Miller Fruit Co. v. Kellerman

229 Ill. App. 499, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 61
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 28, 1923
DocketGen. No. 28,117
StatusPublished

This text of 229 Ill. App. 499 (Miller Fruit Co. v. Kellerman) 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
Miller Fruit Co. v. Kellerman, 229 Ill. App. 499, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 61 (Ill. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Matchett

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment in the sum of $3,050.55 entered in favor of the plaintiff.

Plaintiff and defendant are both residents of the State of California. The plaintiff began its suit by attachment. In its statement of claim it alleged that defendant was indebted to plaintiff by reason of a check made out and delivered by defendant to plaintiff for the sum of $3,750.55, the consideration of the check being the amount of the purchase price of certain goods and merchandise furnished by plaintiff to defendant at defendant’s request; that after delivery of the check defendant stopped payment on the same. The statement also alleged that the amount of the check was due upon an account stated between the parties.

The defendant appeared and filed an affidavit of merits, in which he set up that on or about October 30, 1920, plaintiff agreed to sell and defendant to buy from plaintiff two carloads of grapes in good, first-class condition; that this contract was made in the State of California, in which the plaintiff was incorporated ; that the grapes were delivered there, but that the same were not in good, first-class condition, but on the contrary a large portion of them was decayed, and as a result thereof plaintiff was damaged in the sum of $700, which amount should be deducted from the purchase price, and that defendant was therefore indebted to plaintiff only in the sum of $3,050.55 for these grapes.

The affidavit of merits further set up that under the laws of the State of California the defendant had a right to set off or counterclaim any damages sustained by him arising upon a contract, irrespective of whether such damages were sustained as a result of the breach of the same contract sued upon by plaintiff. The provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure of the State of California so providing were set up and the defendant alleged that inasmuch as the contract between plaintiff and defendant was a California contract and governed by the laws of California, defendant under these provisions had the right to counterclaim or set off any damages sustained by him as a result of a breach of any contract between defendant and plaintiff. This, the affidavit states, the defendant desired to do, and alleged that the amount of the damages sustained by him greatly exceeded the amount due the plaintiff from the defendant for the two carloads of grapes. A contract for the purchase of twenty cars of these grapes is set up in haec verba, and it was alleged that the plaintiff breached the contract in that it delivered only five cars of the grapes so contracted for and failed and refused to deliver the others. It was alleged that the market price of these grapes at the time and place the same should have been delivered exceeded the price named in the contract, and that the total amount of damages claimed for failure to deliver the grapes as provided by the terms of the contract was the sum of $50,599.25; that allowing the plaintiff the sum of $3,050.55 which it was entitled to receive for the two carloads of grapes sued for, the defendant was entitled to receive from plaintiff a balance of $47,548.70.

Defendant also filed a statement of claim (set-off) in which the same contract and breaches thereof, his alleged rights under the Codes of California, and the amount admitted to be due for the two carloads of grapes shipped were set up, together with certain other sums, for which allowances should be made, and a balance was claimed of $44,588.77.

The plaintiff moved the court to strike from the files this statement of set-off as insufficient and not proper, and likewise to strike from the files for the same reason that portion of the affidavit of merits which set up the alleged rights of the defendant by virtue of the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure of the State of California. The motion was allowed. The defendant declined to plead further and on motion of the plaintiff judgment in favor of the plaintiff upon its statement of claim for the sum of $3,050.55 was entered, and it was further ordered that the case should stand for trial upon the merits as to the remainder of the plaintiff’s claim. This is the judgment from which the appeal is taken.

It is the contention of the defendant that the court erred in striking his affidavit of merits in part and in striking the set-off. It is his contention that a defense or discharge good by the law of the place where the contract is made and performed should be held of equal validity in every other place where the question may come to be litigated; that the laws which subsist at the time and place of making a contract enter into and form a part of it as if they were expressly referred to or incorporated in its terms; that if the action were brought in the State of California, that being the lex loci contractus and the lex loci solutionis, the defense presented by that portion of the affidavit of merits stricken and the set-off of claim would have been a valid and good defense, and must therefore be held a valid defense here.

The principal cases cited and relied on are: Pritchard v. Norton, 106 U. S. 124, 27 L. Ed. 104; Fidelity Insurance, Trust & Safe-Deposit Co. v. Mechanics’ Sav. Bank, 97 Fed. 297, 56 L. R. A. 228, and Vermont State Bank v. Porter, 5 Day (Conn.) 316.

Of the first case, Pritchard v. Norton, supra, it is sufficient to say that no question of set-off was involved in it, or necessary to the decision of the case.

Fidelity Insurance, Trust & Safe-Deposit Co. v. Mechanics’ Sav. Bank, supra, was a case where the plaintiff sued in another State to enforce a statutory liability created under the laws of the State of Kansas. The. same statute which created the liability provided that the stockholder against whom such proceeding should be brought under the statute might set up in defense debts due to him from the corporation. The' courts in deciding the case said it would be most remarkable if a nonresident stockholder of a Kansas corporation, sued at law in the courts of the United States upon a liability under the statute of Kansas, were denied the benefit of a personal defense authorized by the statute. We think that there is a very clear distinction between the facts of that case and the facts here, since the plaintiff here does not sue under any liability created by a statute of the State of California, but on the contrary began his suit in attachment, taking advantage of the rights conferred in that respect by the State of Illinois.

Of Vermont State Bank v. Porter, supra, it must be conceded that the law as announced in that decision sustains the contention of the defendant here; but in a note to this same case, which appears in 5 Am. Dec. 161-162, and 96 Am. Dec. 349, it is stated that the rule announced in the decision is contrary to the weight of authority in this country. Far more decisive than any other consideration is the fact that the courts of Illinois have held in well-considered cases directly

contrary to the contention of the defendant in this respect. In Sherman v. Gassett, 9 Ill. (4 Grilm.) 521, the court stated:

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Bluebook (online)
229 Ill. App. 499, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-fruit-co-v-kellerman-illappct-1923.