Bensley v. Brockway

27 Ill. App. 410, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 549
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 7, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 27 Ill. App. 410 (Bensley v. Brockway) 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
Bensley v. Brockway, 27 Ill. App. 410, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 549 (Ill. Ct. App. 1888).

Opinion

Gary, J.

This action of assumpsit was brought against seven defendants, John R. Bensley, George E. Bensley, M. C. Scoby, Charles R. Bensley, H. O. Hough, D. C. Hough and W. II. Reed. The only plea was a joint plea by all of nonassumpsit.

On the trial the appellee relied for a recovery upon his own testimony as to a contract made by him with Charles R. Bensley for employment of the appellee by the firm of Bensley Bros. & Co. as a salesman, and upon the testimony of the defendant Reed, as to a conversation between himself and Charles R. Bensley in relation to such employment about the time appellee began work.

When appellee rested his case appellants offered to prove that the three first named defendants composed the firm of Bensley Bros. & Co., for which the appellee worked, and that the other four were not members, but only employes of the firm. To this the appellee objected, and his objection being overruled, he excepted, and now assigns the admission of that evidence as a cross-error. It is material to decide now whether that evidence was properly admitted, because, after it was in, the appellee having no rebutting evidence on that subject, was driven to discontinue as to those four, and then the appellants moved to strike out the testimony of Reed, it being only as to a conversation with a person not party to the suit, nor jointly liable with the then defendants, now appellants-This motion was denied, and appellants excepted, and now assign that for error.

Charles E. Bensley, as the case now stands on the record, is to be considered only as an employe of the firm. Whether he had or had not their authority to employ other employes, is a matter disputed between the parties. But if he had such authority, his conversation with Eeed was not had as a part, or in the course, of any business he was doing for the firm, but, at the most, could only be said to be a consultation with another employe upon a subject that there is no claim by the appellee that Eeed had any authority over, if he was not a partner.

“ The statements of an agent are admissible only where they are a part of the res gestee.” Whiteside v. Margarel, 51 Ill. 507; Story on Agency, Secs. 134-137; 1 Greenl. Ev., Sec. 113; Lindblom v. Ramsey, 75 Ill. 246.

The refusal of the court to strike out the testimony of Eeed was therefore error, unless the appellee can maintain that the admission of the evidence that the firm was composed only of the appellants was error, and, therefore, as Charles E. Bensley and Eeed ought to have been held, they should still be considered as partners, and as partners their declarations are evidence against the firm. Seed’s testimony can not be held to be immaterial. Whether logically or not, the jury must have regarded it, when the court refused to strike it out, as tending to show that the appellants had employed the appellee upon the terms he alleged.

The appellee relies upon Sec. 35 of the Practice Act of 1872, as follows:

“In actions upon contracts, express or implied, against two or more defendants, as partners, or joint obligors, or payors, whether so alleged or not, proof of the joint liability or partnership of the defendants, or their Christian or surnames, shall not, in the first instance, be required to entitle the plaintiff to judgment, unless such proof shall be rendered necessary by pleading in abatement, or unless the defendant shall file a plea in bar denying the partnership or joint liability, or the execution of the instrument sued upon verified by affidavit.”

He cites a long line of decisions in this State and by the Supreme Court of the United States, in which the construction of this statute was involved, in some of which, as Shufeldt v. Seymour, 21 Ill. 524, and Huntington v. Chambers, in the Third District, 15 Ill. App. 426, the effect of the decision is, that if the defendant does not, by pica, in the manner provided by the statute, deny the joint liability, he is estopped.to deny it by evidence on the trial.

This court has held that the proper construction of the statutes is that it only relieves the plaintiff from the burden of proving that joint liability, “in the first instance,” and leaves the defendants at liberty to disprove it, without first denying it by plea. Davison v. Hill, 1 Ill. App. 70; Garland v. Peeney, 1 Ill. App. 108; Rosenberg v. Barrett, 2 Ill. App. 386.

This distinction has not been discussed in any of the cases cited by the appellee, nor does it appear that any of the courts by which such decisions were made ever had their attention called to it. But in a case involving the construction of another section of the statute, before the last revision, where the arguments of the appellee applied with greater force than to the statute under consideration, the Supreme Court have made and sustained the distinction.

It was provided by the 59th section of the Practice Act of 1845, that “in actions upon bonds, notes and all other writings made assignable by law, in the name of the assignee, the plaintiff shall not be held bound to prove the assignments or signature of any assignor, unless the fact of the assignment he put in issue by plea verified by the affidavit of the defendant, or some credible person, stating that he verily believes the facts stated in the plea are true.”

Comparing this section with the 14th of the same act, which provided that “no person shall be permitted to deny on trial the execution of any instrument in writing * "x" * unless the person so denying the same shall, if defendant, verify his plea by affidavit,” they say: “The language of the 59th section is different from the other. It dispenses with proof of the assignment, before the instrument is admitted, unless the act of assignment is denied by plea, verified by affidavit, whilst the maker,'under the 14th section, is not permitted to deny the execution of the instrument except in that mode. This section does not prohibit the defendant from denying the assignment by rebutting evidence. It only provides that until the assignment is denied in the mode indicated, the plaintiff shall not be required to make the proof. * * * -We think a fair and reasonable construction of these two provisions justifies the distinction that under the one the maker can not deny the execution of the instrument either before or after it is introduced, while under the other he can not deny it before, but may after, its introduction in evidence. The assignment indorsed upon the note is made prima facie evidence of its genuineness, but does not preclude the defendant from rebutting that fact. Or, if he chooses, he may, by denying it by plea, verified by affidavit, throw the burthen of" the proof on the plaintiff in the first instance.” These italics are not in the opinion of the Supreme Court. Lockridge v. Buckolls, 25 Ill. 178.

The language in the section to be construed now, is, “ proof * * * shall not, in the first instance, be required.” In the 59th section quoted it was “the plaintiff shall not be held bound to prove.” The introduction of the words “in the first instance,” imply that there might come a time in the action when the proof would be required even without the plea; while from the words of the other section it might be plausibly argued that the plaintiff could never “ be held bound to prove ” without the plea.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 Ill. App. 410, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bensley-v-brockway-illappct-1888.