Turnes v. Johnson

179 Ill. App. 32, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 864
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 21, 1913
DocketGen. No. 17,403
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 179 Ill. App. 32 (Turnes v. Johnson) 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
Turnes v. Johnson, 179 Ill. App. 32, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 864 (Ill. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Browst

delivered the opinion of the court.

December 14, 1908, praecipe was filed in the clerk’s office of the Municipal Court of Chicago, demanding a summons to the defendant in a plea of trespass on the case on promises in a cause of the first class entitled W. J. Turnes Company, plaintiff, v. L. M. Johnson, defendant.

A summons was issued in conformity with the prae cipe, returnable on the 21st day of December, 1908. December 16, 1908, a declaration was filed in said cause, by which “W. J. Tumes Company, a corporation,” purported to complain of L. M. Johnson, defendant, for that the defendant has not paid to the plaintiff certain sums of money, to the damage of the plaintiff in the amount of $2,500, wherefore it brought suit, etc.

The averments of the declaration, except the consolidated common money counts, were based on a certain contract in writing, which the plaintiff alleged the defendant had entered into with the plaintiff for constructing a three-story factory building in Chicago, which the plaintiff further averred it had fully carried out and on which it asserted a balance of the contract price of $1,200 damages to the amount of $500 and compensation for extra work to the amount of $357.03 were still due and unpaid.

The contract was set out in full in the declaration. It begins:

‘ ‘ This agreement, made at the City of Chicago, this twelfth day of March, 1907, between W. J. Turnes Company, 167 Dearborn St., * * * party of the first part (hereinafter called the Contractor) and M. Í. Johnson, * * * party of the second part, (here: inafter called the Owner);
Witnesseth: That the said party of the first part,” etc.

As recited in the declaration it closes and is signed as follows:

“In witness whereof, the said parties have hereunder set their hands and seals the day and year first above written.
First Party: W. J. Turnes Company, "
By W. J. Turnes (Seal)
Second Party: L. ML Johnson . (Seal)
Witness: Thomas H. Mullay (Seal)”

As offered in evidence, however, at the trial to be hereinafter described, the contract appears to be signed:

“ (First Party) W. J. Turnes Company
(w, ¡T. TURNES COMPANY)
( CORPORATE SEAL ) Wm. J. TURNES, Pl'CS. (SEAL)
( CHICAGO, ILL. )
(Second Party) L. M. Johnson (Seal)
(Witness) Thomas H. Mullay (Seal)”

An affidavit of merits was annexed to the declaration running as follows:

“W. J. Turnes Company vs. L. M. Johnson.
William J. Turnes, being first duly sworn, deposes and says that "he is the President of the plaintiff in the above entitled suit. That the demand of the plaintiff in the said suit is for work, labor and services rendered and materials furnished by plaintiff for defendant at the request of the defendant and for damages for wrongful withholding from said plaintiff a final certificate, to which it was duly entitled; and there is due to the plaintiff from the defendant, after allowing to Mm all just credits, deductions, demands and set offs, the sum of Two Thousand Fifty Seven Hundred and 03/100 ($2057.03) Dollars.
William J. Turnes.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this 15th day of December, A. D. 1908.
Geo. C. Guthrie,
Notary Public.”

L. M. Johnson, the defendant, entered Ms appearance by Ms attorney and afterward pleaded that he, the defendant, had sued the W. J. Turnés Company on the identical contract set up in the plaintiff’s declaration, and that said suit was pending in the Appellate Court of tMs District, and that a final judgment entered for said Johnson would be a complete bar to the plaintiff’s7 action in this case. He also pleaded nomas sump sit and filed an affidavit of defense to the whole of the plaintiff’s demand. To this plea the plaintiff demurred, still under the name of the W. J. Turnes Company, and the demurrer was sustained and the defendant ruled to plead. On the 4th of June, 1909, the defendant added to the plea of the general issue, already on file, a plea of “mil tiel corporation,” denying the existence of any such corporation as “W. J. Turnes Company,” and verified said plea by affidavit.

On the 5th of June, 1909, the plaintiff filed a replication to this plea of mil tiel corporation, averring that on March 12, 1907, the defendant entered into a written sealed contract with the plaintiff, on which the suit was based, as a corporation, and afterward on May 19, 1908, sued the plaintiff as a corporation upon said contract, in which suit a judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff herein (defendant in said suit) by the name of the W. J. Turnes Company; by reason of all which the plaintiff claimed that the defendant was estopped from pleading in this cause that there was no such corporation as the W. J. Turnes Company.

It does not appear that any disposition was ever made of this replication or that any rejoinder was ever made to it.

The transcript of the record before. us, however, contains a recital that on June 23, 1909, “a certain Amendment of the Declaration” was filed in the office of the Clerk of the Municipal Court, “in words and figures following,” and then shows, not “an amendment of the declaration” nor an order allowing an amendment, but a document signed by the plaintiff’s attorney, by which he “moves the court to amend the declaration filed herein by substituting the words (W. J. Turnes, doing business as W. J. Turnes Company,’ in lieu of the words ‘V. J. Turnes Company, a corporation,’ wherever the same occur in the declaration filed herein.”

When the case came on for trial in January, 1911, however, this condition of the record seems to have been taken as equivalent to an amendment of the pleadings and all other necessary papers, and as showing that the action was being prosecuted by W. J. Turnes as an individual and not by the W. J. Turnes Company. This is shown by the following portions of the colloquy set forth in the bill of exceptions:

The signatures to the contract—

W. J. Tubnes Company,

Wm. J. Tubnes, Pres. (Seal)

and

L. M. Johnson (Seal)

having been proven to be made by Turnes and Johnson respectively, the contract was offered in evidence by Mr. Hibben, the counsel for the plaintiff. Then occurred this conversation:

“Mb. Haft: I object to it as incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial and for the reason that no foundation is shown for its introduction in evidence or pleading, and on the further ground that this action is now being prosecuted by W. J.

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Bluebook (online)
179 Ill. App. 32, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turnes-v-johnson-illappct-1913.