Young v. Northern Illinois Coal & Iron Co.

13 F. 806
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 13 F. 806 (Young v. Northern Illinois Coal & Iron Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. Northern Illinois Coal & Iron Co., 13 F. 806 (uscirct 1880).

Opinion

Blodgett, D. J.

The original cause is a bill in equity to foreclose a mortgage given by the' Northern Illinois Coal & Iron Company to complainant’s testator upon certain coal mines and coal lands situate in La Salle county, in this state.

The mortgageor continued in possession of the mortgaged property and operated its mines in the usual manner, by raising and selling coal therefrom, until after this bill was filed.

On the twenty-ninth day of July, 1876, an order was made in the cause appointing a receiver, and directing him to take possession of the mortgaged property, and to collect outstanding dues, demands, and accounts of the company.

[807]*807On the first day of August the receiver gave bond and qualified, and on the second day of August he took possession of the mines and mining property.

It also appears that for several years prior to the appointment of the receiver the company had had dealings with the First National Bank of Mendota, mostly in the way of short loans of money and discount of drafts drawn by the company upon the persons and railroad companies to whom the coal company had sold coal, and I think the fair inference from the disclosed facts is that these drafts, when given, were treated rather as collateral security for the amounts advanced upon them by the bank to the company, than as an absolute transfer to the bank of the indebtedness against which the drafts were drawn, because the proof shows that the money due from customers on the drafts was often collected by the officers of the coal company and paid over to the bank, and on one or more occasions such money was retained and used by the coal company, and the bank paid from other sources by the coal company.

On or about the seventh day of July, 1876, the bank agreed with the officers of the coal company to discount, presumably, upon the basis of their former dealings, three drafts, to be drawn by the coal company, as follows:

On the Clinton, Dubuque & Minnesota E. Co. for - - - $ 900

On the Illinois Central E. Co., ----- 2,f)00

On the C., E. I. & P. E. Co., ------ i,i()0

$4,000

Instead of taking these drafts to the bank to be discounted, after making the arrangement, the superintendent of the company took to the bank the notes of the company, indorsed by Col. Taylor, for #4,000.

The bank at first refused to discount these notes, but finally concluded to do so, provided the superintendent would write across the face of the notes, “To be paid in drafts on the respective roads,” which was done, and the bank thereupon discounted the notes. At the same time the bank discounted for the company a note of the Chicago Stove Works for $291, and a note made by Warren, Clark & Co. for $523. The net proceeds of the $4,000 note and the two small notes, paid by the bank to the coal company, was $4,741, $1,608 of which was applied to the payment of indebtedness then due the bank from the coal company, and the balance of $3,133 was paid in cash to the coal company, and the money so obtained was applied [808]*808by the coal company to the payment, as far as it would go, of its laborers. Within a few days after this transaction, Col. Taylor returned from New York, when the $4,000 notes were taken up and three drafts drawn by the company, and indorsed by Col. Taylor and his wife, in favor of the bank, substituted in their place.

Draft July 7,1876, at 30 days, on O. H. Booth, Treas. Clinton, D. & M. R. Co.,......- - - $ 900

Draft July 7, 1876, at 30 days, on J. C. Willing, Treas. Illinois Central R. Co., - -..... 2,000

Draft of July 7, 1876, at 30 days, on W. G. Purdy, Treas. C., R. I. & P. R. Co.,.........1,100

And on the fourth day of August, 1876, four days after the receiver was appointed and qualified, the superintendent of the coal eonqpany delivered to the bank four drafts, as follows:

Draft dated August 1,1876, due August 25tlf, on C. H. Booth, Treas. C., D. & M. R. Co., for - - - - - - $ 756 00

Draft dated August 1,1876, due August 15th, on J. O. Willing, Treas. Illinois Central R. R., for - - - - - • - 1,539 30

Draft dated August 1,1876, due August 15th, on W. G-. Purdy, Treas. C., R. I. & P. R. Co., for...... 1,356 20

Draft dated August 1,1876, at 10 days’ sight, on J. W. Parker & Co., for - - - - - - - 900 00

The last set of drafts drawn on the Illinois Central, Chicago, Bock Island & Pacific Eailroad Company, and the Clinton, Dubuque & Minnesota Eailroad Company, were for the actual amounts due from those companies to the coal company for coal delivered them by the coal company during the month of July.

The J. W. Parker & Co. draft was given to make up the full amount of the paper taken up, and notice was given the receiver of the giving of the new drafts.

At the time the receiver took possession there was no entry of these drafts upon the books of the coal company, but the amounts represented by them stood in the form of open accounts against drawees.

On the second day of August, Col. Taylor, as president of the coal company, called at the office of the Illinois Central Eailroad Company and signed a receipt in full for the coal delivered in July, and requested that a check be sent the bank for the amount of the draft of August 1st.

[809]*809The bank notified the treasurer of the Chicago, Eock Island & Pacific Company that draft had been drawn, by letter dated August 10th, and asked payment to bank, or that money be held by railroad company, subject to the decision of the court. None of these drafts were ever accepted on their face by the drawees thereof.

On the fourth day of August, 1877, an order was entered by this court directing that the drawees of those drafts should pay the several sums duo from them to the coal company, to the receiver, without prejudice to the right of the bank to claim and receive said indebtedness from the receiver, in case the claim of the bank to said moneys, as set up in this intervening petition, should be established; and in pursuance of this order the amounts due from the Illinois Central Eailroad Company, and from the Chicago, Eock Island & Pacific Eailroad Company, to the coal company have been paid into the hands of the receiver.

It also appears that at the time the receiver took possession of the mines, the coal company was in arrears to its laborers for labor in the working and care of the mines to the amount of about $9,000, and that the receiver was, by order of the court, directed to raise the money and pay off this indebtedness by the issue of certificates, which should be a lien on all the assets of the coal company in the hands of a receiver.

It appears to me, upon more mature reflection, that the money advanced by the bank to the coal company on the transaction of July 7th ■was, in fact, advanced upon the faith that the bank was to be secured by the pledge of drafts upon these railroad companies,—a memorandum to that effect was made upon the $4,000 notes at the time,—and on Col. Taylor’s return the notes were taken up and drafts given to the amount of the notes.

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Related

Minor v. Pursglove Coal Mining Co.
189 S.E. 297 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
13 F. 806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-northern-illinois-coal-iron-co-uscirct-1880.