Sheldon v. Lewis

Mr. Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action of assumpsit, brought by E. 1ST. Lewis against George F. Sheldon, on a promissory note dated February 29th, 1876, due in thirty days, given by the defendant to Lewis, for the sum of $800, with interest after due at ten per cent. The declaration contained a special count on the promissory note, and also the common counts. The defendant pleaded to the declaration, the general issue and two special pleas. The second one was as follows:

“And for a further plea in this behalf, the said defendant says actio have, because he says that the special count and common counts in plaintiff’s declaration are for one and the same cause of action. That said promissory note in plaintiff’s declaration mentioned was got and obtained of the said defendant Avithout any good or valuable consideration whatever, by practicing unlaAvfully and feloniously what is known as the ‘Confidence Game,’ by the criminal laAvs of the State of Illinois, used and practiced upon him by said plaintiff, and this he is ready to verify, wherefore he prays judgment, etc.”

In the third plea the defendant set up substantially the same defence relied upon in O. O. & F. R. V. R. R. Co. v. Black, 79 Ill. 262, and Hays v. O. O. & F. R. V. R. R. Co. 61 id. 422.

To the two special pleas plaintiff interposed a general demurrer, which the court sustained, and, the defendant electing to abide by the pleas, judgment was rendered for the amount due upon the note.

As respects the third plea we are of opinion the matters therein set up did not constitute a legal defence to the promissory note sued on, and, for the reason given in the Black and Hays cases, cited supra, we think the demurrer to that plea was properly sustained. In regard to the first special plea, when the case was before us on the former hearing we held that the plea was in substance good, and in deciding the question, said: “The first special plea is not a plea of failure of consideration, as contended on the argument, but it is a plea of want of consideration. In a plea of failure of consideration it is necessary to set up what the consideration was,'and then aver wherein the consideration has failed; but Avhen a plea of Avant of consideration is relied upon, as ivas held in Honeyman v. Jarvis, 64 Ill. 366, the plea will be sufficient if it avers, in the language of the statute, or any equivalent language, that defendant made the note in the declaration described without any good or A’aluable consideration therefor. It is expressly averred in the plea that the note was ‘got and obtained of the defendant Avithout any good or valuable consideration Avhatever.’ If the pleader had stopped here there could.be no question in regard to the sufficiency of the plea, but he added the Avords ‘by practicing

unlawfully and feloniously Avhat is known as the confidence game.’ Did the addition of these Avords destroy the substance or effect of the plea? We think not. These latter Avords neither added to nor detracted from the force or effect of the plea.. They may be rejected as surplusage, Avhich will-leave the plea a good one of Avant of consideration. As to this plea Ave are of the opinion the demurrer should have been overruled.”

Upon further consideration we perceive no reason for modifying or changing what Avas said on the former hearing. In the argument, however, on the rehearing, objections are made to the plea which were not relied upon in the original argument, which we will now consider. •

The first objection made to the plea is that the words actio have are used i& the introductory part of the plea, when the pleader should have used the words actio non. The use of the word have instead of non was, doubtless, á clerical mistake in drafting the plea or making up the record by the clerk, and while a mistake of that character in the use of a single word might have rendered the plea bad on special demurrer, had one been interposed, we do not regard the plea defective in substance, and, hence, the defect could-not be reached by general demurrer.

• It is next urged that the plea is bad “ because it is an answer, if an answer at all, to but one count of the declaration, to-wit, the special count.” It will be observed that the pleader undertook, in the introductory part of the plea, to aver “that the several supposed causes of action in the several counts in the declaration mentioned are for one and the same thing, to-wit, the promissory note in the first count mentioned,” and it is conceded in the argument that if the plea had contained such language it might be held good on general demurrer. The plea, however, contains this language: “And for a further plea in this behalf the'said defendant says actio have, because he says that the special count and the common counts in plaintiff’s declaration are for one and the same cause of action.” It may be true that the language first indicated might have been used with more propriety in pleading, but that is not the point. The question presented by the record is, whether the uiea is defective in substance. The demurrer was general, and if the plea was substantially good the demurrer ought to have been overruled, although the plea might have been bad on special demurrer, had one been filed, as a géneral demurrer reaches only substantial defects in a pleading. In Chitty on Pleading, vol. 1, page 528, it is said: “The common allegation in a plea, by way .of introduction, that the cause of action laid in one count and the- cause of action laid in-another count are one.and the .same, showing matter in discharge of one"cause of action, only seems to render the plea defective as amounting to the general issue. The fault in question is no ground of error, and can only be objected to by special demurrer.” In Case v. Boughton, 11 Wend. 106, where the declaration contained two counts on the same instrument, and there was no plea to the second count, but in the plea to the first count it was averred that the instrument set forth in that count was the samé identical instrument set forth in ¡the- Second, -the court' held: that it could not be objected, upon general demurrer, that there -is a defence to only one of the causes of action set forth in the declaration. It is there said, “It is objected to the second, third, fourth and fifth pleas that they set up a defence to one of the causes of action only. That objection is satisfactorily answered by a reference to the commencement of those pleas severally, in which they answer the instrument in the first count, adding, ‘and which is same identical agreement or memorandum' set forth in the second count of said declaration.’ This is certainly sufficient upon general demurrer. The answer given is to the instrument, and the same instrument is counted upon in each count.” It will not be necessary to multiply authorities on this question. We are satisfied that the objection urged against the plea- is one that could only be reached by special demurrer. But it is contended that if the defence, want of consideration, could have been introduced under the general issue, the defendant was rot injured by the decision of the court in sustaining the demurrer to the second plea, and, therefore, the judgment should not be reversed for that reason alone.

It is true, that an error which does no harm'is no ground for reversing a judgment, but the law is well settled in this State that the failure of consideration, or want of consideration, can not be proven under a plea of the general issue, but a defence of that character must be specially pleaded, Rose v. Mortimer, 17 Ill. 475; Keith v. Mafit, 38 id. 304.

It is .also contended that the plea is defective, because it is not therein averred, in the language of the statute, that the note was made and entered into without a good and valuable consideration,—that the language of the plea that the promissory note “was got and obtained of the said defendant without any good or valuable consideration,” is not sufficient. It may be, if this objection to the plea had been raised by special demurrer, it might have been proper for the court to have held that the defendant should use different words in setting up his defence, but it is apparent that the objection goes to the form rather than to the substance of the pleading, and, hence, could not be reached by general demurrer.

Whether the defendant will be able to establish the defence he pleaded, a want of consideration to the note upon which the action was brought, we, of course, have no means of knowing; that point does not now arise. The only question presented by the record is one of pleading. We are satisfied that the defendant’s second plea was, in substance, good, and as the court held otherwise, and thus precluded the defendant from making a defence to the action, the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.

Judgment reversed.

Mr. Chief Justice Dickey did not participate in the decision of this case.