Rice & Bullen Malting Co. v. International Bank

185 Ill. 422 | Ill. | 1900

Mr. Chief Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

In 1893 J. H. Pank & Co. were carrying on the business of making and selling malt, and had a malthouse and warehouse in Chicago. They executed two notes on October 21 and November 1 of that year, payable to their own order, and endorsed them and raised money on them. Among other collaterals to the notes they endorsed and delivered a warehouse receipt of the National Storage Company for six thousand bushels of malt stored in bin No. 1 at warehouse A, being the warehouse of Pank & Co. The National Storage Company measured the grain into the bin, put a seal over the mouth of the chute and a sign on the bin that it was leased to and property in the possession of the National Storage Company, as warehouse-men. The malt and bin remained in exclusive possession of the storage company.' The notes were purchased by appellee, the International Bank, in February, 1894, and the warehouse receipt was attached to one of the notes. J. H. Pank & Co. had also given to the Fort Dearborn National Bank their promissory note for money borrowed, and as collateral thereto gave their own receipt for thirty thousand bushels of. malt in store in their warehouses, subject to the order of said Fort Dearborn National Bank, which locked up the bins containing the malt pledged to it. J. H. Pank & Co. failed, and made an assignment to Carl C. Moeller. The appellant, the Rice & Bullen Malting Company, was engaged in the business of a maltster in Chicago, and its president, Patrick H. Rice, was a director of the Fort Dearborn National Bank. J. H. Pank, a member of the firm of J. H. Pank & Co., was directed by the Fort Dearborn National Bank to appellant as a probable purchaser of the malt pledged to said bank, and on April 6, 1894, he made an agreement to sell-complainant twenty-five thousand bushels of malt at fifty-one cents per bushel. This purchase was made or induced, in part at least, from a motive on the part of Rice to aid the Fort Dearborn National Bank in realizing upon its said collateral. Nothing was said at the time of making the contract for the sale about appellee having any interest in the malt or anything to do with the sale. Pank went to appellee to obtain authority to sell the malt pledged to that bank by the warehouse receipt, and told the assistant cashier that he had made a sale of the malt to appellant at fifty-one cents a bushel. That officer told him that as there had been an assignment and the assignee had an equitable claim on the malt, he should get authority from such assignee, and he then brought the following order:

“Carl C. Moeller & Co., General Commission Merchants, 234 LaSalle Street, Chicago, May 4, 1894. }
“B. Neu, Cashier Int. Bk.:
“Dear Sir—Please credit enclosed note for §855.52, less discount on note' for §7800. Also deliver to Mr. J. H. Pank the National Storage Co. receipt for bin No. 1, 6000, for delivery on sale to Messrs. Rice & Bullen. I will hold myself responsible for the full amount due you.
“Yours truly
Carl C. Moeller, Assignee. ”

It was then agreed that he should deliver the malt as agent for the appellee, which should receive the proceeds, and the warehouse receipt was delivered to him for that purpose. He first delivered to appellant the malt which he'had pledged to the Port Dearborn National Bank, amounting to about twelve thousand bushels. By-means of the warehouse receipt he obtained from the storage company the malt for which it was given. The storage company broke the seal and delivered the malt in the same condition as when sealed up, and Rank delivered it to appellant. It amounted to 581811 bushels, and he then delivered some other malt not involved in this case to complete the transaction. Appellee’s malt was delivered f. o. b. cars at warehouse, and Bank sent the bills to appellant, on which was endorsed that they were payable to "appellee. Appellant was also otherwise fully informed, before payment, that this malt belonged to appellee, and was notified to make payment to it. Appellant refused to make such payment, and paid the Port Dearborn National Bank not only for the malt upon which that bank had a claim, but also for that pledged to appellee. Thereupon appellee brought this suit against appellant declaring in the common counts, and appellant pleaded the general issue. There was a trial, when the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, assessing its damages at $3646.67,—the purchase price of the malt represented by the warehouse receipt, with interest from t-he time of delivery. The jury also found, in answer to special interrogatories, that at the time of making the sale of the malt nothing was said about malt of the plaintiff or malt belonging to the plaintiff; that at the time of the delivery of the warehouse receipt to Bank, plaintiff knew that Bank had made a sale of the malt, and that such delivery was made for the purpose of having Bank deliver the malt called for by the receipt to the defendant, pursuant to the contract for the sale of the same.

The defense made at the trial was that defendant purchased the malt represented by the warehouse receipt with the understanding that it was to be paid for to the Port Dearborn Rational Bank, and that it had paid said bank for the same. There was a direct contradiction between witnesses on the question whether the defendant was. informed, before the delivery of the malt, that it belonged to the plaintiff, but there was no dispute that it was notified of plaintiff’s rights and of all the facts before payment was made.

Plaintiff was permitted, against objection, to prove the agency of Pank for it in the transaction, and its assistant cashier was allowed to state the conversation between "himself and Pank, to the effect that upon getting authority from the assignee the malt would be delivered to be sold to the defendant for plaintiff and the proceeds to be delivered to the plaintiff. It is argued that this ruling was error, and that conversations between the plaintiff and Pank, not in the presence of the defendant or brought to its knowledge, were incompetent. The plaintiff affirmed the relation of principal and agent between it and Pank, and the burden was upon it to make proof of such agency. The agency could be created verbally, as it was in fact created by the agreement between plaintiff and Pank, and' there was no error in permitting plaintiff to make the required proof. It is not essential that an agency should be created in the pres-, ence of each party with whom the agent deals on behalf of his principal, nor that the agency should be made known to a party whose rights are not injuriously affected by the want of such notice.' There may be questions as to the rights and liabilities of parties arising out of notice or want of notice of an agency, but no such question arises here. There was no dispute about any right which the defendant had as against Pank, and the only question was whom he was acting for. Plaintiff was seeking the benefit of his dealings made as its agent and on its behalf, and it was proper to prove the agency.

Upon the cross-examination of the assistant cashier the defendant inquired what had become of the other collateral held by the bank with the notes. The court sustained an objection to that inquiry, and it is contended that defendant had a right to go into all the dealings between Rank & Co. and plaintiff to show how much, if anything, was due on the notes. The witness stated that the notes had not been paid, and there was evidence that a balance of $2704.01 was due upon them. The notes not being paid, it did not concern defendant how much was due. The defendant claimed no rights or equities against Bank or Bank & Co., and bad no right to enter upon such an investigation. Blaintiff had a right to collect the col-laterals that it might be ready to account for them, and if there was any balance, to pay it over to Bank & Co. It could make no difference to defendant how plaintiff and Bank & Co. should afterward settle, as defendant’s rights could not be thereby affected. Tooke v. Newman, 75 Ill. 215.

The defendant asked an instruction requiring the jury to return a verdict in its favor, but the court refused to grant it. The evidence on the part of plaintiff established a good cause of action, and the instruction was properly refused.

Complaint is made of instruction No. 6 given to the jury at the request of plaintiff. It is as follows:

“The court instructs the jury, that if you find, from the evidence, that the International Bank, through its duly authorized officers or agents, or any one of them, directed J. H. Bank to sell the malt in question for it, and that said J. H. Bank, acting for and on behalf of said International Bank, did sell and deliver such malt to the defendant, Rice & Bullen Malting Company, at an agreed price of fifty-one cents per bushel, and if you further believe, from the evidence, that said malt belonged to the plaintiff and that defendant was so notified, and that said defendant has not paid to the plaintiff, the International Bank, the price agreed to be paid for such malt, then it is your duty to find a verdict for the plaintiff for the amount of such sale, together with interest on said sum at the rate of five per cent per annum from the date of the delivery of said malt to the present time.”

The main objection argued is, that the jury were told it would be their duty to find for the plaintiff if the defendant was notified that the malt belonged to the plaintiff, without regard to the time of notice, and even though the notice might have been after it had paid the Port Dearborn National Bank. This would have been a fatal objection if it had not been confessed by defendant that it had notice before such payment. It was conceded that the notice was received, and before payment, and the jury could not have found that the notification came after payment. The omission of that qualification as to time in the hypothesis could not affect the defendant.

Defendant asked the court to give an instruction marked 5b, stating, in substance, that by the surrender of the warehouse receipt to Rank the plaintiff losf its lien, by virtue of said receipt, upon the malt therein mentioned, and that if the malt was sold and delivered by Bank without any agreement on the part of the defendant to pay the plaintiff therefor, and without any knowledge of any claim by the plaintiff in or to said malt at the time the defendant received the same, then the jury should find the issues in favor of the defendant. The court qualified the instruction so as to say that plaintiff lost said lien as against defendant, and that if the' defendant was without knowledge of the claim of the plaintiff at the time defendant received or paid for the malt, the jury should find for the defendant. The modification is complained of. The instruction was not the law of the case, either as asked or given. It should have been refused as an attempt to misapply a rule of law. There was no question in the case of the rights of a tona fide purchaser from Rank supposing that he had title to the malt. Defendant acquired a perfect title to the malt, and plaintiff authorized the transfer of such title and affirmed its validity. There were no equities of the defendant involved, and the only question was whether Bank acted for the Fort Dearborn National Bank or for the plaintiff. The right of the plaintiff to the proceeds was not lost, as between the parties or as against the defendant, by delivering the warehouse receipt to Bank in the character of agent for the plaintiff. Cooper v. Ray, 47 Ill. 53.

It is insisted, however, that when defendant agreed to buy the malt from Bank it agreed to make the payment therefor to the Fort Dearborn National Bank, and that this contract for the benefit of the bank, as a third party, was binding upon the defendant, and it was bound to pay said bank, regardless of the subsequent notice of the rights of the parties. The malt in fact belonged to the plaintiff, and even if Bank represented to the defendant that it was pledged to the Fort Dearborn National Bank, yet if, before payment, the defendant was notified of the truth, it would be a good defense to a suit by the Fort Dearborn National Bank. That bank could not have recovered from defendant upon a promise upon such a consideration. Defendant was neither a creditor of Bank nor an innocent purchaser for value without notice, and was not entitled to invoke any rule arising out of the fact that the warehouse receipt was surrendered to Bank.

Some other instructions- are discussed in argument, but what we have said covers every question of law raised in the case.

The judgment of the Appellate Court is affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

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