O'Brien v. O'Brien

75 Ill. App. 263 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1898

Mr. Presiding Justice

Shepard delivered the opinion op the Court.

This was assumpsit brought by the appellee against the ■ appellant to recover for services rendered as manager of a saloon for a period of about eight and one-half months, and for some contributions to the stock of the business.

, The defense was that he had been fully paid by money and goods received by him.

The appellee, as manager of the business, bought the stock from time to time, incurred and paid bills, hired and paid the help, and made payments on account of indebtedness that existed against the business, and was assumed to be paid when the former owner was bought out.

The appellant, by way of defense, sought to show that appellee had paid to himself all that his claim amounted to, by appropriating to himself á large quantity of goods, or the proceeds thereof, that went into the business under his management, and remained unaccounted for by him.

And for that purpose appellant sought to prove the amount of goods purchased for and delivered into the saibon, the amount of goods remaining on hand when appellant put out the appellee, and the amounts paid by the appellee on account of the business and to the appellant. To that end, specific questions to a witness were propounded, and under objection were ruled out.

This was clear error. According to the record, the trial judge gave as his reasons for excluding the offered evidence, “You can not have an accounting in this case; there being no claim of off-set, you can not charge him (appellee) for any of those matters; the only pertinency it would have is as to what his services were worth, if anything.”

A plea of set-off need not be interposed where a defendant seeks nothing more than a defense to the claim of the plaintiff. ISTo claim was made by the defendant for an affirmative recovery against the plaintiff, but only to be permitted to prove such matters as would constitute a defense to plaintiff’s action.

Counsel for appellee admit, in their brief, that the reasons given by the trial judge “did not enunciate a correct proposition of law,” but seek to justify the ruling, because the evidence offered “ did not tend to shoiv that appellee had disposed of any beer and failed to account for the money.” Neither an action, nor the defense to one, can ordinarily be sustained by a single question and answer.

There was considerable discussion between appellant’s counsel and the court as to the admissibility and relevancy of the offered testimony, in which the counsel stated explicitly what the defense was, and how it was proposed to be shown, and the court being against him, he put the specific questions upon which the ruling was made. With those questions answered, a beginning would have been made to what might, have constituted proof of a full defense. It can not be said that one sued for wages claimed for sellinoa keg of beer, might not show in defense, under a plea of the general issue, that the keg full of beer was delivered to the plaintiff for sale, and that he returned it empty and refused to account for the proceeds; and we apprehend the illustration is as applicable to the case of five hundred kegs as to one.

The plea in this case was non-assumpsit, and under such plea the defendant was entitled to prove payment (Crews v. Bleakley, 16 Ill. 21; Kassing v. International Bank, 74 Ill. 16), and, generally, amrihing which shows that ex aequo et bono, the plaintiff ought not to recover. 2 Encyclopedia of Pl. & Pr. 1027-8.

The judgment of the Superior Court is reversed and the cause remanded.