Smith v. Mayfield

45 N.E. 157, 163 Ill. 447
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 11, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 45 N.E. 157 (Smith v. Mayfield) 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
Smith v. Mayfield, 45 N.E. 157, 163 Ill. 447 (Ill. 1896).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the court:

Prom the judgment of affirmance in the Appellate Court the law conclusively presumes that in the trial court all questions of fact were properly disposed- of and all material allegations of the declaration established by the weight of evidence, and in the absence of rulings of the trial court upon propositions of law submitted to it, the presumption also is that the law was properly applied to the facts of the case. It is, however, by the appellant here, defendant below, assigned as error that the trial court allowed the plaintiff below to withdraw his propositions of law and did not pass on the same.

It is provided in the statute (Practice act, sec. 41,) that when, by agreement of parties, both matters of law and fact are tried by the court, “either party may, within such time as the court may require, submit to the court written propositions to be held as law in the decision of the case, upon which the court shall write ‘refused’ or ‘held,’ as he shall be of opinion is the law, or modify the same, to which either id arty may except as to other opinions of the court.” It is to be noted that the statute, while it is mandatory as to the duty of the court, is, as to the actions of the parties to .the controversy, permissive, merely. In order to properly dispose of the present contention it is necessary to ascertain just what the court did in the premises.

It appears from the record and bill of exceptions that the case was tried on October 19, 1894, and at the close of the evidence, by agreement and consent of both parties, time was given to each to submit propositions of law, and that thereafter, on October 26, 1894, counsel for plaintiff submitted certain propositions in writing to be held as law in the case, and that on the same day “counsel for defendant, in open court, stated to opposite counsel and the court that the defendant did not desire to submit any propositions of law, whereupon counsel for plaintiff asked leave to withdraw the propositions submitted by him, and thereupon leave to withdraw them was granted, and the said propositions were never read, considered or passed upon by the court; and thereafter, on a later day of said October term, the court gave judgment for the plaintiff, and assessed his damages at 84035, to which finding and judgment of the court the defendant, by his counsel, at the time excepted.”

It is an amply sufficient answer to the assignment of error that defendant did not object or except to the ruling of the court upon the motion of plaintiff to withdraw the propositions that the latter had submitted. It must be presumed that he fully acquiesced in the action taken by the plaintiff and by the court. But it is a still better answer that appellant had no right to either object or except. If the court had in fact passed upon the propositions and had held them to be law applicable in the decision of the case, then a very different question would be presented, and its action in allowing a withdrawal under such circumstances might well be held error. If appellant desired the ruling of the court upon any questions of law involved in the case, then he should have complied with the requirements of the statute by submitting- such propositions as he desired the court to rule upon. The court neither read nor considered nor passed upon the propositions handed up by appellee, and the latter, upon the announcement of counsel that defendant did not desire to submit propositions, immediately withdrew those he had just offered. The court owed no duty to appellant in respect to the propositions that were withdrawn, except this: that it should not hold to be law a proposition that was not the law and that was inimical to his rights or interests. The court did not violate this duty. The mandate of the statute to write upon a proffered proposition of law either the word “refused” or the word “held” is one that is for the exclusive benefit of the party submitting the proposition, and if such party elects to withdraw such proposition from the consideration of the court and waive his right to demand that the court should pass upon it, then no one else has a right to complain. It is sound law that a party for whose benefit either a constitutional or statutory right is given may waive such right—at least in a civil case. The assignment of error is without any merit whatever.

It is claimed that the court erred in admitting the testimony of appellee explaining, varying and contradicting" the terms of the document of February 27, 1893. We may say by way of premise, that it devolved upon appellee to show, jmder his declaration, that his contract for commissions was with appellant personally and in his individual capacity, and not with him as the agent of the Alton and Upper Alton Horse Railway Company and Alton Improvement Association,—owners, respectively, of the two street car lines; also, that the commissions were due when the contract of sale to Farnum or the syndicate, or company or corporation, organized by him or them, or under his or their control, was consummated; and also that under the contract his commissions were to be five per cent upon the total price of §80,700. In respect to each of these matters the evidence was conflicting, appellant contending that the liability for commissions under the contract was not personal, and also contending the commissions were not to be paid when the sale was closed but when the full contract price was paid, and then only upon the §72,000 mentioned in the declaration.

Appellee, after testifying that the contract for commissions was personal with appellant, further testified that after the sale was consummated he went to appellant and told him that he would like to have his commissions; that appellant said he was hard up and did not have the money to pay the same; that the §8700 which had been paid by Farnum and his associates had passed into the Alton Savings Bank to the credit of the street paving account, which that bank had cared for; that he, appellee, urged that he was in need of the money, and appellant said he would write a letter to Hayner, of the Alton Savings Bank, and he thought arrangements could be made by which he, appellee, could get money, and that appellant wrote a letter, and he, appellee, wrote an endorsement on its back, and appellant subscribed thereto his approval. As corroborative of his claim that the promise and undertaking of appellant were personal, appellee introduced in evidence the said letter, endorsement and approval. The same are-as follows:

“Alton, Ill- Feb 27, 1898'
"Mr. J. E. Hayner:
"Dear Sit—As per our talk with Mr. White, I am to pay $3600 as commission or bonus on street railway deal, of which Mr. White said to us Mr. Mayfield was to receive $1200. The only question between us is, when paid. My remembrance is distinct this was to be paid from proceeds of note 47,000. If you can assist Mr. Mayfield in this I shall be glad.
“Yours truly, Wm. Eliot Smith.”
“State of Illinois, 1 City of Alton. 5
‘ ‘Know all men by these presents, that I hereby authorize J. E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 N.E. 157, 163 Ill. 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-mayfield-ill-1896.