Gebbie v. Mooney

Mr. Justice Scholeield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was assumpsit, by appellee, against appellant. The declaration contains a special count upon an agreement in ■writing, and the common counts.

First—Appellant contends that the judgment below is erroneous, because the special count does not disclose a cause of action; but there are no objections to the common counts, and the verdict is an entire one, not limited to the special •count. It is provided by section 58 of chapter 110, of the Ttevised Statutes of 1874: “Whenever an entire verdict shall be given on several counts, the samé shall not be set aside or .reversed on the ground of any defective count, if one or more •of the counts in the declaration be sufficient to sustain the verdict. ” And to this -effect is-also the ruling in Bradshaw v. Hubbard, 1 Gilm. 390; Reece v. Smith, 94 Ill. 362; Snyder v. Gaither, 3 Scam. 91; Missouri River Telegraph Co. v. First National Bank of Sioux City, 74 Ill. 217; Davis v. Taylor, 41 ad. 405; James v. Dexter, 113 id. 654.

There is no bill of exceptions here, and consequently the -question is only one'of pleading,—is either count of the declaration, tested by itself, good and sufficient to sustain the judgment? And there being no objection to the common counts, ■on the authority of the cases referred to, supra, there was no -error in overruling the motion to arrest the judgment.

Second—It is contended by appellant’s counsel, that the trial court erred in sustaining a demurrer to the first special plea of the appellant. There are several grounds alleged by ■counsel for appellee, justifying that ruling, but we think it ■sufficient to observe that the plea professes to answer the whole cause of action, but is, in fact, only an answer to the ¡special count. Chitty says: “If a plea profess, in its commencement, to answer the whole cause of action, and after-wards answers only a part, the whole plea is bad,” and he •says the proper course is to demur. 1 Pleadings, (7th Am. -ed.) 554, *555. And so we have held, where a declaration in -assumpsit contained the common counts, and also a special -count, upon a promissory note, a plea which purported to ■answer the whole declaration, but only answered the special ■count, was bad on demurrer. Goodrich v. Reynolds et al. 31 Ill. 490; American Ins. Co. v. Holly, 81 id. 353; People v. McCormack, 68 id. 226; People v. Weber, 92 id. 288.

Third—Two other objections are urged, which, in the view we take of the case, may be considered together. They are, first, that the court erred in going to trial without having disposed of the demurrer to the defendant’s pleas of fraud to the original declaration; second, the court erred in proceeding to trial on the amended declaration, without first ruling the defendant to plead, etc.

An amended record was filed, by leave, in the Appellate-Court, while the cause was pending there, which shows that-the demurrer to the defendant’s pleas of fraud to the original declaration was sustained, and that, on appellant’s own motion, his pleas filed to the original declaration were ordered to stand as pleas to the amended declaration. Counsel for appellant, however, contend that the amended record ought-not to have been filed, because the amendment of the record was made at a term subsequent to that at which the cause was tried, and there was nothing to amend by. The court can not make an original order in a case at a term subsequent to that at which final judgment is rendered, but it may, at a subsequent term, cause the clerk to enter upon the records of the-court an order made at a previous term, at which judgment-was rendered, provided, only, there shall be some minute or memorial paper from which it can be determined what such order, made at the previous term, was. (Church v. English, 81 Ill. 442; Dunham v. South Park Commissioners, 87 id. 185 ; Howell v. Morlan, 78 id. 162.) The amended record here-recites that “the court, upon the inspection of the records of this court in this cause, * * * finds that two certain orders made by the court herein, have not been entered upon the records of this court, through an omission of the clerk to-do so, ” and it then proceeds to order that they be entered nunc pro tunc. The presumption here, as in respect of all judgments, decrees and orders of the circuit court, is, that the ruling is right until it is affirmatively made to appear that it is wrong. And it was incumbent on appellant, if, in fact, there was nothing here to amend by, to have tendered a bill of exceptions, reciting all the evidence in this respect then before the court, and not having done so, the order can not be reversed or disregarded. Prout v. Grout, 72 Ill. 456; Indianapolis and St. Louis Railroad Co. v. Miller, 62 id. 468; Krebaum v. Cordell, 63 id. 23 ; Bowman v. Bowman, 64 id. 75 ; Cunningham v. Craig, 53 id. 252; Wallahan v. People, 40 id. 104. This last case is, in the respect under consideration, precisely analogous to the present. We can not listen to assertions of counsel that there was no notice, the record showing the contrary.

The pleas of fraud, like the other special plea before noticed, professed to answer the whole cause of action, but, in fact, only answered the special count, and the demurrer to them was, for that reason, if for no other, properly sustained.

The judgment of the Appellate Court is affirmed.

Judgment affirmed„