delivered the opinion of the court:
In November, 1907, Thomas E. Grubb, the defendant in error, exchanged an apartment building in Chicago, subject to an encumbrance of $40,000, with William H. Milan, plaintiff in error, for the fixtures, property and good will connected with a restaurant in said city and $2000 in cash. Milan remained in charge of the restaurant for Grubb eight days after the exchange and Grubb then took charge. Soon afterward Grubb commenced a suit in assumpsit in the municipal court of Chicago against Milan and filed a declaration consisting of one count, alleging the agreement for the exchange and that Milan agreed to convey $5000 worth of stock, wares, merchandise, produce, groceries and eatables located in the basement and kitchen of the restaurant, to transfer the property free from encumbrance and to procure an assignment of .the lease, and that the lessor would acknowledge Grubb as tenant. It averred that the plaintiff performed the contract on his part, but that the defendant failed in this: that he did not transfer $5000 worth of stock, merchandise, eatables, produce and other property; that the property was encumbered, and the defendant did not malee a transfer of the lease by which the lessor acknowledged plaintiff as tenant. To this declaration a plea of non-assumpsit was filed. . What was called an amended declaration was afterward filed, setting forth the agreement for the exchange and alleging that the .defendant represented and warranted his property h> be worth $30,000 and ,the business worth $40,000 per year; that there were stored in the basement of the premises stock and supplies worth $5000 which he would deliver to the plaintiff, and that there were no outstanding debts .or obligations. It was averred that the representations were false and fraudulent and induced the plaintiff to transfer his property; that he was ■prevented from investigating the value of the business and the amount of stock on hand by the representations and warranties of the defendant; that the premises and business were not worth $30,000'; that the business did not pay $40,-000 per year; that the stock and goods in the basement were not worth $5000; that the business was not unencumbered but defendant had given out meal tickets to the extent of $3000, and that the lease was not of great value and no transfer was assented to by the owner of the building. An order was afterward made that the original declaration stand as an original count and the declaration was treated as containing two counts. There was no plea to this second count, but although issue was not taken on it the case came to trial before the court and a jury.
The plaintiff introduced a large amount of testimony and among other witnesses examined the defendant. After the defendant had been asked whether he did not transfer the property received from Grubb to his wife soon after the exchange, and had been compelled to answer that he signed some papers and took them to the recorder’s office, he was asked by plaintiff’s attorney to produce the papers and whether he could produce them within an hour or so. He answered that he could not, as he did not know where they were. Plaintiff’s attorney then asked him to produce them, and the defendant was told by the court to step aside and left the court room to find the papers called for. The plaintiff called other witnesses, who were examined, and then demanded the papers. The fact that the defendant had gone after the papers was explained, and his attorney said that he wanted to put him on the stand when he returned, and the plaintiff thereupon rested his case. The court required the defendant’s- attorney to proceed, and after offering a lease of the restaurant premises, with an assignment of the same, the case was argued by counsel. As the argument was finished the defendant entered the court room and had been gone at that time an hour and a half. His attorney offered him as a witness and the court sustained an objection. There was a verdict for the plaintiff for $7600 and the defendant’s attorney entered a motion for a new trial. On June 15, 1908, the plaintiff appeared by his attorney, no one appearing for the defendant, and the court overruled the motion and entered judgment on the verdict. Fifteen days afterward, on June 30, 1908, the parties being present in court, the defendant moved the court to vacate the judgment, and this motion was entered and continued by the court from time to time until Octoher 8, 1908, when it was overruled and defendant excepted. The. defendant then asked leave to except to overruling the motion for a new trial and to the entry of judgment, which had been done in the absence of his attorney. The court allowed the exception and fixed sixty days from that time for a bill of exceptions. The bill of exceptions was settled and signed within the time allowed and the case was taken to the Appellate Court for the First District. On February 16, 1909, the defendant in error moved the Appellate Court to strike out of the record the bill of exceptions, which motion was denied. On October 20, 1910, the court having taken the case under advisement for a decision on the errors assigned, struck from the record that part of the bill of exceptions containing the proceedings at the trial, held that there were no errors well assigned on the common law record or the proceedings had subsequent to the judgment, and affirmed the judgment. We granted a petition for a writ of certiorari, and the record has been brought to this court.
If a judgment is rendered at a term of court and a motion is made during the term to vacate the judgment, the court will retain jurisdiction of the cause and have full power to act upon and decide the motion at a subsequent term. (Hibbard v. Mueller,
It is urged, however, that the rule is not applicable to this case because the motion was to vacate the judgment without asking for a new trial. It would be an indefensible and absurd proposition to say that a judgment is final where there is a motion to vacate it and not final where the motion is to vacate the judgment and for a new trial, but the motion was, in effect, for a new trial and was so treated. Vacating the judgment without a new trial would have done no good, and no reason was offered for setting aside the judgment except to obtain another trial. The motion was supported by an affidavit showing the efforts made by the defendant to find the papers which the plaintiff’s attorney had demanded of him, and alleging facts which would constitute a good defense to the action. The affidavit stated that defendant had no other witness than himself by whom he could prove the matters and things set forth in the affidavit, and that if given an opportunity in another trial he would be able to disprove each and all of the matters and things averred against him. The motion for a'new trial had been overruled and judgment entered in the absence of the defendant’s attorney and necessarily no exception was taken, but when the motion to vacate was overruled .the court allowed an exception to the denial of the motion for a new trial. Under the circumstances we see no objection to the exercise of that power by the court, which still had jurisdiction of the cause, but there were various rulings on the trial which are complained of and which required no motion for a new trial. (Yarber v. Chicago and Alton Railway Co.
The Appellate Court erred in striking out all that part of the bill of exceptions containing the proceedings 011 the trial and did not consider the errors assigned thereon. The plaintiff in error would have had a right to have all the errors assigned, considered and decided by the Appellate Court, but he- expressly waived that right at the bar of this court, and for the purpose of avoiding needless delay stipulated that the case need not be remanded to the Appellate Court to decide upon the assignment of errors not considered, but should be considered by this cWrt as though the judgment of affirmance by the Appellate Court was a finding against him upon all the errors assigned.
The action was assumpsit, and the declaration, in each count, alleged a contract by which the defendant agreed to do certain things and made certain representations and warranties of existing facts, and it averred that the restaurant property was not of the value and did not produce the income represented and that the promises were not fulfilled, and by reason thereof the plaintiff suffered damages. It is quite uncertain upon what ground the recovery was had, but the case was tried upon different and inconsistent theories, sometimes as an action in 'assumpsit on the- contract and at others as an action on the case for fraud and deceit. No objection was made' by the defendant to the form of the action and he cannot now complain that it was assumpsit. (Rockford, Rock Island and St. Louis Railroad Co. v. Beckemeier,
The plaintiff offered evidence that the defendant said he had given out some meal tickets, but they would all, or about all, be in before the matter was closed up, and the plaintiff was then' permitted to testify that people came there with meal tickets and demanded meals. He was allowed to testify that one man came with 500 tickets, another with 400, another with 175, another with 190, another with 225 and another with 274. He proved that one Schnabble held $375 worth of meal tickets and one Kubleck $180 worth. He also testified that these persons told him that they had the tickets before the sale of the restaurant to him. The evidence was incompetent, both because the statements were hearsay and because the matter had nothing to do with the plaintiff or his rights. There was no evidence that he was to furnish meals to people who had meal tickets, and he only furnished a few voluntarily. When the testimony about the meal tickets was offered, the court stated that the evidence showed that the defendant sold these tickets in advance and the plaintiff could follow it up. The abstract does not show any testimony of that kind and the statement of a fact not proved was prejudicial. There was no evidence of any agreement to turn over the lease, as alleged in the declaration.
The apartment building belonged to a man named Barry, who had an office in which the plaintiff and George W. Stewart had desk room, and the $2000 paid by the defendant was turned over to Barry. Stewart and plaintiff were partners in the real estate business and had a man named Jose Migneault, a broker, working for them, to whom they advanced $15 per week to apply on commissions to be earned by him. He brought in the proposition to trade the Barry apartment building for the restaurant, and the plaintiff was allowed to prove that Migneault said the defendant sent him over to. malee the trade, and to testify to everything that Migneault said the defendant had told him. There was no evidence of any authority by the defendant to Migneault to make representations to his employers with reference to the matter, and there was no other evidence of some of the things which the plaintiff proved were so represented by his broker.
There were other errors prejudicial to the defendant committed by the court upon the trial, but they are not likely to occur upon a trial limited to a definite and consistent theory of a cause of action.
The municipal court erred in not vacating the judgment and awarding a new trial.
The judgments of the Appellate Court and the municipal court are reversed and the cause is remanded to-the municipal court.
, , Reversed and- remanded.
