Jadwin v. Hoyt

1 F.2d 784, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 1894
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 15, 1924
Docket3366
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1 F.2d 784 (Jadwin v. Hoyt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jadwin v. Hoyt, 1 F.2d 784, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 1894 (7th Cir. 1924).

Opinion

LUSE, District Judge.

Plaintiff in error seeks review of a judgment of tbe lower court, entered after demurrer by defendant in error to tbe former’s replication was sustained, and such demurrer to tbe amended plea of tbe defendant in error overruled, upon tbe omission of plaintiff in error to ask to plead further. Tbe parties will be here designated as they were below and in tbe ease in tbe municipal court for Cook county, hereinafter mentioned.

Tbe action is one of trespass on tbe case; plaintiff, Jadwin, seeking damages claimed to result to him from tbe purchase of stock in tbe Smith-Form A-Traetor Company. Plaintiff alleges that be was induced to make tbe purchase by false and fraudulent representations made to him by the defendant, upon which be relied in making tbe purchase. Tbe question here is whether or not tbe plaintiff irrevocably elected to pursue an inconsistent remedy, when, prior to tbe *785 commencement of the action in the court below, he commenced and prosecuted to judgment, in favor of the defendant, an action in assumpsit in the municipal court for Cook county.

The reeord discloses that the action in the municipal court for Cook county was brought on the theory that plaintiff had purchased the stock from defendant, paid him $20,000 therefor, which the defendant had received; that such purchase was induced by the false and fraudulent representations of the defendant, relied upon by plaintiff, being- the same representations which are 1he foundation for the present action; that the plaintiff had tendered back the stock, demanded his money, and sought in that action to recover the $20,000 paid therefor, with interest. Such action, it appears from defendant’s amended plea herein, was based on an alleged disaffirmance and rescission of the contract. It appears, further, from such amended plea, that in the municipal court defendant, by his affidavit of merits, not only denied the fraud, hut also denied that plaintiff purchased the stock from defendant, that plaintiff paid defendant, and that defendant had or received the $20,000 or any other sum from plaintiff. It also appears that on the trial the plaintiff testified on his own behalf, and that the defendant and numerous other witnesses on his behalf testified and were examined and cross-examined in the presence of the plaintiff; that on the trial the jury returned a general verdict and answers to certain special questions; that the general verdict was in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant, but thereafter the municipal court, rendered judgment in favor of the defendant upon the special findings; that such filial judgment is now in full force and effect, unreversed, unmodified, and unappoaled from. As a conclusion to the amended plea the defendant avers that the plaintiff, with full knowledge of all the facts, conclusively and irrevocably elected to rescind tbe contract of purchase, and not to sue or attempt to recover for any alleged damages by reason of any alleged false or fraudulent representations made in connection with the sale of the stock.

To this amended plea the plaintiff interposed Ms replication, setting; out in full the special questions, with the jury’s answers thereto, which were returned by the jury in connection with their general verdict, by which special questions the jury found, among other things: (1) That the defendant was not the actual owner of the Smith-

Form A-Tractor stock purchased by the plaintiff; (2) that the money paid by the plaintiff for such stock was never received personally by tbe defendant; (3) that the Smith-Form A-Tractor Company was the owner of the stock purchased by the plaintiff; (4) that the Smith-Form A-Tractor Company received the money paid by the plaintiff for the stock but that the defendant did not; (5) that the defendant had never appropriated to his own use the money paid for such stock; (6) that the $20,000 paid by plaintiff for the stock was paid by his check, payable to the order of Michaelis & Co., and by them indorsed, delivered, and transmitted to the Smith Form A-Tractor Company, and by it retained in payment of the slock purchased by plaintiff; also that the general verdict returned by the plaintiff and by the jury was in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant in the sum of $22,794.94, and that a motion of the defendant for judgment on the special findings of the jury was made, allowed, and judgment entered for the defendant; and that it was not until the motion last mentioned was decided and tbe case was finally determined in the municipal court of Chicago that plaintiff was fully informed, and it was finally established that the money paid by him to the defendant for such corporate stock had not been personally received by the defendant. To this replication defendant interposed a demurrer, and on motion of plaintiff the demurrer was carried back to the amended plea. The court below overruled the demurrer to the amended plea, and sustained the defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiff’s replication, and judgment was entered in favor of the defendant.

The two actions, the first in the municipal court, and the second in the court below, were inconsistent; the former being founded on a disaffirmance, the latter on an affirmance of a voidable transaction. United States v. Oregon Lumber Co., 260 U. S. 290, 294, 43 S. Ct. 100, 67 L. Ed. 261. It is undoubtedly the geuera.1 rule that prosecution of one remedial right to judgment or decree, whether the judgment or decree is for _ or against plaintiff, is a decisive act, ■which constitutes a- conclusive election, barring the subsequent prosecution of inconsistent remedial rights. 20 C. J. 28. Under this doctrine, defendant’s first amended plea would seem to he proof against demurrer, for it discloses that plaintiff had pursued a remedy inconsistent with the one presently invoked, and been defeated.

However, the replication discloses *786 that plaintiffs defeat in "the municipal court was due to the special findings of the jury, the substance of which has been stated, and they establish that the stock which plaintiff purchased was not defendant’s stock, but stock in and belonging to the Smith-Form A-Traetor Company, that it and not defendant received plaintiff’s money therefor, and that defendant had never received same nor any part of it. These findings mean that plaintiff had no right at any time to tender to defendant the stock plaintiff had purchased, for it had never belonged to him; that plaintiff had no right to demand from defendant the return of the purchase money, for defendant had never received it. In other words, plaintiff was defeated solely because he had pursued a remedy which in fact never existed in him. The special findings thus establish that defendant’s relationship to the corporate stock, the money, and to plaintiff, was such that as to him alone plaintiff’s only remedy, if any he has, is in tort. Neither waiver of' the tort, rescission, nor any other act of plaintiff could place defendant under any other responsibility to plaintiff. This, we understand, was the theory upon which the municipal court acted in entering judgment, applying the Illinois law as declared in Arnold v. Dodson, 272 Ill. 377, 381, 112 N. E. 70. See, also, Sim v. Edenborn (C. C.) 163 F. 655.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 F.2d 784, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 1894, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jadwin-v-hoyt-ca7-1924.