Lake Erie & Western Railroad v. Faught

129 Ill. 257 | Ill. | 1889

Mr. Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the Court;

In this case, the appellee moves to dismiss the appeal, on the ground that the amount involved, exclusive of costs, is less than $1000, and that there is no certificate of a majority of the judges of the Appellate Court that the case involves questions of law of such importance, either on account of principal or collateral interests that it should be passed upon by this-court. The action is assumpsit, and is brought by Phillip H. Faught against the Lake Brie and Western Eailroad Company,, to recover for work, labor and services done and performed by the plaintiff for the defendant, and at its request. The declaration consists of the common indebitatus assumpsit counts, the damages laid in the declaration being $3000. The defendant pleaded non assumpsit, and on the trial the plaintiff gave evidence tending to show that the value of the services sued for was in excess of $1000. The jury by their verdict assessed his damages at $930, and for that sum and costs the court gave judgment in his favor.

The defendant appealed to the Appellate Court where said judgment was affirmed. It thereupon presented its petition to one of the judges of that court, in vacation, representing that the cause involved the sum of $3000, for the reason that the plaintiff, in his declaration, claimed that sum, and praying that an appeal to this court be allowed and the amount of the appeal bond fixed. No representation was made in the petition that any question of law was involved in the ease of such importance that the case should be passed upon by this court. On that petition an order was made by said judge allowing an appeal and fixing the conditions upon which the same might be taken, but no certificate was made as to the importance of any of the questions of law involved in the case.

The appellee’s motion raises the question whether the case involves less than $1000, exclusive of costs, within the meaning of the statute allowing appeals from the Appellate Court to this court. The judgment is for $930 and costs, and with that judgment the plaintiff is content. Whatever may have been the amount of the indebtedness claimed in his declaration or shown by the evidence, the amount recovered is all that is now in controversy. The plaintiff having neither appealed or assigned errors, he must be deemed to have accepted the judgment as a conclusive and final ascertainment of the amount of his claim, and to have abandoned all of it in excess of his recovery; and the controversy, so far as it can be made by appeal, is conclusively narrowed down to the plaintiff’s right to recover the $930 and costs.

We are of the opinion that, in eases ex contractu, where the judgment is in favor of the plaintiff, and he assigns no error, and no counter-claim has been set up by the defendant by way of set-off, the amount of the judgment must be accepted as conclusive of the amount involved in the case. There the plaintiff must be deemed to have abandoned all claim to a larger recovery, and thus eliminated from the case all of his claim in excess of the amount recovered, as effectually as though he had entered a remittitur of such excess before the trial; and the defendant can not insist that a larger sum than that recovered is involved, since his doing so would be tantamount to assigning for error that the judgment against himself is for too small an amount.

Where the judgment is against the plaintiff, or if in his favor, for a sum smaller than he claims, and he appeals, then undoubtedly, the amount involved must be determined from the evidence. It will be such sum, not exceeding the ad damnum in the declaration, as the evidence fairly tends to prove. The cases of Brant v. Gallup, 111 Ill. 487, and Hankins v. Chicago and Northwestern Railway Co. 100 id. 466, are illustrative of this rule.

So where the defendant not only contests the plaintiff’s cause of action, but pleads and gives evidence tending to prove a set-off, and the jury disallow the set-off and give their verdict for the plaintiff, there, if the plaintiff’s recovery, added to the amount of the set-off claimed, exceeds $1000, it may be held that more than $1000 is involved within the meaning of the statute. The following are eases of this character: Capen v. De Steiger Glass Co. 105 Ill. 185; Moshier v. Shear, 100 id. 469.

No question of the character above indicated exists in this case. The suit is brought to recover the value of certain work done by the plaintiff, as he claims, for the defendant, in the grading of its railroad, the defense being, that said work was done by the plaintiff, not for the defendant or at its request, but as a sub-contractor of J. M. Wright & Co., the contractors to whom the defendant had let the entire work of grading that portion of its railroad upon which the work sued for was done. The only evidence affecting the question of the amount involved in the suit is that by which the plaintiff sought to prove the value of said work; and as he is content with the amount of his recovery, the judgment must be accepted as the true measure of the amount involved. That, exclusive of costs, being less than $1000, no appeal lies from the Appellate Court to this court. See Martin v. Stubbings, 126 Ill. 387. It follows that the appeal was improperly taken, and that the appellee’s motion to dismiss must be sustained. The appeal will be dismissed at the appellant’s costs.

Appeal dismissed.