Warth v. L. Loewenstein & Sons

76 N.E. 379, 219 Ill. 222
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 76 N.E. 379 (Warth v. L. Loewenstein & Sons) 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
Warth v. L. Loewenstein & Sons, 76 N.E. 379, 219 Ill. 222 (Ill. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal perfected by the appellant, Apollonia Warth, trading as Albin Warth, from a judgment entered in the Appellate Court for the First District affirming a judgment of the circuit court of Cook county against the appellee corporation in her favor in the sum of $87.50, and also entering judgment for the costs in that court against appellant. A certificate of importance was granted by the said Appellate Court.

The action was assumpsit by the appellant against the appellee, and the declaration contained four counts. The first count alleged that in April, 1895, appellant, at the request of appellee, a corporation, “licensed, let and delivered to use” to appellee a.patented machine for cutting cloth, constructed under certain letters patent of the United States belonging to her, “under licenses, terms and conditions” which the count set out in full, and that the appellee agreed to pay $150 semi-annually to the appellant. The seventh clause of said license is as follows: “The said licensees may terminate the payment of royalty herein mentioned upon the condition that the aforesaid machine shall be returned and delivered to said licensor by the said licensees with payment of royalty up to date of such return; and upon the further condition, and the said licensees agree, that they will not thereafter -use or authorize, or allow to be used, directly or indirectly, in their business or elsewhere, any other cloth-cutting machine until all the patents herein mentioned shall have run out.” This count alleges as the breach thereof that the appellee did not, after October 2, 1896, pay the semi-annual royalties for said machine, and that said appellee “never did, prior to the commencement of this suit, return the said machine, with payments of royalties up to the date of such return, whereby,” etc. The second count is the same, in substance, as the first, and the breach alleged is the failure to pay the semi-annual royalties due on April 2, 1897, and thereafter. The third and fourth counts are common counts for royalties unpaid. There is no averment in either of the counts that after the delivery of the machine to the appellee corporation the appellee used any other cloth-cutting machines, and thereby became liable to pay royalties.

To the declaration the appellee pleaded the general issue, verified by affidavit, and also a plea of the Statute of Frauds, which latter plea alleged that the supposed agreement of April, 1895, was not to be performed within one year, and that no note or memorandum of it was signed by the appellee. This latter plea was disposed of by a demurrer which was sustained thereto by the court. The defense was that the machine was re-delivered to the appellant and the royalties due to that date tendered to her. This defense was sustained and judgment in the sum of $87.50 was entered in favor of the appellant, being the amount due for royalties to the date of the re-delivery of the machine to the appellant. The appellant contends there was no evidence tending to support this defense. No motion for a peremptory verdict in her favor was entered.

It is urged by the appellant that the question whether there was any evidence tending to support the defense was raised and preserved for review in this court by her motion for a new trial. We do not think this contention cán be sustained. In support of this insistence counsel urge that Reichwald v. Gaylord, 73 Ill. 503, and Geary v. Bangs, 138 id. 77, so hold. We have examined both of those cases on this point, and find the holdings there to be, that the question whether the evidence is sufficient to sustain the verdict may be raised for review by a motion for new trial. But the question so preserved for review would be one of fact, cognizable only in the Appellate Court,—not a question of law for this court. In the latter of the cases cited we' held that the question whether there was any evidence to go to the jury was raised by the demurrer to the evidence on behalf of plaintiff, but that defendant did not abide the demurrer but introduced testimony to controvert plaintiff’s evidence and did not renew the demurrer at the close of all the evidence, and thereby waived the right to raise the question, on appeal, as to whether there was any evidence tending to support the plaintiff’s case.

In Berriman v. Marvin, 162 Ill. 415, we held the practice is settled that by submitting the case to the jury without a motion for a peremptory instruction, a motion to exclude the evidence or a demurrer to the evidence, the right to raise as a question of law whether there was any evidence tending to support the cause was waived. The appellant, by submitting the case to the jury without a motion to direct a verdict in her favor, must be held to have conceded that there was evidence tending to support the defense, and that question was not raised by the motion for a new trial. Calumet Electric Street Railway Co. v. VanPelt, 173 Ill. 70; West Chicago Street Railroad Co. v. McCallum, 169 id. 240.

The evidence disclosed that Emanuel Loewenstein was the president of the appellee corporation and the representative thereof with whom the negotiations leading up to the alleged contract were had, and that in November prior to the trial in March he went to Europe and was absent there at the time of the trial, and that his deposition had not been taken. It was insisted by appellant that the failure to produce Emanuel Loewenstein as a witness or to procure and present his deposition on the hearing justified the jury to infer that his evidence, if produced, would have been unfavorable to the cause of the appellee, and therefore appellant contends the giving of the following instruction in behalf of the appellee was error:

“The court instructs the jury that they should not draw any inference unfavorable to the defendant from the fact that Emanuel Loewenstein has not appeared as a witness in this case on behalf of the defendant, if, from the evidence, the jury believe that said Loewenstein is unavoidably absent in Europe at the time of this trial.”

The evidence for the appellant showed, and the brief of counsel for appellant here admits, that the only matter said Emanuel Loewenstein could have testified to, if present, was as to part of the negotiations had between Henry Warth, acting for appellant, and said Emanuel, acting for appellee, in reference to the alleged agreement of February, 1895. The verdict of the jury is consistent only with the view they found that the contract was made and entered into as claimed by the appellant, hence it is clear the instruction, whether accurate or not, did not produce any harmful result to the appellant.

It is insisted that the court erred in permitting the witness Sidney Loewenstein, over the objection of the appellant that it was immaterial, to state why his brother, Emanuel, had gone to Europe. We do not think this was error. The correct rule is stated as contended for by counsel for the appellant, that the mere withholding or failing to produce evidence which, under the circumstances, would be expected to be produced and which is available gives rise to a presumption against a party. (Mantonya v. Reilly, 184 Ill. 183.) But evidence may be given in behalf of the party who fails to produce such evidence to explain such failure, ánd thereby rebut any inference or presumption that might otherwise arise therefrom. (22 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law,— 2d ed.—1260.)

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Bluebook (online)
76 N.E. 379, 219 Ill. 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warth-v-l-loewenstein-sons-ill-1905.