This case was before us at the May term, 1879, on substantially the same evidence, and' we then held that the finding of the court in favor of appellee was manifestly against the weight of the evidence, and the judgment was reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings. Town of Carthage v. Buckner, 4 Bradwell, 317.
On the second trial below, the verdict of the jury was also in favor of appellee, and judgment was rendered in his favor against appellant for costs, and the case again comes up by appeal.
Numerous errors and cross-errors are assigned by the parties, of which only the most important will be noticed.
It appears that on the first trial, the parties entered into a written stipulation of facts agreed upon, as proven on the trial, and also that a jury should be waived, and the case submitted to the court for trial. On the second trial, appellant claimed that under such stipulation a jury should again be waived, and the case be tried by the court, and entered a motion to that effect. The action of the court in overruling this motion is one of the errors assigned. In this we think no error was committed. The agreement to waive a jury only bound the parties to the mode adopted, of trial by the court, to that one trial. When the case was remanded by this court for am the ■ trial in the court below, both parties were restored to their original right of trial by jury. Each party is entitled.to as many juries as there are trials, and a waiver of- a jury on one trial, is expended by that trial. ,
Appellant also assigned for error, the admission by the court of evidence offered by appellee not embraced in the written stipulation of facts. This evidence consisted of the testimony of several physicians as to their custom or practice in giving prescriptions, and of their form, and was objected to, on the ground that such evidence was irrelevant and improper. This objection was well taken.
We fail to see that the practice or custom of other physicians, or the form of their prescriptions, tended to prove or disprove the issue before the jury, whether the appellee was guilty of violating the ordinances of the town.
Another error assigned by appellant, is that the court refused to permit the ordinances of the town, and the written stipulation of facts, which had been read in evidence, to be taken by the jury on their retirement to their room. Revised Statutes of 1877, section 56, page 741, provides that “ Papers read in evidence, other than depositions, may be carried from the bar by the jury.”
The ordinances of the town, and the stipulation of facts, were papers read in evidence to the jury. The one was a written or printed paper, showing the law as adopted for the government of the town, and the other was a written agreement entered into by the parties, showing the facts of the case, which were to be taken, by the jury as having been sworn to before them. We find no good reason why the jury should not be permitted to take them to their room, which would not exclude written contracts, promissory notes, bonds or deeds, which are always permitted to be taken by the jury. They are certainly not excluded by force of the statute, for that permits all papers read in evidence, other than depositions, to be carried from the bar by the jury, and they are not depositions or equivalent to the depositions of witnesses. Under the statute now in force, which is somewhat different from the one existing when the earlier decisions were made, and under the ruling of the Supreme Court in O’Neall et al. v. Calhoun, 67 Ill. 219, we think the court erred in not permitting the jury to take to their room the papers read in evidence.
It is also assigned for error by appellant that the verdict of the jury is contrary to the weight of evidence.
The testimony given on the last trial is the same in every respect as that given on the first, except that in the last the court improperly admitted the testimony of the physicians; but we regard their evidence as unimportant and as not strengthening the case of appellee. And as we held, when the case was first before us, that the verdict was so clearly against the weight of evidence as to show that injustice had been done, and that our duty required us to reverse the judgment, we must again, when the case comes before us upon similar evidence, reach the same conclusion.
We will only notice the cross-error assigned by appellee, that the court erred in permitting appellant to read to the jury the agreed statement of facts.
The rule is, that admissions, including those made by attorneys of record, bind the parties in all matters relating to the progress and trial of.the cause. But they must be distinct and formal and made for the express purpose of alleviating the stringency of some rule of practice or of dispensing with the formal proof of some fact at the trial. In such cases they are in general conclusive, and may be given in evidence even upon a new trial. 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, Sec. 186.
Under this rule the evidence objected to was properly admitted.
For the errors appearing on the record, the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.
Judgment reversed.