Eaton v. Harth

45 Ill. App. 355, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 227
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 12, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 45 Ill. App. 355 (Eaton v. Harth) 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
Eaton v. Harth, 45 Ill. App. 355, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 227 (Ill. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Lacey.

The appellee brought action against appellant to recover damages for the breach of contract of guaranty, of a portion of a certain contract of one John L. White with the appellee, to sink a coal shaft and do other things. The contract between White and appellee was substantially as follows: White agreed with the latter “ to sink a coal shaft six feet by twelve down to first vein of coal, and pase the same all the way down with timber four inches thick, and build a platform over said shaft with shed over the same 20x30 feet, and divide one side of said platform into four bins for the storage of coal; also to furnish ten new coal cars of usual size for use of shaft, for which appellee agreed to pay before the completion of the work, $1,600.” It was also agreed the “ said White shall retain control of the finished shaft for the purpose of working and mining the coal, and he agrees to pay as rent to said Harth the amount of one cent per bushel of all coal mined and sold, to be paid at the end of every month.” The appellant, Charles L. Eaton, guaranteed the fulfillment of a portion of said contract by indorsement thereon as follows, viz.: “ William Harth (the appellee), in the honest disposal of the money given to John L. White, I, C. L. Eaton, of the town of Deer Park, county of La Salle and State of Illinois, do hereby guarantee the fulfillment of the covenants of the said John L. White, as far as the sinking of the shaft and building superstructure is concerned.”

The appellee commenced suit against White on the said contract at the January term, 1889, of the Circuit Court, alleging several breaches of said contract, as follows, viz.: That White failed to comply with the contract in every respect; that he performed it in a wrongful and unskillful manner; that he wantonly and negligently failed and refused to carry out the provisions of the contract.

By an agreement between the parties to that suit the defendant, White, was allowed to offer any and all evidence which could be offered under all pleas which might be properly pleaded to plaintiff’s cause of action. The cause was tried before the court and a jury, resulting in a verdict for the appellee herein, and plaintiff in that suit, in the sum of $619.25, upon which judgment was rendered, and remained in full force at the time of the trial herein.

That judgment and verdict included recovery for the failure of White to furnish the ten coal cars stipulated for in the contract, but not guaranteed by the appellant, by his' within guaranty on the back of the contract. The suit now under consideration was brought in the same court, and the declaration set out the said contract and guaranty, and averred the breaches of the contract as far as guaranteed by appellant, and declared for damages on the guaranty. After the trial and judgment against White, appellee, by leave of court, filed an amended count, in which the contract was set forth in full, and the guaranty and breaches, and then set up the recovery against White as above set out and declared as for the measure of damages, the amount of the said judgment, and the plaintiff’s costs therein, amounting to §225.30, and the attorney’s fees expended by appellee in that suit, amounting to $200. The case now under consideration was tried by the court without a jury, and resulted in a finding and judgment for appellee for $986.35.

The declaration and pleadings- and the judgment in the case of appellee against White, were introduced in evidence and treated by the court as an estoppel, and appellant pre-. vented from introducing evidence which he offered to controvert the breach of the agreement by White so far as guaranteed by him. The court then allowed evidence to be introduced against appellee’s objections, showing the estimation of witnesses sworn on the trial- of the case against White as to the value of the ten coal cars White was to furnish by the terms of his agreement, but failed, and which appellee did not guarantee, which evidence showed an estimation of such value to be $6 to $6.10 per car. The court also allowed appellee to show that the amount of his attorney’s fees expended in the case against White was $200, and the costs he incurred to be $186.30. The court then computed the supposed amount of the judgment against White, made up for the failure to furnish the cars, at $60, added the balance of the White judgment to the amount of the appellee’s costs and attorney’s fees in that case, and gave judgment for that amount, as above stated. The action of the court in treating the judgment of the court in the case against White as an estoppel to the appellant against his making any defense in this case and in allowing as damages appellee’s costs and attorney’s fees in that case, are the material alleged errors complained of by attorney for appellant.

It may be admitted that appellee had notice of the pendency of the suit against White, and that he made no defense to the action in White’s name nor attempted, to make any. There are several questions involved in this controversy depending somewhat and in one phase upon how the main one should be answered. The main and most important one in this case is, can a judgment recovered in a suit by a contractee against the contractor, based on a charge of breaches of several covenants in his bond, be pleaded in bar against or set up in estoppel to a defense grounded on a plea of no breach of covenant by the principal, where the same plaintiff sues a guarantor of a portion only of such covenants in such bojjd on such portion so guaranteed, not being the only ones, however, litigated in the original suit % The answer to this depends on the principles of the law of estoppel by judgment. We need not in this case decide whether appellant was in privity with White in such a way that the judgment in appellee’s favor against him, if the issues had been the same in the two suits as to bind appellant by the judgment in the White suits, for even admitting that to be so for the purposes of argument, it will be seen that the issues were not the same, nor the amount of the judgment the same as was sought to be recovered in this suit.

The rule applicable in this class of estoppels, as announced in the decisions of our Supreme Court and supported by all the authorities, is as follows: “ A judgment is not evidence of any matter which is only to be inferred therefrom by argument and which probably did, but might not, constitute the true ground of recovery; for to admit a presumption that a fact is established by the judgment, and not allow that presumption to be rebutted by proof that it is without foundation, would be to reverse the rule applicable to all presumptions of fact. The authorities are therefore that a judgment is conclusive only of what it necessarily decides.” Kitson v. Harwell, 132 Ill. 327. If we apply the rule here we see that the judgment in the case of appellee v. White was not the measure of damages for failure to dig the coal shaft and put up the superstructure, but was that and something more, i. e., the expense of furnishing ten coal cars. Therefore it was uncertain and indefinite as to

<5 how the judgment should be apportioned between these claims for damages made in the suit against White.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Ill. App. 355, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eaton-v-harth-illappct-1892.