Mount v. Scholes

11 N.E. 401, 120 Ill. 394
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 11 N.E. 401 (Mount v. Scholes) 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
Mount v. Scholes, 11 N.E. 401, 120 Ill. 394 (Ill. 1887).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Mulkey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

At the January term, 1886, of the Sangamon circuit court, S. D. Scholes, administrator of Travis Glasscock, deceased, recovered therein a judgment against William Mount, for the sum of $3704.37, which, having been affirmed by the Appellate Court for the Third District, the defendant brings the case here for review.

The record shows the following state of facts : Travis Glass-cock died at the house of William Mount, in Menard county, this State, on the 18th day of March, 1882, leaving a last will and testament. The executors named in the will having declined to act, the defendant in error, S. D. Scholes, was appointed administrator of the estate, with the will annexed. At the time of Glasscock’s death, he held notes given by Mount to himself, aggregating (interest included) between $2000 and $3000. These notes, together with other valuable papers, were kept by him in a small tin box. About a month before his death, as if apprehending some trouble in respect to them, he caused his business manager, A. J. Barber, to take a copy of them. After his death, the executors not finding the notes among his other papers, they called at the house of William Mount, and asked his wife, who is a niece of the deceased, what had become of them. In this interview, she stated, as is sworn to by two witnesses, that the deceased had given her the notes, and that they were burned. This statement, at least so far as the burning of the notes is concerned, Avas entirely false, as is shown by subsequent events. The administrator, Avithout having the notes in his possession or power, on the 28th of December, 1882, brought the present suit upon them.

The declaration contained a special count on the notes, and also the money counts. At the February term, 1883, the defendant filed the plea of non assumpsit, and issue Avas joined thereon. No further steps seem to have been taken in the case until the September term, 1885, when the defendant filed a plea of former recovery, to which the court sustained a demurrer, and the ruling of the court upon the demurrer is assigned, for error. The plea we regard as clearly bad, and, consequently, there was no error in sustaining the demurrer to it. Without stopping to consider the several objections to it which have been pointed out by counsel, we think its failure to state the time when the judgment was obtained, rendered it substantially defective. In pleading a judgment, either the term of the court at which it was recovered, or the exact date of its rendition, should always be stated, and when taken in vacation, as this one was, the time of its entry by the clerk should be stated. (Freeman on Judgments, sec. 450.) If such be the general rule, it should certainly be applied with more stringency in cases like the present where the judgment is obtained after the commencement of the suit. In these cases the rights of the plaintiff will depend, to some extent, upon whether the judgment was recovered before or after plea. If rendered before, the plea could not properly be filed, except upon a special application to the court for that purpose. (Millikin v. Jones, 77 Ill. 372; Fisher v. Green, 95 id. 94.) If rendered afterwards, the matter could only be pleaded puis darrein continuance.

The general rule upon this subject, at common law, is, that any matter of defence arising after the commencement of the suit, can not be pleaded in bar of the action, generally. If such matter arise after the commencement of the suit and before plea, it must be pleaded to the further maintenance of the action. But if it arise after plea, and before replication; or after issue joined, whether of law or fact, then it must be pleaded puis darrein continuance. A plea of this kind involves grave legal consequences that do not attach to an ordinary plea. It only questions the plaintiff’s right to further maintain the suit. When filed, it, by operation of law, supersedes all other pleas and defences in the cause, and the parties proceed to settle the pleadings de novo, just as though no plea or pleas had theretofore been filed in the case. By reason of pleas of this kind having a tendency to delay, great strictness is required in framing them. In this respect they are viewed much like pleas in abatement, and, for the same reason, they must, like those pleas, be verified by affidavit. 1 Chitty’s Pleading, (12th Am. ed.) 660; 2 Tidd, (1st Am. ed.) 776-778.

Treating the plea under consideration as a plea of puis clarrein continuance, it is confessedly bad. Indeed, it has none of the distinctive features of such a plea, nor has it been pleaded or treated by the court or counsel as such.

While, as we have seen, the plea in question fails to state the date of the judgment, nevertheless, upon'looking into the record, we find it was entered on the 2d of March, 1883, which was some time after issue had been joined on the defendant’s plea of non assumpsit, which was the only plea in the case. Now, it is clear from what we have already said, if the date of the judgment had been inserted in the plea according to the fact, the plea would, without doubt, have been clearly bad, because the matter set up in it could only have been pleaded puis darrein continuance. This is obviously so, for the reason such matter was only available as a bar to the further prosecution of the suit, whereas, by suppressing .the date, it was sought to interpose it as a bar to the suit from its inception. This can not be permitted. These considerations clearly show the propriety of the rule above adverted to, which requires a plea of former recovery to state the date of the judgment. Had the matter been pleaded, as it ought to have been, as a bar to the further prosecution of the suit, only, it would have operated as an admission on the record that the suit was properly begun and prosecuted up to the time of filing such plea, or, in any event,.up to the date of the judgment, which, of course, would have had an important bearing upon the question of costs.

The record of the judgment set up in the plea was put in evidence on the trial, under the general issue. The question therefore arises, what, if any, effect should be given the judgment as a mere instrument of evidence? We think it clear, from the authorities, as well as from the nature of the defence, and its legal effect, when properly made, that all matters of defence arising after the issue or issues have been made up, must be specially pleaded. Such being the law, it follows, the trial court erred in admitting the record of the judgment in evidence, against the objection of the plaintiff. But as no exception seems to have been taken to the ruling of the court, the objection must be considered as waived. Moreover, no cross-errors have been assigned by the defendant in error.

Looking at the record, then, as we find it, the question arises, what, if any, errors of law intervened in the trial court, to the prejudice of plaintiff in error, for which the Appellate Court, should have reversed the judgment.

A jury having been waived, the court, after the evidence was in, was asked to hold certain propositions, the legal effect of which was, that under the facts proved there was no right of recovery. The material points raised by the propositions submitted to the court may be considered together, but before doing so it will be necessary to advert more particularly to some of the facts out of which they arise.

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.E. 401, 120 Ill. 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mount-v-scholes-ill-1887.