J. F. Hallinan v. A. Levytansky

A. Levytansky sued J. F. Hallinan in the Justice Court upon an open account, verified by his affidavit under the statute, for merchandise sold and delivered. Defendant denied the account, but not under oath, and pleaded by way of counter-claim or setoff and reconvention, a claim for damages for injury to a certain diamond stone, which it was alleged had been left with plaintiff to be set in a ring and which he had, through unskillfulness or carelessness, broken and injured.

Plaintiff excepted to the plea on the ground that his suit was upon a certain demand, while defendant's claim was for unliquidated damages for "tort or breach of covenant" and, under the statute (article 754, Revised Statutes), could not be pleaded as an offset to his claim upon the verified open account. There were no pleadings on the part of the plaintiff that would serve to show the nature of his claim except the open account and affidavit that it was just and correct. The plaintiff's exceptions were sustained to the defendant's plea of counter-claim, or cross action as defendant terms it, and judgment rendered for plaintiff for the amount of his claim. Upon appeal to the County Court there was the same result, and from the judgment defendant appeals.

The fact that appellee's open account was verified by affidavit did not affect appellant's right to plead the counter-claim. (Railway Co. v. McTieque, 1 Ohio App. Civ. Cases, sec. 461; Bach, Meirs Co. v. Ginacchio, id., sec. 762; Galveston, H. S. A. Ry. Co. v. Schwartz, 2 id., sec. 759.) Nor did such affidavit affect the nature of the demand *Page 230 as being certain or uncertain under the provisions of article 754 of the statute.

Following the decision of the Supreme Court in Taylor v. Bewley (93 Tex. 524), we must hold that the suit upon open account was not a suit upon a certain demand, and that appellant could properly plead as a counter-claim his claim for unliquidated damages. The judgment of the County Court is reversed and the cause remanded.

Reversed and remanded.