Dunn v. Crichfield

73 N.E. 386, 214 Ill. 292
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 73 N.E. 386 (Dunn v. Crichfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunn v. Crichfield, 73 N.E. 386, 214 Ill. 292 (Ill. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

First—As we understand the evidence in this case and the respective contentions of the counsel herein, appellee was paid his salary of $20.00 per week under the terms of the contract during the time he was in the service of appellants from December 17, 1889, or January 1, 1890, until June 1, 1892, when such service ceased; but the difference between the parties has reference to the question whether or not appellee was paid his share of the net profits of the business during the time in question. By the terms of the contract appellee was to receive one-half of such net profits.

At the end of the first year, and in January, 1891, appellant, Dunn, handed the appellee a memorandum in Dunn’s handwriting showing the profits of that year to have been $2597.45, and desired appellee to renew the contract. At the end of the second year, and on January 2,1892, Dunn handed appellee a memorandum in Dunn’s handwriting, showing the profits for the year 1891 to be $6817.79.- According to the testimony of appellee he was unable to obtain payment from Dunn & Co., and accordingly on May 11, 1892, he gave appellants notice that he would terminate the contract, and demanded an accounting and settlement of what was due him. In May, 1892, Dunn handed to appellee a statement in his handwriting, showing the business for 1892, based upon the earnings up to that time, in which the profits for 1892 were estimated at $9557.89. The net profits for the whole of the year '1892 being estimated at $9557.89, appellee claimed that he was entitled to five-twelfths of this amount for the five months from January 1,1892, to June 1,1892, such five-twelfths being the sum of $3982.45. Appellee contends that he only received, on account of net profits for the time he was in the service of the appellants, the sum of $1489.81.

Appellee’s claim on the trial" was that the net profits for the year 1890 were $2597.45, for the year 1891, $6817.79, and for the five months from January 1, 1892, to June 1, 1892, $3982.45, making the total net profits, by adding these three sums-together, the sum of $13,397.69; that one-half of this sum, to-wit, $6698.84, was his share of the net profits, and that, after deducting the sum of $1489.81, which had been paid to him, from the sum of $6698.84, there was due to him the sum of $5209.03. The latter sum of $5209.03 was the amount which the appellee sought to recover upon the trial below. The jury, however, took the view that there had been a settlement between the parties for the years 1890 and 1891, and that appellee was only entitled to half of the net profits, earned in the business during the five months from January 1, 1892, to June 1, 1892, that is to say, that appellee was entitled to one-half of the sum of $3982.45, to-wit, $1991.22. The sum of $1991.22, with five per gent interest, would amount to- more than $2000.00, which was the amount of the verdict rendered by the jury. The appellee was thus awarded, as the result of the trial, more than $3000.00 less than he claimed to be due to him.

The material question of fact was whether the profits for the year 1892 were $9557.89, as claimed by appellee, and as indicáted upon the memorandum in the handwriting of Dunn, which was handed to appellee, or whether such profits were only $1984.05, as claimed by appellants. Five-twelfths of the latter amount would be $826.70, and, as we understand the position of appellants, it is that, if appellee is entitled to anything, it is half of the last named sum, to-wit, $413.35. The question of fact, about which the parties thus differ, has been decided by the jury against both of them, and in such a way that appellee is willing to abide by the verdict, to-wit, $2000.00. The judgment of the trial court in favor of appellee, and the judgment of the Appellate Court affirming the same, are conclusive, upon us, so far as these questions of fact are concerned. There is evidence tending. to sustain the finding of the jury, and we are not disposed to disturb it if no error of law was committed by the trial court.

Second—Appellants contend that the trial court erred in giving the instructions, which it did give in behalf of the appellee. As, however, the argument in behalf of the appellants calls our attention specifically only to two of these instructions, we will only notice what is said in reference to them. Counsel for the appellants claim that the third instruction, given for the appellee, was erroneous.

The third instruction thus objected to told the jury that, if they believed from the evidence that any person who had testified in the case had knowingly and willfully testified falsely as to any matter or thing, upon the existence or nonexistence of which the right of appellee to recover, or the right of appellants to escape liability, depended, they were at liberty to entirely disregard the testimony of such persons, “except- in so far as it may have been corroborated by evidence in the case, which you believe to be true, or by circumstance's shown by evidence in the case, which you believe to be true.” This instruction is not precisely the same as the instruction condemned by this court in the recent case of Chicago and Alton Railroad Co. v. Kelly, 210 Ill. 449. If it be said, however, that its phraseology is such as to bring it within the condemnation of the views expressed in that case, its defectiveness cannot be here urged as error, for the reason that the objection, now made to it, which is the same as the objection made to the instruction in the Kelly case, was not called to the attention of the trial court, nor to the attention of the Appellate Court, when the case was before those courts. We have been furnished with copies of the briefs, filed by the appellants in the Appellate Court, and find no such point made by them in the Appellate Court.

In the Kelly case an instruction, permitting the jury to disregard the entire testimony of a witness who, they believe, has willfully sworn falsely to a material matter, “except in so far as it may have been corroborated by other credible evidence which they do believe,” etc., was held to be erroneous in requiring the credible evidence to be believed. In the case at bar, the only reference to the third instruction, given for appellee, in the argument of counsel before the Appellate Court is the statement, that that instruction and three others “are abstractions tending to confuse as a series and divert the jury from an intelligent consideration of all the evidence.” The point, now made in opposition to the instruction^ was not embraced in the criticism thus made upon it in the Appellate Court. Where a question is not raised upon the trial of a case, or urged on the motion for new trial, or assigned as error in the Appellate Court, such question is waived, so far as this court is concerned; and even where errors are assigned in the Appellate Court, which would cover supposed erroneous rulings of the trial court, but are not argued or brought to the attention of the Appellate Court, they will be held to have been waived, and abandoned, and cannot be raised in this court for the first time. (Chicago and Alton Railroad Co. v. American Strawboard Co. 190 Ill. 268; Central Union Building Co. v. Kolander, 212 id. 27; Strodtmann v. County of Menard, 158 id. 155; Rnnesser v. Hudek, 169 id. 494).

. The sixth instruction, given on behalf of the appellee, is also objected to as erroneous.

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Bluebook (online)
73 N.E. 386, 214 Ill. 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunn-v-crichfield-ill-1905.