Honeyman v. Jarvis

64 Ill. 366
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 64 Ill. 366 (Honeyman v. Jarvis) 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
Honeyman v. Jarvis, 64 Ill. 366 (Ill. 1872).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McAllister

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was assumpsit, by the original payee of a promissory note, against the makers, one of whom, the appellant, filed three special pleas, to all of which the court below sustained a general demurrer. The 'sufficiency of. these pleas is the only matter for decision. The first plea, after the formal part, is in these words: “And there was no consideration for said note, and that said defendant was not indebted to said plaintiff at the time of giving said note, upon any consideration whatever; and that the said promise of said defendant was a mere naked promise without any consideration therefor.”

The statute declares that in any action commenced, or which may hereafter be commenced, in any court of law in this State, upon any note, bond, bill, etc., for the payment of money or property, .etc., if such note, bond, bill, etc., was made or entered into without a good or valuable consideration, or if the consideration upon which such note, bond, bill, etc., was made or entered into has wholly or in part failed, it shall be lawful for the defendant or defendants, etc., to plead such want of consideration, or that the consideration has wholly or in part failed; and if it shall appear that such note, bond, bill, etc., Avas made or entered into without a good or valuable consideration, or that the consideration has wholly failed,, the verdict shall be for the defendant; and if it shall appear that the consideration has failed in part, the. plaintiff shall recover according to the equity of the case. B,. S. 385-6.

It is the settled law of this court that a plea of entire failure of consideration is bad, unless it shows what the consideration was, and states particularly in what the failure consisted; that general averments are not sufficient. Parks v. Holmes, 22 Ill. 522; Baldwin v. Banks, 20 Ill. 48.

The same rule applies, of course, to a plea of partial failure, and is supported by reasons springing from the very philosophy of pleading.

Counsel for appellee insist that a plea that the defendant made or entered into the note without any good or valuable consideration, to be good, must set out all the circumstances attending the making of it, and thereby show the want of consideration. Such a plea, as a general result, would violate the rule of pleading, which requires the fact, and not the evidence of the fact, to be averred. • This plea is essentially different from that of a failure of consideration. The latter is framed upon the theory that there Avas originally a good or A’aluable consideration, but Avhich has failed by facts subsequent. These facts comprise affirmative matters which must be particularly stated in order to apprise the plaintiff of what he is required to meet by evidence. The difference betiveen the two kinds of pleas was expressly recognized in the early case of Poole v. Vanlandingham, Breese (Beecher’s Edit.), 47. There, the third and seventh pleas were that the note was 'given without any good or valuable consideration. The fourth averred, in general terms, that the consideration had wholly failed. The court held the third and seventh good, but the fourth bad; because it was necessary, when the consideration is alleged to have failed, to show in what manner it had failed; that the circumstances should be set out with as much precision as in a declaration.

It is stated in the Reporter’s note to Stacker et al. v. Hewitt, 1 Scam. 207, that Poole v. Vanlandingham, supra, was there overruled. A critical examination of the two cases shows this statement to be too broad. In the case in Breese, the court made an observation that on the plea of want of consideration, the plaintiff takes the affirmative—or, in other words, that the defendant was not required to prove a negative. If the case in Scammon is correctly reported, the plea was simply that the note was given without any consideration whatever. The action was debt upon a sealed note, and the plaintiff took issue on the plea of want of consideration. On the trial, the plaintiff introduced his note in evidence, which was under seal and expressed to have been given for value received. To this evidence the defendant demurred ore tenus. The circuit court held the evidence insufficient, and no other evidence being given, gave judgment for defendant. On error to'this court, it was held that the execution of the note not having been denied by a plea verified by affidavit, the note was admissible in evidence, and when admitted, it imported a consideration; but raising no question as to the form or substance of the plea, it was further held that the production of evidence to support the plea of no consideration, it being an affirmative plea, devolved on the defendant. The court said: “The position assumed by counsel, that the plea was the affirmation of the non-existence of a fact not susceptible of proof by the defendant, and that therefore the onus probandi, to show the actual consideration of the note, ought to devolve on the plaintiff, is not, we apprehend, by any means correct. The entire absence of a consideration for the execution of the note, would be a fact as completely within the means of proof by the defendant as the plaintiff’s ability to show a consideration therefor.’’ In this respect, and this only, was Poole’s case overruled. The same rule there laid down as to pleas of failure of consideration has ever since obtained; and the same rule there announced, that a plea of want of consideration is good without averring circumstances or a supposed consideration was not only impliedly recognized in Stacker v. Hewitt, supra, but it has received a tacit recognition by this court in various other eases.

Vanlandingham v. Ryan, 17 Ill. 25, was a plea of failure of consideration, which omitted the averments of what the consideration was and the particulars of its failure. It was held bad. Parks v. Holmes and Baldwin v. Banks, above cited, were the same. Topper v. Snow, 20 Ill. 434, had also a plea of failure of consideration. Its sufficiency was not questioned, but it was held the burden was on defendant to sustain his plea by evidence.

In Diversey v. Loeb, 22 Ill. 393, the defendant was sued as acceptor of a bill, by an indorsee. The plea was that defendant accepted without any good, valuable or sufficient consideration therefor, which the plaintiff well knew at the time he took the bill. The only question in this court was the sufficiency of that plea on demurrer. The court, making no objection to the plea for want of averments of circumstances to show want of consideration, put its decision upon the ground that the defense of want of consideration could not be made by the acceptor of a bill, to an action by the indorsee, although the plea averred notice to the indorsee of want of consideration, without the further averment that plaintiff was holder without consideration.'

In Smith v. Doty, 24 Ill. 163, the action was upon a note. Plea that the note sued on was given in consideration of the assignment of another note, which had been given, by one Higly to plaintiff, and that the latter note was given without any consideration, and was therefore void, while the plaintiff fraudulently represented that it was good and collectible, so that the note in suit was given without any consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
64 Ill. 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/honeyman-v-jarvis-ill-1872.