This was an action of debt brought by appellee against appellant upon a replevin bond.
The declaration charged that in the replevin suit it was on November 9, 1886, adjudged by the court that appellant take nothing by his writ, and that the defendant therein, one Hattie Bigelow, have return of the goods; that appellant did not return the goods, and did not prosecute the said replevin suit with effect, etc.
Appellant tiled, among others, a plea setting up property in him, appellant, and that the replevin suit was dismissed for want of a declaration, and judgment entered without a trial on the merits.
To this the appellee replied that in the Circuit Court of Cook County, at the June term thereof, in the year 1886, in a suit wherein the said John C. F. Clark was plaintiff and the said Hattie Bigelow was defendant, the title to the property involved in said suit in said Circuit Court was the same as that involved in said replevin suit in said Superior Court, wherein the bond was given in which this suit was brought, and that in said Circuit Court there was a verdict of a jury finding the property in the said goods in the said Hattie Bigelow, and that on July 1, 1886, judgment was entered on said finding and the return of the said goods awarded to said Hattie Bigelow, and that on July 20, 1886, the said goods were delivered to said HattieBigelow by the sheriff of Cook County. To which replication the appellants filed a rejoinder, setting-up that the jury in said cause, set out in the replication, found for the defendant therein, Hattie S. Bigelow, solely in consequence of the plaintiff’s failure to prove a proper demand made for the goods and property in question, and because the said plaintiff in the replevin suit mentioned, had failed to make a proper and legal tender of money alleged to have been due from the plaintiff Clark to the defendant Bigelow in said replevin suit, as the court instructed them, and that the right of property in the goods and chattels was not determined in said suit. To the defendant’s rejoinder the appellee demurred, and the court sustained the demurrer. Appellants insist that this was error.
It is now contended by appellant that this action of the court prevented him from making any defense whatever in the suit
As pleadings are always taken most strongly against the pleader, the replication to which the rejoinder was made was defective because it did not set forth that there had been no change of title or right to possession between the time of the judgment in the Circuit Court, July 1, 1886, and the bringing of the replevin suit in the Superior Court, August 25, 1886, and the demurrer should have been carried back and sustained to such replication; the plaintiff would theu have been given leave to amend.
But we do not think that the defendant was, by the sustaining of the demurrer to his rejoinder, precluded from making any defense. The rejoinder went only to the question of damages. Stevison v. Earnest, 80 Ill. 513; Warner v. Mathews, 18 Ill. 83; Cleaves v. Herbert, 61 Ill. 126.
The sustaining of a demurrer to the rejoinder did not pi-event appellant’s setting up and showing the title in Clark or any one else in mitigation of damages. Ho evidence offered by appellant bearing upon the question of damages seems to have been rejected, and we can not say that upon the evidence the damages awarded are excessive. The testimony of Gilbert S. Bigelow was properly admitted. Mrs. Bigelow would, if unmarried, have been (as she was) the plaintiff, and in such case the husband is allowed to testify (Sec. 5, Chap. 51, R. S.); and as to the special matter of value he showed himself to have the requisite knowledge to render his testimony upon such question admissible.
Judgment affirmed.