of the company at Litchfield, to be by him filled up and exchanged for old ones as occasion required. Of such were those here in suit.

When the first of these, dated June 2, 1884-, became due, Mr. Van Deusen, the cashier of Beach, Davis & Co., declined to accept his offered renewal, and told him they could not do business in that way any longer. The others, of which the last was dated June 12th, successively matured in the course of ten days and were all unprovided for. There was no further offer of renewals.

At that time, in consequence of the reduction which was made in the amount of indebtedness, $23,000 of the collateral bonds had been surrendered. It is not claimed, however, that by the agreement of September, Beach, Davis & Co. were at all bound to accept renewals of these bills. From the evidence it would appear that in the meantime material changes in the conditions affecting the value of the securities had taken place, or were by them supposed to have taken place, and it is conceded they were free to refuse an extension of the credit if they saw fit to do so.

This action was commenced in November, 1886, and the defense set up was purely technical—that plaintiffs had not taken the formal steps required by law to fix the liability of defendant as an indorser.

First, that they did not make a sufficient demand of. payment upon the acceptor, nor show a lawful excuse for the failure to make it, or any waiver of it by the defendant.

There was no evidence of any formal demand upon either of them on the day it became due, except the first, as to which each of two witnesses, Mr. Van Deusen and David Davis, stated that when Carlos Wing came on that day to renew it, he, the witness, made the demand; and Wing contradicted the statements.

It is also contended that such demand, if made, was insufficient unless the collaterals were then produced or shown to be in possession of the bank, to be surrendered on payment of the bill, of which there was no proof.

But where, as here, a note or bill is made or accepted payable at a particular bank, and the banker is himself the holder at its maturity, we understand the law to be as stated in Bank of U. S. v. Carmeal, 2 Pet. 543, that “no formal demand of payment is necessary; it is sufficient if the note is at the bank and remains unpaid at the expiration of business hours.” The indorser as well as the maker or acceptor engages that payment shall be made at the place so named. In the absence of proof to the contrary, it will be presumed that the instrument was there, ready to be delivered upon payment; and if there be no funds left there for that purpose and the maker or acceptor does not there appear and pay it when due, these facts are sufficient proof of a demand and refusal. Byles on Bills, 167; 1 Parsons on Motes and Bills, 365, 371; Edwards on Bills and Notes, 497; Chicopee Bank v. Philadelphia Bank, 8 Wall. 641.

For the proposition that a demand without a tender of the collaterals would he insufficient, counsel cite The Ocean National Bank v. Fant, 50 N. Y. 474. That was a suit against the payee and indorser of a note reciting, on its face that the maker had given him certain bonds as collateral, with power to sell on default. When the notary presented it for payment the maker expressed his readiness and offered to pay it, on the surrender of the collaterals also. They were not produced, and for that reason only he refused to make the payment.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Ill. App. 78, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wing-v-beach-illappct-1889.