Webb v. Lasater

5 Scam. 543
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1843
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Scam. 543 (Webb v. Lasater) 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
Webb v. Lasater, 5 Scam. 543 (Ill. 1843).

Opinion

Thomas, Justice,

delivered the opinion of the court: The plaintiff in error sued the defendant before a justice of the peace of Hamilton county. The parties appeared and proceeded to trial, and a verdict and judgment were rendered for the plaintiff for $11.21 and costs. The defendant appealed, and on the trial in the circuit court, a verdict was found by the jury for him.

From the bill of exceptions tendered by the plaintiff and allowed by tbe court, during the progress of the trial, the following state of facts appears, viz: The plaintiff after having-proved several items of his account, by witnesses introduced for that purpose, made oatli that he had no other witness by whom he could prove the remaining items of his said account, except his own oath, or that of the defendant, and called upon the latter to testify as to said last mentioned items, and the said defendant consenting to do so, was accordingly sworn. The plaintiff, by his counsel, then examined the said defendant, as to the items of his said account, not proved by other witnesses, and thereupon the said defendant’s attorney proceeded to examine the said defendant generally, as to the whole of the plaintiff’s said account, to which the plaintiff objected, but his objection was overruled by the court, and said examination permitted. The defendant’s counsel then produced the defendant’s account, and offered to prove the same by the oath of the said defendant, and thereupon the plaintiff, by his counsel, objected to the introduction and proof of the said account at all, because the defendant was present on the trial of the said cause before the justice of the peace, and on his account being demanded of him by the said justice, neglected and refused to bring any account forward, or file, the same; all of which, the plaintiff offered to prove by the said justice ; but the court refused to hear the evidence of the said justice, and overruled [* 545 ] said objection. The plaintiff, by his attorney, then objected to the defendant’s swearing to his own account, without first making oath, that he had no other witnesses, by whom to prove the same, except his own oath, or that of the adverse party, and first tendering the oath to the plaintiff; but the court overruled the objection, and permitted the defendant to prove his own account, by his own testimony. To the said several opinions of the court the plaintiff excepted.

The plaintiff moved for a new trial, on the following grounds, to wit:

1. Because the verdict was contrary to law and evidence.

2. Because it was contrary to evidence.

3. Surprise.

4. Newly discovered evidence.

The third and fourth grounds relied upon for a new trial were supported by the affidavit of the plaintiff (preserved by a bill of exceptions allowed by the court,) stating, in substance among other things, that plaintiff was taken by surprise by the production of the defendant’s account in the circuit court, which he did not produce on the trial before the justice of the peace, and by his being permitted to swear to the said account. That plaintiff tendered the oath to the defendant as to only three items of his, the said plaintiff’s account, and by reason of the court’s permitting the defendant to disprove the said account of plaintiff generally, aud also to prove his own fabricated account, which said plaintiff then for the first time ever saw or heard of, he was taken by surprise. That had the plaintiff known of the existence of such account, he would have been prepared to meet it, so as to have obtained judgment for at least part of his demand. That he, the plaintiff, could prove by James Heard, the justice who tried the suit, that the defendant admitted after the trial before the said justice, that he owed the plaintiff |7.50, on a settlement of accounts, but would not pay it, because he thought he could non-suit plaintiff in the circuit court, and his ability to prove said facts by said Heard came to his knowledge, since the trial of the cause in the circuit court, etc. The court overruled the motion for a new trial, and rendered judgment against the plaintiff on the verdict. The plaintiff excepted to the decision of the circuit court and prosecutes this, his writ of error, for the reversal of the said judgment.

The assignment of errors questions the several decisions of the circuit court:

1st. In allowing the defendant to be examined generally as to the plaintiff’s account, when he had been introduced to testify to particular items only ;

2d. In receiving evidence, on an account which the defendant refused to produce before the justice;

3d. In permitting defendant to swear to his own account, without first making oath that he had no witness by whom [* 546 ] to prove his demand, except his own oath, or that of the adverse party, and without tendering the oath to the plaintiff; and,

4th and 5th. In overruling plaintiff’s motion for a new trial, on the ground of surprise and newly discovered evidence.

In the investigation of these questions we are called upon to settle the correct practice in the circuit court, in cases of ap peal from -decisions of justices of the peace:

I. Where either party in any such case makes oath that “ he knows of no witness by whom he can prove his demand, discount, or set-off, except by his own oath, or that of the adverse party,” as authorized by law. Gale’s Stat. 420. And,

II. Where the defendant offers, for the first time, to file his account in the circuit court.

Then as to the first point: To determine the extent to which the examination of a party to an appeal suit may be carried, where he has been called upon by the adverse party to testify under the statute, a reference to the purposes of seeking to elicit such testimony, and authorizing it to be received, may be necessary. When persons have gone into litigation for the settlement of disputes, involving their pecuniary interests, neither party is willing to subject his claim to the test of his adversary’s oath, if he has any other means of establishing it. He always considers such resort a dernier one, and chooses to rely on the testimony of impartial and disinterested witnesses, if they can be had, for proof of the legality and justice of his claim, rather than to submit it for confirmation to the very party whose interests require him to invalidate it, to say nothing of the anxiety for success and fear of defeat, which litigation always engenders. And moreover, the law, as a general rule, wisely refuses to permit parties to be placed in a position, in which the hope of gain, and dread of loss, may tempt them to secure the former and avoid the latter, by means of false swearing. But there are cases in which a party may desire to sustain his claim or demand against his adversary, by the testimony of that adversary himself, and in such cases the law permits it to be done. In the necessity which begets the desire to resort to such proof is found the justification for allowing it to be done. This is where the facts necessary to prove any matter of account in controversy rests alone in the knowledge of the parties themselves.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Scam. 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webb-v-lasater-ill-1843.