Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Winchester Repeating Arms Co.

178 Ill. App. 318 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1913

Mr. Justice Browe

delivered tie opinion of tie court.

Tie judgment wiici tiis writ of error is brougit to reverse was one of nil capiat and for costs rendered against tie corporation plaintiff in error iere and plaintiff below, in a suit brougit by it against tie defendant corporation in tie Superior Court.

Tie plaintiff was attempting to recover from the defendant tie sum of $973.51 and interest on a contract for a special rebate on tie purchase of certain fire arms wiici plaintiff purchased from tie defendant in 1904.

Tie defendant contended below and contends iere that no binding contract for such a rebate was ever made by it, and also that if it conld be held to have made such an agreement, it was conditioned, among other things, on the undertaking of the plaintiff not to sell or to offer in print to the trade any of the goods at a price lower than the minimum price feed by the defendant, and that the plaintiff had not kept the agreement in this particular, but had sold and offered in print at such lower price.

The cause was tried below before a jury, which found a verdict for the defendant, on which the judgment complained of was entered. The bill of exceptions brought here as a part of the transcript of the record does not purport to contain all the evidence, but states that “the evidence was contrary and conflicting,” and that the issues were: first, whether or not a contract existed between plaintiff and defendant; second, whether the plaintiff had performed the agreements of said alleged contract on its part to be performed; and, third, whether or not the defendant had broken the alleged contract. It then recites that the plaintiff, to maintain the issues on its part offered evidence, tending to show certain things, and that the defendant offered evidence tending to show certain other things; and that the court then “gave to the jury on behalf of the plaintiff” certain instructions which are set forth in full, and “on behalf of the defendant” certain instructions also set forth, to the giving of which the defendant excepted; and, further, that the plaintiff, by its counsel, asked the court to give each of four instructions set forth, and the court refused to give each of said instructions, to which refusal the defendant excepted.

As the plaintiff in error has raised in this court only the question of error in the instructions, it was only necessary for it to present in the bill of exceptions enough of the evidence to show the pertinency of the instructions. Sidwell v. Lobly, 27 Ill. 438; Illinois Cent. R. Co. v. O’Keefe, 154 Ill. 508. Nor can, in the present state of tlie record here, the defendant in error maintain that an erroneous instruction, if there were one, was not harmful by reason of the justice of its cause as shown by the evidence.

In Schmidt v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co., 83 Ill. 405, 412, the Supreme Court says:

“It is only where the evidence is all preserved in the record, and we can see from it that the jury could have reached no other conclusion than they did had the instructions and all of the rulings been correct, that we will affirm notwithstanding error may have been committed in giving or refusing instructions. In this case the bill of exceptions shows that the evidence was inharmonious. As only legal questions arising on the record are presented, we cannot presume the finding was right in despite of thé errors committed by the court on the trial of the case.”

The Appellate Court of the Third District made the necessary deduction from this rule in the statement in Tipton v. Schuler, 87 Ill. App. 517, that:

“If, as a matter of fact, the erroneous instruction complained of was not harmful by reason of matters appearing in proof, the appellee or the defendant in error should have insisted upon the bill of exceptions reciting the evidence before it was signed.”

We are in this cause, therefore, limited to passing on the accuracy of the instructions given and on the question whether the refusal of those rejected was justified. The plaintiff in error confines his argument to the giving of instruction numbered 4, the giving of instruction numbered 8, and the refusal of instruction numbered 9.

Instruction 4 (given) was this:

“If the jury find that the evidence in this case is evenly balanced and they are in doubt as to whether defendant is indebted to the plaintiff, then their verdict should be for the defendant.”

Instruction 9 (refused) was as follows:

“The court instructs the jury that if they find from the evidence that the plaintiff has made out its case by a preponderance of tbe evidence as laid in its declaration, then tbe jury sbonld find for tbe plaintiff.”

We are of tbe opinion that giving tbe first and refusing tbe second of these instructions, taken together, constituted reversible error.

Instruction 4 might naturally tend to mislead tbe jury, for a superficial reading or attention to it might well leave tbe impression that it meant that if the evidence were so balanced as to leave a doubt in their minds as to tbe indebtedness • of tbe defendant, they must not find for tbe plaintiff, — a proposition which is manifestly erroneous. A preponderance of tbe evidence, however slight, in favor of tbe plaintiff, by no means removing all doubt, would have been sufficient to justify a verdict for it. And it was precisely an emphasis on this point which tbe plaintiff sought by instruction 9, which has been often held unobjectionable. Chicago & J. Elec. R. Co. v. Patton, 219 Ill. 214.

It is true that instruction 4 does not actually read as we have said it might be misread; and it is not so much as inaccurate as misleading that we must condemn it. Under the construction which defendant insists it should bear, the words “and they are in doubt as to whether defendant is indebted to the plaintiff” are purely surplusage. Without them the instruction would state the truth; but even if it were so given, a refusal to supplement it with the tendered instruction 9 could hardly have been justified. With the words in question in instruction 4 we think the refusal to give 9 was reversible error, and we think instruction 4 misleading.

Instruction 8 (given) was:

“The eourt instructs the jury that before there can be a contract between two parties, the minds of the two parties must come together upon all the terms and conditions of the contract, or, as is sometimes said, ‘the minds of the contracting parties must meet.’ ”

We do not see the objections to this instruction which counsel for plaintiff in error finds to it.

But for tlie refusal of instruction 9, in connection with the giving of instruction 4, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.

Reversed, and remanded.