Zenco Electrical Supply Co. v. South Shore Electric Co.

177 Ill. App. 553, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1227
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 4, 1913
DocketGen. No. 17,122
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 177 Ill. App. 553 (Zenco Electrical Supply Co. v. South Shore Electric Co.) 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
Zenco Electrical Supply Co. v. South Shore Electric Co., 177 Ill. App. 553, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1227 (Ill. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court of Cook County, entered on July 15, 1910, by which it was decreed that unless the H. M. Hooker Company, the appellant, paid to the complainant, the Zenco Electrical Supply Company, the sum of $495.97, with interest thereon at the rate of five per cent, per annum from the date of the decree to the day of payment, with the taxed costs in the cause, certain premises in Chicago belonging to the said H. M. Hooker Company should be sold to satisfy a lien to which the decree found the Zenco Electrical Supply Company was entitled by virtue of its furnishing as a subcontractor materials to a building on the said premises, under a contract with the South Shore Electric Company. The South Shore Electric Company had a contract with the H. M. Hooker Company to furnish all material and labor necessary to instal a conduit wiring system for the building, and it proceeded to purchase for delivery to the building from the Zenco Electrical Supply Company electrical conduit calls, covers, gang switch boxes and other electrical materials and supplies.

The South Shore Electric Company was on the 12th day of December, 1907, declared a bankrupt. The Zenco Electrical Supply Company filed its claim in that proceeding and was paid dividends amounting to $65.78 on said claim. "

In this appeal there are several points urged as reasons why the decree should be reversed, but there is one which is, in our opinion, conclusive against the right of the complainant to the relief granted by the decree. This renders it unnecessary to consider the others.

The statute under which this suit is brought and which alone gives the right to the subcontractor for materials to a lien,—(“An Act to revise the law in relation to Mechanics Liens, Approved May 18, 1903”) provides (section 33) that the petition shall be filed or suit commenced to enforce the lien given to subcontractors “within four months after the time that the final payment is due the subcontractor * * * furnishing the material.”

The contention of the appellee is that the final payment was not due the subcontractor until December 2, 1907, the date when the Hooker Company notified the contractor to resume work on its contract, or it would be canceled. The master to whom the cause was referred and the court below sustained this contention; but it is a conclusion with which we are unable, on full consideration, to agree. The master disposes of the question as follows:

“The contract of the Zenco Company was dependent upon the contract of the South Shore Company and the time when the four months would begin to run would therefore commence on December 2, 1907. As the bill in this case was filed on March 31, 1908, it was within the statutory time.”

We cannot find in the evidence in this cause any proof that the time of payment or “credit” given the South Shore Company by the Zenco Company for the goods furnished depended on the completion of the contract by the South Shore Company with the Hooker Company, or had any relation to the payment of the Hooker Company to the South Shore Company.

The appellee relies, it would appear, on the testimony of Frantzen, its Secretary and Treasurer, and of Mr. Spensley, the Secretary of the South Shore Company, but we cannot find justification in either for the conclusion reached by the master and the court below.

Frantzen testifies that the Zenco Company had business dealings with the South Shore Company for an extended period, selling them goods; that in relation to the sale of the goods in question which went to the Hooker building, he had a conversation with Spensley; that “the only thing was to send them over to the job;” that “the material was ordered by Spensley and his foreman;” that the bills introduced in evidence “represent a series of orders and conversations; that they were telephone orders; that before deliveries were made the orders were O. Ek’d by him.” He says: “I am cognizant of everything that goes out of our house in the way of goods. Mr. Spensley made arrangements with me by ’phone that if any telephone orders came there I would O. K. them and I O. E.’d the credit.” And again: “When the South Shore wanted material for the Hooker job, Mr. Spensley was either at our office when he had the first conversation, or it was over the ’phone to establish the credit and the passing of whatever orders that would be given either that day or later for that contract, and I told him I would sell the goods to him and deliver them at the job.” Then he says that Mr. Spensley told him that he would call him up or have his foreman do it, to give the specific items to send over, and that the order tickets were then filled out, O. E.’d by him (Frantzen) and the goods shipped. He further testifies that “after the delivery of the goods demands for payment were made by me of Mr. Spensley and he said they did not have the money.” He further testified: “I went to Spensley and told him I wanted a check and he kept putting me off and said they did not have the money and then they dropped into bankruptcy.” Again he says that when he went to Spensley for money he was expecting him, Spensley, to collect money from various other unfinished jobs and pay it over for the material furnished on the Hooker job.

Spensley, referring to electrical material purchased by the South Shore Company from the Zenco Company for various jobs, says he “never understood it as their having two or more separate accounts.”

Nor do we see in Spensley’s cross-examination, as it appears in the record (referred to in the appellee’s argument as unabstracted) anything to show that the Zenco Company’s rights.against the South Shore Company as to time of payment depended on the contract of the latter corporation with the Hooker Company. He merely says: “I gave orders.from time to time over the telephone and confirmed them by written orders afterwards for goods to be delivered to the' Hooker building from the Zenco people.”

The goods in question here, for the price or value of which this lien was decreed, were delivered at the Hooker building on the order of the South Shore Company on October 15, 16, 17 and 22, 1907. Prima facie the payment for goods sold and delivered as these were becomes due on delivery. So far as the record goes, that may have been the case with these goods, and the last payment have become due on October 22, 1907. There is nothing sufficient to overcome this prima facie presumption. It is true that Mr. Frantzen, as pointed out by appellee, spoke of Spensley having a conversation with him to “establish the credit, and that he (Frantzen) ” O. K.’d the credit, but this might mean nothing more than that Frantzen ’s O. K. was necessary to the delivery of the goods without previous payment.

But assuming*, as was very probable, that some time credit was expected and understood to exist, there is no evidence as. to what it was, except evidence which tends strongly to show it could not have been more than 30 days—a very usual time for credit in the sale of merchandise. When, on December 10, 1907, the Zenco Company gave a formal notice to the H. M.

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George Green Lumber Co. v. Fendl
246 Ill. App. 132 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
177 Ill. App. 553, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 1227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zenco-electrical-supply-co-v-south-shore-electric-co-illappct-1913.