Genuine Panama Hat Works, Inc. v. Paragon Hat Co.

245 Ill. App. 531, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 230
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 4, 1927
DocketGen. No. 31,543
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 245 Ill. App. 531 (Genuine Panama Hat Works, Inc. v. Paragon Hat Co.) 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
Genuine Panama Hat Works, Inc. v. Paragon Hat Co., 245 Ill. App. 531, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 230 (Ill. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Mr.. Justice Gridley

delivered the opinion of the court.

In an action in assumpsit, commenced June 9, 1924, for the recovery of the invoice prices, aggregating the sum of $2,972.25, of 159 dozen straw hats, sold and originally delivered in five separate shipments to defendant in Chicago during June, 1920, the court instructed the jury to find the issues against defendant and assess plaintiff’s damages at said sum. Such verdict being returned on February 26, 1926, the court entered judgment thereon and this appeal followed.

In plaintiff’s statement of claim, after stating the sale and delivery at said prices, it is alleged that on June 21, 1920, defendant, after receiving the goods, “rejected and refused to accept the same,” because it claimed that they were not as warranted, “and returned them to the American Railway Express Company for shipment back to plaintiff in New York City”; that “plaintiff refused to accept the return of the goods”; that thereafter they were held in storage by the Express Company until about December, 1923, when defendant ordered them “reconsigned back to it” by the Express Company, and “accepted” them; and that defendant, although often requested, has refused to pay for the goods or any part thereof, to plaintiff’s damage, etc.

In the defendant’s affidavit of merits the only defense stated is res adjudicata. After denying that defendant is indebted to plaintiff it is alleged that on November 17, 1923, in the case of Genuine Panama Hat Works, Inc. v. Paragon Hat Company, lately pending in said municipal court as case No. 853,241, judgment was entered after verdict against defendant; that the judgment thereafter was paid by defendant; that the parties and the subject matter in the two suits are the same; and that, therefore, said suit and judgment are res adjudicata of plaintiff’s claim in the present action.

Prior to the trial plaintiff, by leave of court, filed certain interrogatories to be answered by defendant. In its answers defendant admitted that during June, 1920, it received from plaintiff, through the Express Company, the several shipments as set forth in plaintiff’s statement of claim, and with each shipment an invoice showing the quantity, style and prices of the goods, but stated that shortly after the receipt of the* shipments it rejected the goods and returned them to the Express Company for delivery back to plaintiff in New York City. Defendant further admitted that, on or about November 22, 1923, it “ordered said Express Company to return said merchandise to it (defendant) which was accordingly done on or about November 26,1923.”

Upon the trial plaintiff’s attorney read to the jury the interrogatories and answers, except certain portions of the answer to interrogatories 11 and 12, which on plaintiff’s motion were stricken, and thereupon plaintiff rested. Defendant’s motion for a directed verdict was overruled, and, to sustain its defense of res adjudicata, it introduced the pleadings, verdict, judgment and satisfaction of judgment in the former suit (case No. 853,241), and also certain portions of the proceedings therein. Defendant also made certain offers to prove the' condition and market value of the goods in question, both at the time they were originally delivered to it in June, 1920, and at the time they were again delivered to it by the Express Company in .November, .1923, and also to prove the amounts which •defendant had paid to the Express Company for express. and storage charges and also the amounts paid .for insurance.on the goods while they were in storage with the Express Company. Plaintiff’s objections .to the offered evidence, on the ground that it was incom.petent and not material to the issues, were sustained by the court. Thereupon plaintiff, in rebuttal, introduced in evidence two forms of verdict (which the jury ■in the former suit had returned into court unsigned) and- also certain testimony of the court reporter who had reported defendant’s counsel’s closing argument •to the jury in that suit. At the close of all the evidence defendant’s renewed motion for a directed verdict was overruled, but the court sustained plaintiff’s motion for a directed verdict in its favor for said sum ,pf $2,972.25.

In October, 1920, plaintiff sued defendant to recover the sum of $6,154.50, and interest, for eighteen separate shipments of straw hats, received by defendant during the. months of May and June, 1920. Ten of these shipments were in May and eight in June. Five of the June shipments, aggregating at invoice prices $2,972.25, are those now in question. From defendant’s affidavit of merits, and from interrogatories and answers filed in the former suit, it appears that defendant rejected said, five June shipments, on the claimed ground that the goods were not in accord with samples or .description, and returned them to the Express Company to be returned to plaintiff at New York. City.. It further appears that defendant accepted thirteen of the shipments, aggregating at invoice prices $3,182.25, and that all shipments (including thé five rejected) were accompanied with invoices showing tlie quantities, styles and prices. In the former suit defendant als.o filed a claim of set-off of $8,475.79. This set-off was' made up of the following items: (a) $5,000 for alleged damages because of plaintiff’s failure to deliver other goods át other times; (b) $2,972.25, the invoice prices' of the goods in the five rejected shipments; (c) :$48.49, paid for express charges. on the rejected shipments; and (d) $455.05, for damages because of certain claimed defects in certain goods contained in the thirteen accepted shipments. Plaintiff, in its affidavit, of merits to defendant’s claim of set-off, denied that defendant was entitled, to any damages or deductions, that the goods in the five rejected shipments were not according to sample or description, or that defendant had any right to reject them. During all of the time of the pendency of the former suit, and until a few days after November 17, 1923 (when judgment following the jury’s verdict was entered therein against defendant for $3,659.59), the rejected goods remained in the custody of the Express Company, — plaintiff having refused to accept their return. Upon the trial of the former suit defendant, in support of its set-off, adduced some evidence of damages but only to the extent of $1,600 or $1,800. This evidence was disputed by plaintiff’s contrary evidence. In his closing argument to the jury defendant’s counsel stated in substance that defendant had produced evidence of damage under its set-off to the extent of from $1,600 to $1,800, and, arguing that defendant was justified in rejecting the five shipments, urged-the jury to return a verdict in plaintiff’s favor for the invoice prices of the thirteen shipments which defendant had accepted, less defendant’s damages in said sum from $1,600 to $1,800, but not to award plaintiff anything for said five rejected shipments. The court submitted to the jury three forms of verdict: One finding the issues against defendant and assessing plaintiff’s damages at............ dollars; another finding the issues against plaintiff; and a third finding the issues against plaintiff on defendant’s claim of- . set-off and assessing defendant’s damages at ................ dollars.

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Bluebook (online)
245 Ill. App. 531, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/genuine-panama-hat-works-inc-v-paragon-hat-co-illappct-1927.