Kaufman v. Helmick

212 Ill. App. 10, 1918 Ill. App. LEXIS 18
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 19, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 212 Ill. App. 10 (Kaufman v. Helmick) 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
Kaufman v. Helmick, 212 Ill. App. 10, 1918 Ill. App. LEXIS 18 (Ill. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion of the court.

On August 23, 1913, a judgment by confession for $899.35 was entered in favor of Hattie F. Kaufman in the office of the clerk of the Circuit Court of DeWitt county on a promissory note, with a cognovit attached, purporting to have been executed by Adam Helmick and his son Howard Helmick on August 14, 1912, for $825, payable one year after date to the order of J. F. Newbanks with interest at 7 per cent and $15 attorney fees. The note was assigned by Newbanks to plaintiff. The defendants presented to one of the circuit judges a motion to stay all proceedings on the judgment and for leave to plead, and in support of the motion filed affidavits to the effect that neither of them had signed, authorized the signing nor ratified the affixing of their names to the purported note. An' order was made allowing the motion. At the November term, plaintiff amended her declaration by adding the common counts to the count on the note. The defendants filed verified pleas of the general issue and that they did not make the note sued on. A trial before a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendants, which was reversed by this court for error in instructions. (Kaufman v. Helmick, 190 Ill. App. 487.) On a second trial, a jury returned a verdict, “We, the jury, find the issues for the plaintiff,” and also answered special interrogatories submitted by the defendants finding (1) that Howard Helmick did not sign the note; (2) that Adam Helmick had ratified, as his signature, the name Adam Helmick signed to the note; and (3) that Howard Helmick had not ratified the name Howard Helmick signed to the note. A motion for a new trial was entered by the defendants, each defendant assigning numerous reasons for the. motion. The court denied the motion of Adam Helmick for a new trial and rendered judgment that the judgment heretofore entered August 23,1913, in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant Adam Helmick for $899.35, stand in full force as of the date of said judgment, and that plaintiff have execution therefor, and as to the defendant Howard Helmick the court allowed the motion for a new trial. Both defendants excepted to the judgment and prayed separate appeals. The record does not show that any appeal bond was ever filed by either party defendant, but appellee has not raised any question over that fact, and the defendant Adam Helmick alone has assigned errors on the record.

The jury, by its answer to the second interrogatory, submitted to it by appellant, found that he “had ratified or adopted the name Adam Helmick” signed to the note. The jury, by its answers to the first and third interrogatives, found that Howard Helmick neither signed, adopted nor ratified the name Howard Helmick signed to the note. The special findings of the jury concerning the name Howard Helmick were contrary to the general verdict. The statute (section 79 of the Practice Act, J. & A. ¶ 8616) provides that when the special finding of fact is inconsistent with the general verdict the special finding shall control. The trial court had no alternative other than to grant a new trial as to Howard Helmick.

The first contention of Adam Helmick is that the court erred in rendering judgment on the verdict confirming the judgment of August 23, 1913, against him, and in granting a new trial as to the defendant Howard Helmick. ,In cases in tort, a court may set aside a verdict and grant a new trial as to part of the defendants, and may overrule the motion for a new trial as to other defendants and render judgment on the verdict in favor of the plaintiff against said other defendants. Appellee argues that section 7b of the Negotiable Instruments Act, as amended in 1895 (J. & A. ¶ 7626), authorizes the setting aside of a verdict and granting of a new trial as to part of the defendants and rendering judgment on the verdict against others. The act only authorizes the severance of judgments as to defendants defaulted and a trial and judgment as to other defendants, and authorizes a judgment against defendants standing trial who are found liable, and a judgment in favor of such defendants as by the verdict are found not liable. This act does not, in actions on negotiable instruments, change the common-law rule, that where a verdict in an action ex contractu is erroneous as to one defendant it must be set aside as to all defendants standing trial before a jury. Morehouse & Wells Co. v. Schwaber, 118 Ill. App. 44.

It is also assigned for error that the court erred in permitting the evidence of Newbanks, heard at the former trial, to be read to the jury on this trial, over the objection that a proper foundation, for its admission had not been laid. The abstract purports to contain an affidavit, made by one of the attorneys for appellee, stating that Newbanks, who testified on the former trial, “is now to the best information and belief that can be ascertained by affiant, out of the State of Illinois and beyond the jurisdiction of the court”; that he had diligently sought to find his place of residence but had learned that he had left the State of Illinois and had gune to the State of Iowa, but his residence cannot be ascertained and his deposition cannot be procured. The bill of exceptions does not contain any such affidavit. The record does not show any foundation for the admission of the evidence given on a former trial; its admission under such circumstances was error.

It was stipulated on the trial that the name “Adam Helmick” on the note sued upon was not written by appellant, and the only contentions made by appellee concerning appellant’s name on the note were that he had approved his name being on the note by permitting part of the proceeds received from the sale of the forged paper to be used in the payment of another note claimed to have had his name on it, because he had not offered to return the money so applied, and also that he had ratified the execution of the note by acknowledging that he had signed it, to an agent or broker acting for the payee, which acknowledgment was communicated to appellee before she purchased it, and was thereby estopped to deny its execution.

Regarding the first contention, Newbanks at the first trial of this case testified that he wrote out the note sued on and Howard Helmick took it away and returned in a short time with appellant’s name on it, and signed it and delivered it to him; that at that time he had a conversation with Howard regarding certain notes made by Howard and himself and that “the Walden note I had taken up for Adam Helmick and mailed Adam Helmick the note personally myself.” The Walden note was for $230 and was the only note claimed by appellee to have been paid to which Adam Helmick’s name was signed. Adam Helmick testified that he never made or saw such a note. It would appear from the evidence that the Walden note, even if it had been made by appellant, was not paid with the proceeds of the note in suit, neither is it claimed it was paid at the request of or with the knowledge of appellant. If the Walden note for $230 was made by Adam Helmick and Newbanks, and New-banks was only surety on it, and as such surety paid it with his own money, no reason is given nor is any authority cited showing that Adam Helmick would thereby be made liable for the payment of a forged note for $825 put in circulation by Newbanks after he had paid off the Walden note for Adam Helmick; all that appellant would be liable for would be to Newbanks for the money paid out by him for the use of appellant. Concerning the second contention, L. E.

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Bluebook (online)
212 Ill. App. 10, 1918 Ill. App. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaufman-v-helmick-illappct-1918.