Shreffler v. Nadelhoffer

25 N.E. 630, 133 Ill. 536
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 12, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 25 N.E. 630 (Shreffler v. Nadelhoffer) 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
Shreffler v. Nadelhoffer, 25 N.E. 630, 133 Ill. 536 (Ill. 1890).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Certain questions arising upon the pleadings are presented by counsel which we will notice first. It is said that the defendants’ eighth plea presented a complete defense to the action, and as that plea was unanswered, judgment should have been rendered thereon for the defendants. It appears that the defendants went to trial without objection that said plea was unanswered, and without moving for any judgment thereon for want of a replication. They thereby waived the necessity of a formal issue. As we said in Strohm v. Hayes, 70 Ill. 41, it is the settled doctrine of this court, that, proceeding to trial where an issue is not made up on one of the pleas, such issue is considered as waived, or the irregularity is cured by verdict. Furthermore, said eighth plea purports to answer only the third count of the declaration, and as that count was dismissed by the plaintiff prior to the trial, such dismissal carried the eighth plea with it, and that plea, was no longer in the case, and there was no occasion for answering it.

Again, it is insisted that each of the several counts in the declaration is insufficient to show a cause of action, and that the defendants’ motion in arrest of judgment should therefore have been sustained. The alleged defect in the first, second and fourth counts is, that, except as to the first breach assigned in the first count, there is no averment that the decree recited in the appeal bond has ever been affirmed by the Appellate Court. It is difficult to see how, as the record now stands, the defendants can avail themselves of this defect in the second count, or in the second breach assigned in the first count. Said second breach in the first count and said second count were both demurred to by the defendants, and their demurrer being overruled, they abandoned it, and filed various pleas in bar. The only assignment of error by which the alleged defect in the first and second counts is presented for consideration here, is the one which calls in question the decision of the trial court overruling the defendants’ motion in arrest of judgment, and the settled doctrine of this court is, that where a defendant demurs to a declaration, and, after his demurrer is overruled, pleads over, he will be precluded from insisting upon a motion in arrest of judgment for insufficiency in the declaration. Quincy Coal Co. v. Hood, 77 Ill. 68; American Express Co. v. Pinckney, 29 id. 392; Independent Order of Mutual Aid v. Paine, 122 id. 625; Rouse v. County of Peoria, 2 Gilm. 99; 2 Tidd’s Practice, 918.

But we think the fifth count, especially after verdict, is ■ sufficient to sustain the judgment, and that being so, the court properly overruled the motion in arrest of judgment, even though all the other counts may have been defective. Section 57 of the Practice Act provides that: “Whenever an entire verdict shall be given on several counts, the same shall not be set aside or reversed on the ground of any defective count, if one or more of the counts of the declaration be sufficient to sustain the verdict.” See also Gebbie v. Mooney, 121 Ill. 255, and authorities cited. The objection urged to the other counts does not exist in the fifth count, as that count contains a sufficient averment of the affirmance by the Appellate Court of the decree appealed from. But it is claimed that said count is defective in failing to state the names of the parties who had agreed to or were about to purchase said note, and the sale to whom was defeated by the continuance of the injunction.

The allegation of damages in said count is, in substance, that at the time the order continuing the inj unction was made, the note, the sale and transfer of which was restrained, had a market value of $10,000, the makers and guarantors of said note then being men of great wealth and financial standing; that but for the injunction, the note could have been negotiated and sold for that sum, and that the plaintiff was offered that sum for it by divers responsible parties, and would have disposed of and sold it, without recourse, for that sum, if the injuuction had not been continued in force; that by reason of the continuance of the injunction, the plaintiff was delayed and hindered in making such disposition of the note for the period of ten months, and that during that period the makers and guarantors of the note became financially irresponsible, whereby the note became worthless.

Without pausing to determine whether, in this case, the rules of good pleading required the plaintiff to state the names of the parties who had offered to purchase said note, or to whom he would have sold it if he had not been prevented from doing so by the continuance of the injunction, the case is one merely of a defective statement of a cause of action, and not one where no cause of action is stated, and the defect is therefore one which is cured by verdict. The rule on this subject, as laid down by Mr. Gould in his Treatise on Pleading, is as follows: “Where the statement of the plaintiff’s cause of action, and that only, is defective or inaccurate, the defect is cured by a general verdict in his favor; because, to entitle him to recover, all circumstances necessary, in form or substance, to complete a title so imperfectly stated, must be proved at the trial; and it is therefore a fair presumption that they are proved. But where no cause of action is stated, the omission is not cured by verdict. For, as no right of recovery was necessary to be proved, or could have been legally proved, under such a declaration, there can be no ground for presuming that it was proved at the trial.” Gould on Plead. 463. The allegations of said fifth count were clearly sufficient to admit proof of the names of the parties with whom the plaintiff had negotiated the sale of said note, and to whom he was prevented from making such sale by the continuance of the injunction, and it will therefore be presumed, as was the fact, that such proof was made at the trial.

But the question to which our attention has been chiefly directed, and the one which presents the greatest difficulty, is, whether any breach of the' condition of the bond sued on is shown. The decision of that question must turn wholly upon the construction to be placed upon the language of the condition. That language is as follows: “Now if the said Andrew Dillman and Edward B. Knowlton shall duly prosecute said appeal, and shall moreover pay all damages, and damages growing out of the continuance of the injunction herein, costs of suit rendered and to be rendered against them the said Andrew Dillman and Edward B. Knowlton by said court, in case the said decree shall be affirmed in said Appellate Court, then the obligation to be null and void, otherwise to remain in full force and virtue.”

The judgment of the Appellate Court simply affirmed the decree appealed from, and awarded the appellee, the plaintiff, his costs in that court. No judgment for damages was rendered by the Appellate Court against Dillman and Knowlton or the survivor of them, and no such judgment could have been rendered, as that court had no jurisdiction or authority, on affirming the decree, to maké an award to the party entitled thereto, of his damages growing out of the continuance of the injunction. It is-not disputed that the costs adjudged to the appellee were paid prior to the commencement of the suit on the bond, and there was therefore no breach of the condition of the bond by reason of the non-payment of said costs.

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.E. 630, 133 Ill. 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shreffler-v-nadelhoffer-ill-1890.