197 Ill. App. 626 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1916
delivered the opinion of the court.
This review is sought by defendant from a judgment against it in favor of plaintiff for $918.02.
The parties, as shown by the record, had two transactions, in both of which plaintiff was the seller and defendant the purchaser. The commodities sold were bottles. The amount due for the first sale was paid, that for the second is unpaid, and to enforce its payment this suit was commenced. In this suit defendant has counterclaimed for damages alleged to have been sustained by reason of defects in the bottles sold and paid for, a large quantity of which defendant endeavored to return to plaintiff.
There is no controversy concerning the amount due plaintiff for the bottles involved in this suit. The whole controversy hinges on defendant’s counterclaim, amounting to $532.69, which it asks to have deducted from plaintiff’s claim. Defendant sent plaintiff the difference between plaintiff’s claim and defendant’s counterclaim, which plaintiff refused to accept and returned. Plaintiff resists defendant’s counterclaim on two grounds:
First. That a contract, if disaffirmed, must be dis-affirmed in toto; that such contract cannot be affirmed as to part and rescinded as to part. In other words, the party rescinding must restore the status quo.
Second. That the damages claimed by defendant are unliquidated and can, in no event, be set off in this action.
With these contentions we are inclined to agree.
Defendant paid for the first purchase of bottles after having had them for more than a sufficient time to examine them, which fact constituted in law an acceptance. By so doing defendant made the bottles its own. Moreover, it used a very substantial part of them and thereby put it out of its power to restore them to plaintiff by the rescission of the contract under which they were purchased. As defendant could
not rescind the contract in toto, it could not rescind it at all. Waukesha Canning Co. v. Henry Horner & Co., 138 Ill. App. 564.
The claim and counterclaim were separate and distinct transactions. Neither in any way grew out of or was related to the other. The damages sought to be set off in the counterclaim are in no wise liquidated; neither are they made so by defendant’s suggested arbitrary method of calculating its damages. This case on fact and principle comes within the ruling in Turnbull Joice Lumber Co. v. Chicago Lumber & Coal Co., 152 Ill. App. 347, where the court say, as we say here: “We think the defendant’s claim is for unliquidated damages as defined in Higbie v. Rust, 211 Ill. 333; Horn v. Noble, 95 Ill. App. 99; Smith v. Billings, 62 Ill. App. 77.”
There being no error in the record, the judgment of the Municipal Court is affirmed.
Affirmed.