Sanitary Can Co. v. Hines

149 Ill. App. 244 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1909

Mr. Justice Willis

delivered the opinion of the court.

October 30, 1907, Charles T. Howe & Company of New York, shipped to Peoria, Illinois, fifty cases of canned pineapple, consigned to their own order with the endorsement on hill of lading, “Notify Jobst Bet-hard Co.” November 4, 1907, the consignors sold these goods to the Sanitary Can Company, appellant, and endorsed and delivered to the latter a bill of lading therefor, issued at the time of shipment, also a writing which was attached to the bill of lading. Prior thereto, appellant had sold and delivered to Howe & Co. two carloads of empty tin cans for which payment had not been made. The goods shipped by Howe & Co. reached Peoria and were levied upon by the sheriff as the goods of Howe & Co. to satisfy an alleged claim of Jobst Bethard & Co. November 29, 1907, appellant replevied the goods. The declaration alleged that the goods were seized by the sheriff on a writ of attachment in favor of Jobst Bethard Company, and that they were the goods of the plaintiff and were not seized by the defendant by virtue of any attachment or other writ directed against the plaintiff. Appellee filed the pleas of non cepit, non detinet, property in himself, property in Charles T. Howe & Co. and a plea that the property was in Charles T. Howe & Co. and not in the plaintiff, and that he took the same by virtue of a writ of attachment sued out by Jobst Bethard & Co. against Chas. T. Howe & Co. The third, fourth and fifth pleas concluded with a verification. No replications were filed. A jury was waived and a trial had before the court. The issues were found for appellee, an order for the return of the goods made, and judgment for costs of suit rendered against the Sanitary Can Co. and the company appealed.

By submitting the case to the court for trial, and waiving a jury, the parties submitted it to be tried by the court, on the pleadings in the case, and the trial by consent cured the defect of issues not being formed upon these pleas. Kelsey v. Lamb, 21 Ill. 558; Hewetson v. City of Chicago, 172 Ill. 112; Supreme Court of Honor v. Barker, 96 Ill. App. 490.

Appellant’s proof showed that some sixty days before the shipment of the goods involved in these proceedings, appellant had sold and delivered to Charles T. Howe & Co. two carloads of empty cans which had not been paid for, and that Chas. T. Howe & Co. shipped the fifty cases of pineapple to their order at Peoria and delivered the same to appellant and endorsed and delivered to them the bill of lading issued by the transportation company together with an assignment thereto attached, and that this was intended to apply on the indebtedness for the two carloads of cans. The delivery of the bill of lading or shipping contract executed by the transportation company, alone, operated as a symbolic delivery of the fifty cases of pineapple to appellant. Michigan Central R. R. Co. v. Phillips, 60 Ill. 190; Taylor v. Turner, 87 id. 296; Lewis v. Springville Banking Co., 166 id. 311. In the Taylor case, it was held that the shipper, being the owner of the property (sheep), and no opposing interest or claim arising on the part of the carrier, consignee of prior endorsee of the bill of lading, no endorsement of the bill of lading to the interpleader was necessary to transfer title to it, and it was further held in the Taylor case, on the authority of Allen v. Williams, 12 Pick. 297, and First National Bank v. Dearborn, 115 Mass. 219, that even a sale or pledge of property without a formal bill of lading by the shipper, would operate as a good assignment of the property, and a delivery of an informal, unendorsed bill of lading or other documentary evidence of the shippers would be a good symbolical delivery, so as to vest the property in the plaintiff. It cannot be doubted that the endorsement and delivery of the bill of lading made a prima facie case for appellant and as appellee offered no evidence in rebuttal thereof, the judgment should have been in appellant’s favor.

To overcome this apparent necessary result of appellant’s proof, appellee replies that the court below sustained an objection to the bill of lading and that it was not admitted in evidence and that while the assignments of error question the correctness of the ruling of the court in sustaining objections to the testimony, yet as appellant’s counsel did not argue such objection in his original brief, he is barred from discussing it in his reply brief, and that as the bill of lading is not in evidence, the proof did not make a prima facie case for appellant. The record shows that appellant took, offered and read in evidence, the deposition of Charles T. Howe and that he identified'the bill of lading and assignment which were attached thereto, as exhibits, to such deposition. And said deposition and exhibits were read in evidence without objection. Afterwards, plaintiff offered these documents separately and an objection was made to the introduction of the bill of lading on the ground that it was incompetent, immaterial, and that no proper foundation had been laid for its introduction, and no proof of its execution by the common carrier. This objection was sustained and plaintiff excepted. The condition of the record then, is this: The bill of lading had once been offered with the deposition, and read in evidence in connection therewith, but an objection was sustained to it when offered separately. With a record in this state in a cause tried by the court without a jury, we do not think appellant’s counsel should be precluded from discussing, in his reply brief, the action of the court in sustaining the objections to the bill of lading when offered in evidence the second time.

Appellee urges that the court ruled correctly in sustaining the objection to the admission of the bill of lading in evidence because its execution by the transportation company was not proven, and because the proper foundation was not laid, and because no sufficient consideration for the purchase had been shown. The deposition of Charles T. Howe states fully the transaction between the firm of Charles T. Howe & Co. and appellant. He testified that Charles T. Howe & Co. shipped the fifty cases of pineapple to their own order at Peoria by the Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad Company, and that they had received a bill of lading from the company when they made the shipment. He identified the bill of lading offered in evidence as the one they received from the transportation company when they made the assignment, and testified to the sale of the goods and the endorsement of the bill of lading to appellant and that he wrote the endorsement on the back thereof. This clearly establishes that the bill of lading was issued by the trafisportation company to Charles T. Howe & Co. for these goods, and it was not necessary to prove the signature of the transportation company’s agent issuing the bill of lading, or that the person signing it was the agent of the transportation company. The transportation company received the fifty cases of pineapple for shipment, and issued the bill of lading, and it is immaterial how it was signed.

Appellee also urges that the amount due from Howe & Co. for the two cars of cans is not stated and it may not have been as much as the value of the fifty cases of pineapple. The testimony of both Howe and Bogle, appellant’s president, is that this shipment of pineapple was sold to appellant to apply upon that indebtedness. This signifies that it did not equal the indebtedness. The court therefore erred in sustaining the objection to the bill of lading.

It is said that the other paper or writing termed an assignment given by Howe & Co. to appellant at the same time as the bill of lading, has some effect upon it as a transfer of the title to the goods. It is alleged, in appellee’s brief, that Howe & Co. had given Jobst Bethard & Co. a bill of lading of these goods, and had sold them to Jobst Bethard Co. and that the intention of that assignment was only to transfer to appellant the account of Howe & Co. against Jobst Bethard Co. The answer to this is that there is no proof in the record that these goods had been sold or a bill of lading delivered by Howe & Co. to Jobst Bethard & Co. Whether, then, the execution of the assignment would qualify the effect of the delivery of the bill of lading to appellant, if proof had been made of the facts alleged in appellee’s argument, cannot now be determined. As it now stands, the assignment is practically unexplained.

Appellee argues that appellant did not prove that a demand for the goods had been made on appellee before suit was brought, and for that reason the judgment is right. Appellee did offer in evidence the attachment writ issued at the suit of Jobst Bethard Co. against Charles T. Howe & Co. and an endorsement of a levy on these goods as the property of Charles T. Howe & Co. But this was five days after the bill of lading had been transferred to appellant. When appellee as sheriff seized these goods, he had no means of knowing that they were the goods of Charles T. Howe & Co. and he wrongfully seized them, under the facts as they appear in this record. Appellee being wrongfully in possession, no demand upon him for their return was necessary. Clark v. Lewis, 35 Ill. 417; Tuttle v. Robinson, 78 Ill. 332.

The court below should not have sustained the objection to the bill of lading when offered the second time, except on the ground that it had already been admitted, and should have rendered judgment for appellant on the proofs offered in the record.

The judgment of the lower court is reversed and the cause remanded.

Reversed and remanded.