Reilly Tar & Chemical Corp. v. Lewis

326 Ill. App. 117
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 13, 1944
DocketGen. No. 42,602
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 326 Ill. App. 117 (Reilly Tar & Chemical Corp. v. Lewis) 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
Reilly Tar & Chemical Corp. v. Lewis, 326 Ill. App. 117 (Ill. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

On Rehearing.

Mr. Presiding Justice Burke

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is the third appeal in this case. Our opinion in the first appeal (No. 40458), filed October 25, 1939, is reported in 301 Ill. App. 459. The opinion on the second appeal (41697), filed January 7, 1942, was reported in abstract form (312 Ill. App. 654). We are now requesting that it be published in full. [See 326 Ill. App. 84] After the last remandment the case went to trial before the court and a jury on September 23, 1942, resulting in a verdict against plaintiff. The court overruled plaintiff’s motion for a new trial and entered judgment on the verdict. Plaintiff appeals.

Plaintiff urges that the court erred in refusing to permit it to introduce evidence of what was said and done at the conference with the representatives of the Government, attended by Mr. Orr, Mr. Ryan and Mr. Lux, on May 25,1928. The court should have followed our opinion reported in 301 Ill. App. 459, wherein we held that this testimony was competent. Defendant states that when a case is reversed and remanded generally, only the legal principles announced by the appellate tribunal control in any future proceedings. In our first opinion we clearly stated that the trial court erred in refusing to admit the exhibits and proffered testimony. Furthermore, we stated that the testimony of Mr. Orr as to what was said and done at the conference with the representatives of the Government was competent. On the retrial of the case it was the duty of the court to follow the directions so given. The conference with the Government men was one of the constituent facts in the transaction; was in contemplation of the parties at the hotel conference; and was so connected in point of time and interest with the hotel conference as to be part of it. Orr, acting under power of attorney for plaintiff, and Ryan and Lux, acting as attorneys for defendant, went from the hotel directly to the conference with the Government men. The parties to this action were there by their representatives. What was. done there was a part of the transaction at the hotel and continued that transaction. It was part of the res gestae. Bes gestae has been defined as those circumstances which are the automatic and undesigned incidents of a particular litigated act and which are admissible when illustrative of such act. The true inquiry is whether the declarations are a verbal act, illustrating, explaining or interpreting other parts of the transaction of which they are then a part, or merely a history of a completed past affair. In one case they are competent; in the other they are not. It has been held that the test of the admissibility of evidence as a part of the res gestae is whether the act, declaration or exclamation is so intimately interwoven or connected with the principal fact or event which it characterizes as to be regarded as a part of the transaction itself, and whether it clearly negatives any premeditation or purpose to manufacture testimony. We are of the opinion that the testimony of Mr. Orr was admissible under the res gestae rule. We disagree with the contention of defendant that the proffered evidence was repetitious, immaterial and irrelevant to plaintiff’s case in chief. Defendant, by his attorneys Ryan and Lux, was present at the conference with the Grovernment agents. Attorneys Ryan and Lux at that time were in the discharge of their duties and transacting the business of their principal, Mr. Lewis! . Defendant urges that the conversation between Orr and representatives of the Bureau of Internal Revenue was in the presence of the agents of the defendant, both of whom were dead at the time of the trial, and that it has been consistently held by the courts of this State that conversations with the deceased agent of a principal sought to be charged are not admissible in evidence as against the principal. The cases cited by defendant in support of this proposition are based on section 4 of the Evidence Act (par. 4, ch. 51, Ill. Rev. Stat. 1943 [Jones Ill. Stats. Ann. 107.070]). In the case at bar plaintiff seeks to enforce a contract allegedly made with defendant. Mr. Orr is not a party litigant, nor is he a party to the contract. Section 4 of the Evidence Act provides that a party to an action who has contracted with an agent of the adverse party, the agent having since died, shall not be a competent witness as to any admission or conversation between himself and such agent, unless such admission or conversation with the deceased agent was had or made in the presence of a surviving agent or agents of such adverse party. This section is not applicable and may not be invoked to exclude the testimony of Mr. Orr and the cases cited by defendant in support of the point are inapplicable.

Plaintiff maintains that the court erred in refusing to allow it to prove that the stipulations shown in plaintiff’s exhibits 4 to 10, entered into by attorneys for plaintiff and for defendant with Mr. Chare st, acting for the Government, were made pursuant to the discussion and conference with the Government officials on May 25, 1928. Defendant insists that the court ruled correctly, for the reason that the question called for the conclusion of the witness, invaded the province of the jury and was neither material nor relevant. Whether the stipulations were made pursuant to the discussion or conference, was a question of fact. Mr. Orr knew the fact. It was a material and relevant fact and a constituent part of the settlement transaction. It was a part of the res gestae. The question did not call for the conclusion of the witness on a question of fact; it did not invade the province of the jury, and it was material and relevant. Defendant calls attention to the fact that in our last opinion (No. 41697) we held that a question directed to Mr. William Lewis as to whether in delivering certain checks to the Collector of Internal Revenue he relied on an alleged agreement between defendant and plaintiff, called for the conclusion of the witness and invaded the province of the jury, and urges that following our reasoning in that opinion we should sustain the action of the trial court in declining to allow Mr. Orr to answer the question under discussion. In our last opinion we held that Mr. Lewis was not conversant with the situation and that any information he had was necessarily derived from others. Mr. Orr was fully acquainted with the situation and had personal knowledge thereof. Plaintiff urges that the court erred in refusing to permit witness Boynton to testify regarding his instructions to Hayes to draw up the journal entry called exhibit 801, and regarding the instructions and statements of Hunter to Boynton as to that journal entry; in excluding the .testimony of Hayes as to the instructions of Boynton regarding the preparation of the exhibit; and in excluding the testimony of witness Hayes concerning the exhibit. Plaintiff asserts that these statements were verbal acts, essential to an understanding of the transaction of which they were a part. In our opinion in case No. 41697 we stated that the exhibit and the testimony in the depositions of Boynton and Hayes were admissible as rebuttal evidence. We are now of the opinion that the exhibit and the proffered testimony were admissible in rebuttal and are also admissible as part of the res gestae. It will be observed that plaintiff’s sixth and final check in payment of the taxes fixed in the orders of redetermination, was dated February 15, 1929. Plaintiff’s'exhibit 26, also referred to as exhibit 801, was made in March 1929, a month after the payment of the final instalment, to set up the account on the books of plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
326 Ill. App. 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reilly-tar-chemical-corp-v-lewis-illappct-1944.