Carpenter v. Wells

65 Ill. 451 | Ill. | 1872

Mr. Justice Breese

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The theory of appellant in this case is the same as in the next preceding case, that it was a partnership affair, and no adjustment thereof can be had in an action at law.

The facts are briefly these: Appellee had been a partner with one Cagwin, in the grain business. Appellant was a customer of that firm, and became indebted to it in the sum of seven or eight hundred dollars on a balance struck. This sum appellant agreed to pay appellee, he then retiring from the firm of Cagwin & Wells. On his doing so, he went into partnership with appellant in the grain trade and flour and grocery business. In a few weeks thereafter, this firm was dissolved, under circumstances detailed in the preceding case.

The amount being above the jurisdiction of a justice of the peace, the claim was reduced to six hundred dollars, to bring it within that jurisdiction, and a judgment had for that amount, which, on appeal to the circuit court, was affirmed.

. Defendant brings thé record here and makes this as his principal point, that this debt, so due by him to Cagwin Sa Wells, and which he had assumed to pay to Wells, was, by the consent and agreement of these parties when they formed their co-partnership, taken and considered as so much capital put into the concern by Wells, and on this hinges the whole controversy.

The proof is overwhelming, whatever the intention of the parties may have been at the outset, that this sum never did go to the credit of appellee on the books of the concern, nor was it used in the concern during the continuance of their partnership. It is a bald case of a promise to pay an honest debt, and that promise unfulfilled. This eight hundred dollars, as the proof conclusively shows, never did go into the firm account, or into the business of the firm. If it did, it was the duty of appellant to show it by competent testimony. This he has wholly failed to do.

As to the right of a creditor to reduce his claim in order to bring it within the jurisdiction of a justice of the peace, see Raymond v. Strobel, 24 Ill. 113.

The judgment must be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

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