Baumgartner v. Montavon

276 Ill. App. 498, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 292
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 24, 1934
DocketGen. No. 8,778
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 276 Ill. App. 498 (Baumgartner v. Montavon) 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
Baumgartner v. Montavon, 276 Ill. App. 498, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 292 (Ill. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dove

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a distress for rent proceeding brought by the appellants Joseph Baumgartner and George Baumgartner against the appellees William Montavon and Edward Montavon for a balance of $715 rent claimed to be due and unpaid.

The evidence discloses that on February 15, 1927, the parties hereto entered into a written lease by the provisions of which appellants leased to appellees their farm of 246 acres in DeKalb county for a period of five years from March 1, 1927, until March 1, 1932, for an annual cash rental of $2,500, of which amount $500 was payable on March 1st, $1,000 on October 1st, and $1,000 on February 1st, of each rental year. The lease further provided that appellants would keep the well and water system in good repair and that the appellees would use due care to keep the water system in good condition. Appellees entered into possession of the demised premises, under the lease, and paid the rent until the instalment due February 1, 1932, when there was a balance due and unpaid of $715. On February 2, 1932, the appellants demanded the balance of the rent due from appellee, William Montavon. Concerning what occurred between the parties at the time, the- evidence is conflicting. Appellants testified that appellee William Montavon offered them a crib containing about 1,470 bushels of corn worth 22 cents a bushel in satisfaction of the rent, but that they refused to accept it in full payment of the rent due, but did offer to accept it at its market value and credit the value thereof upon the rent. Appellees refused this offer and no agreement was ever made concerning it and this crib of corn was, with other personal property, levied upon under the distress warrant, but subsequently released, appellees having executed a forthcoming bond as provided by section 26 of the Landlord and Tenant Act, Cahill’s Illinois Revised Statutes, 1933, ch. 80, H 26, and subsequently the corn was sold by appellees to other parties. In defense of this action, appellees plead the general issue with-notice of several items of recoupment or set-off. In this notice appellees insisted that they had sustained damages to the extent of at least $2,000 by reason of appellants ’ failure to keep the well and water system in repair, stating that in the fall of 1927, appellants caused the water to be shut off from the barn, to the damage of appellees of $900, and that in the year 1929, appellees caused the water to be shut off from the house, to appellees’ damage of $300. The notice further stated that appellees would, upon the trial, insist that appellants represented that all the land was tillable and not subject to overflow, whereas in fact appellees lost from five to ten acres of crops from overflow each year. In their notice of set-off, it was also insisted by appellees that appellants were indebted to them for making certain repairs upon the premises, enumerating the repairing of tile, filling a ditch to the amount of $150, hauling 25 loads of cinders for the driveway, $150, and painting and papering the house, $25. It was also insisted that appellants represented the farm as practically free from quack grass, Canada thistles and other foul weeds-, whereas after appellees had farmed it they found it was infested' with such weeds, by reason of which they sustained damages in the form of loss of crops and labor in exterminating these weeds to the amount of $200. Issue was joined upon the plea of the general issue, and a trial had, resulting in the jury returning the following verdict, viz.: “We, the jury find the issues joined in favor of defendants and assess defendants’ damages at Five Hundred Dollars ($500.00) and crib of corn to be turned over to plaintiffs.” The trial court denied appellants’ motion for a new trial and rendered judgment against appellants for $500, disregarding the other portion of the verdict and from this judgment the record is before us for review upon appeal.

Upon the trial, the court, after admitting evidence concerning conversations detailed by appellees as to statements made by appellants with reference to Canada thistles, quack grass and noxious weeds, struck not only that evidence, but also all evidence from the record concerning Canada thistles, quack grass and noxious weeds, and withdrew from the consideration of the jury any evidence given as to repair work on the tile, hauling of cinders, Canada thistles and quack grass. There was no evidence offered by appellees to sustain their notice in so far as they claimed damages by reason of their filling ditches, painting and papering, so that the alleged false representations as to the land being tillable and not subject to overflow and the alleged breach of the covenant in the lease upon the part of appellants to keep the well and water system in repair are the only matters in the record upon which the jury could have based their verdict.

It is first contended by appellants that it was error for the trial court to permit the introduction of evidence relating to what was said and done by the parties in regard to leasing the premises prior to the execution of the lease which was under seal. The appellee William Montavon was permitted to testify that appellant, Joseph Baumgartner, took the appellees to the premises the day before the lease was signed and showed them the farm; that there was snow on the ground at the time and that Baumgartner told appellees that “every foot of his land was work land,” and that the overflow land drained out. He was further permitted to testify, over objection, that there was a loss of crops of from five to ten acres each year, caused by overflow. Other witnesses also testified as to the damage to crops from the overflow. Appellees contend that the above representations of Joseph Baumgartner were false, that they relied upon them to their damage and that they are entitled to recoup or offset their damages in this proceeding to the extent the evidence shows they were damaged, the same as if they had instituted an independent action for fraud and deceit. Appellants invoke the well known rule that preliminary negotiations and conversations between the parties prior to the execution of a written instrument are inadmissible in a suit on such instrument, as it is conclusively presumed that the whole engagement of the parties and the extent and manner of their undertaking are merged in the written instrument.

In Kingman v. Draper, 14 Ill. App. 577, the court says: “Set-off has application only to actions brought on contract, and is a cross-debt, a counter demand or claim, originating in contract, which the defendant holds against the plaintiff, and it most usually arises out of a transaction extrinsic to that involved in the plaintiff’s cause of action. . . . The defendant stands in the attitude of a plaintiff in a cross-action and both the original action and the cross-action are ex contractu. Recoupment proceeds upon another principle, and is a mere right to reduce or defeat the plaintiff’s demand, on account of some matter connected with the transaction upon which the suit is brought. The recoupment may be to the full extent of the plaintiff’s damages, but the defendant cannot recover any excess of damages. A claim originating in contract may be set up against one founded in tort; and damages for a tort may be set up against a suit on a contract.”

In the early case of Stow v. Yarwood, 14 Ill. 424, which was an action in trover for wrongfully taking and converting a steam engine, the defendant was allowed to recoup the amount of work which he had done for the plaintiff in repairing the engine.

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Bluebook (online)
276 Ill. App. 498, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baumgartner-v-montavon-illappct-1934.