The question presented' is a question of practice. It appears that Mr. Walker, representing a certain railroad company as its attorney, which was sued and judgment obtained against it, an appeal being prayed to the Supreme Court, signed the appeal bond as surety. This appeal bond contained the usual conditions required by the statute, that is to say, in substance, that if the judgment should be affirmed by the Supreme Court, he was to pay the debt.
It seems that- upon the appeal being taken to the Supreme Court, the judgment was reversed, and a mandate to that effect was sent back to the court here, where it was tried; subsequently, upon re-hearing, a change of view was effected in the Supreme Court, and the judgment was affirmed, and that was the final decision and judgment of that court.
Suit was brought upon this appeal bond, the plaintiff alleging the affirmance by the Supreme Court of the judgment of the court below; the defendant pleaded nil debit; to that plea a demurrer was sustained; he then applied to the court for leave to file amended pleas; the court granted him that leave upon certain conditions, viz.: that he should prepare his amended or additional pleas and submit them to the court with an affidavit, from which the court might see that he did really have a meritorious defense. The case decided in this court at the last term: Empire Fire Ins. Co. v. Real Estate Trust Co., 1 Bradwell, 391; as also tire case decided in the 78th Ill., Misch v. McAlpine, 78 Ill. 507, have been relied upon by the appellant in support of his rights in this case; we have considered them carefully, and .think the case at bar differs from and is not within the purview of those decisions.
At the time at which he had leave to file these amended pleas, together with the affidavit, the appellant presented a plea that the Supreme Court had reversed the case, and filed his affidavit that the plea was true; the plea was not good in this, that it did not traverse the allegation that the judgment had been affirmed by the Supreme Court; that was the gravamen of the plaintiff’s declaration.
He simply presents the allegation in his plea that the Supreme Court had reversed the case, non constat; that it had also affirmed it, as was the fact; the plea, therefore, was defective, and not responsive to the plaintiff’s declaration in the matter of a material allegation. The court may well have said to him: “There is no object in allowing you to file this plea; a demurrer would be instantly sustained to it.”
Defendant was not, therefore, allowed to plead anew; the plea offered was not accepted.
That is about the case, as it appears upon the record.
And upon that state of facts we think the court decided correctly. We think it fails to come within the ruling of this court in the case decided at the last term, where the facts were that immediately upon the plaintiff’s demurrer being sustained, the counsel for defendant was present with good pleas, ready to file them instan ter; the court refused leave to file them; we decided that to he error, and we think now that it was error, but that is not the case now before us. After having asked the indulgence of the court for several days, to prepare and present pleas with his affidavit, the appellant comes into court and presents a bad plea—confessedly, manifestly bad, at first-sight. .
And, therefore, we think the analogy between the cases can scarcely be perceived by the most astute observer.
Defendant’s plea being bad, it was simply trifling with the court to ask it to permit it to be filed; the plaintiff could again demur and repeat that" sort of folly indefinitely. That is not the spirit in which justice is administered; it lacks that gravity necessary to the fair administration of justice by the court.
The Superior Court we think decided correctly in refusing the filing of the bad pleas. In the light of these facts, the judgment of the court below is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.