Funk v. Babbitt

Mr. Presiding Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of t/ib Court.

■The judgment below was upon the verdict of a jury in favor of the appellee in the sum of $4,240, against Francis M. Funk and Ira Lackey, as partners, composing the late firm of Funk & Lackey. This is an appeal prosecuted therefrom by- Funk alone. The declaration was in assumpsit and counted upon fifteen notes purporting to have been given by said firm to the appellee. Lackey suffered default. Funk pleaded (1) general issue; (2) no consideration; (3) denial that he executed the notes; (4) denial of joint liability. The 3d and 4th pleas concluded to the country and were verified by affidavit. A demurrer to each of them was overruled and the cause submitted to the jury without further pleading as to them and without issue joined on the plea of the general issue. It is urged that no issue as to the 3d and 4th pleas, or the plea of the general issue was submitted for determination. ■ It is now well .settled - that proceeding to trial without issue being made upon a plea, is considered as a waiver of a formal joinder. Such an irregularity is cured by a verdict. Strohm v. Hays, 70 Ill. 41; People v. Wibler, 92 Ill. 288. The notes in.suit were executed by Lackey in the name of the firm for money .borro wed of the appellee at divers times. The first bore date December 13, 1890, and the last one May 27, 1891. Appellant and Lackey were, during that period, and for some years before had been, partners in business as retail dealers in drugs, paints, oils, etc., in Bloomington, and the partnership was not dissolved until September^ 1891. It was abundantly proven that Lackey signed the firm name to each of the notes. He had full power to borrow money for the purpose of the partnership and give notes of the firm therefor. Walsh v. Lennon, 98 Ill. 27; 17 Amer. & Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 1018.

Upon this point- there seems to be no contention, but counsel for appellant insists that the appellee did not, in good faith, loan the. money to the firm, but upon the contrary, understood that he was loaning the money to Lackey and was taking the notes of the firm, merely as security for its repayment by Lackey. That Lackey had not power to sign the firm name as security for his individual indebtedness is beyond dispute. Appellant’s first complaint is that the court permitted counsel for appellee to repeatedly and persistently address leading and suggestive questions to the appellee while the latter was testifying in his own behalf, and that by this course counsel, to quote from appellant’s " brief, “urged and almost drove the appellee to swearing that he understood at the time he loaned the money that it was loaned to Funk & Lackey to be used in the business of the firm, instead of the plain truth which the witness was inclined to tell, that he in fact loaned the money to Lackey under an arrangement that notes of the firm were to be given as security.” The appellee, at the time of the trial, was nearly eighty-six years old and the infirmities of age may have, as it is suggested, demanded some latitude in the manner of the examination and justified in some degree, direct and pointed interrogatories and even suggestions. Particular circumstances frequently warrant departure from the general rule as to leading questions and the proper course to be pursued in each instance must, and does, largely rest in the sound discretion of the trial judge who has opportunities for intelligent and correct judgment so far superior to that of an appellate court that his action is subject to review only in case of manifest abuse of the discretion with which he is vested. 1 Greenleaf on Ev., Sec. 435; 1 Thompson on Trials, Sec. 360. The liberality at times allowable was in this instance, it seems to us, carried to the verge of propriety and proper judicial discretion, and we might be disposed to regard the complaint as of serious moment but for the fact that the testimony of the appellee upon the precise point seemed to have abundant confirmation in the evidence. Lackey testified. that he borrowed the money for the firm, and that he so told the appellee. The appellee not only received notes of the firm, but he made the payments of the money for which the notes were given by checks upon a bank payable to Funk & Lackey. Whether this money so borrowed was devoted by Lackey to the use or purpose of the firm, was a point upon which it can only be said the evidence was in conflict. Whether it was so applied did not touch upon the point to which the leading questions were directed. If appellee parted with the money to a partner in good faith as being for partnership purposes he is not to be prejudiced by. its misapplication to other uses, even if it was so misapplied. 17 Amer. and Eng. Ency. of Law, 1098. We have carefully examined the whole evidence and have reached the conclusion that the judgment ought not be reversed upon the ground alone that the leading questions were asked. It is urged that the court improperly modified the 2d, 4th, 5th and 7th instructions asked by appellant. The 4th as modified was as follows, the modification being in italics: “ The court instructs the jury that although they may believe from the evidence that the plaintiff loaned the money to the amount of the notes offered in evidence and took such notes therefor, yet if the jury further believe from the evidence that such money was in fact borrowed for the use of Lackey, and not of the-firm, and that the plaintiff knew such fact (if it be a fact), or if the jury believe that the plaintiff knew or had notice that Lackey had no power so to bind the firm, or that the money (if any) was not in good faith loaned to the firm, then in either of such cases the jury should find the issues for the defendant; unless the plaintiff has proved by a preponderance of evidence that the firm of Funk (& Lackey did in fact receive and use the money of the plaintiff.” The modification was erroneous.

If the appellee loaned the money to Lackey individually he had recourse for its repayment upon Lackey alone, and could not recover from the firm by showing that Lackey applied the money to the use of the firm. Watts v. Kirby, 15 Ill. 200; Bates’ Law of Partnership, Vol. 1, Sec. 446. The other instructions about which complaint is made were modified, as was the one we have just quoted, the objection being the same as to all. The injurious effect of the modifications were that they at least apparently advised the jury that liability against the firm would exist if it appeared from the evidence that the firm did in fact receive and use the money loaned by the appellee. The appellee did not base a right of recovery upon that ground. The pleadings, evidence and instructions in this behalf indicate no such claim. The errors in the instructions are confined to the series given for the appellant, and are so largely attributable to him that it would be unjust to entertain his objections. The appellant presented to the court a number of instructions bearing upon the question of the liability of the firm. We have examined all of them whether given as asked, modified and given, or refused, and find the theory that the firm should be held liable by the jury, if the proof showed it received the money, distinctly set out in several of them and directly denied in none. Instruction number 8 asked by appellant was as follows: “ The court instructs the jury that before the plaintiff can recover in the case, he must prove by a preponderance of evidence, either one or both, of the following: First, that the firm of Funk & Lackey actually received the money. Second, that he actually loaned the money in good faith to the firm of Funk & Lackey, and in good faith received their note therefor, the law being that if the money was not received by the firm and the money was loaned to Ira Lackey personally, then the plaintiff can not recover, although at the time of making such loans the •plaintiff, as security for Ms loans, took from Ira Lackey a note or notes signed by Funk & Lackey.” The court added as follows : “ The law is, if the money in question was borrowed by the defendant Lackey, and the same was not loaned to the firm, then Lackey had no authority to give the firm note for said money, so borrowed, without the consent of Funk,” and gave the instructions otherwise as asked. Instruction Ho. 1, asked by the appellant and given as asked, is as follows:

“ The court instructs the jury that if the plaintiff has failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that Funk and Lackey received the money, and if the jury further believe from the evidence that the money was loaned to Ira Lackey personally, then in such case the jury should find a verdict for the defendant, Funk, and that should be the verdict of the jury, although it may appear from the evidence that Ira Lackey at each of the times of making the several loans as security therefor, gave to the plaintiff a note signed Funk & Lackey.” The modification now complained of by the appellant declared the law precisely as appellant asked, and • procured it to be declared by his other instructions, Ho. 1 and Ho. 8, above quoted. The error did not occur at the instance of the appellee and did not operate to support or aid his ground of recovery. lie did not base his right to recover upon the ground that the firm had received the benefit of money loaned by him to an individual who was a member of the firm, but upon the ground that he had loaned the money to a partner to be applied to the use of the firm, and that the firm was liable therefor whether the money was so applied or not. The appellant sought to strengthen his defense by offering proof tending to show that the firm did not receive the money, and presented instructions Ho. 1 and 8 in relation thereto, which the court gave. The modification of the other of appellant’s instructions now assigned as error, but made harmonious the series given in his behalf. The case in this respect demands the application of the rule that a party has no right to complain that an erroneous principle was announced by an instruction, when he requested and obtained the same principle to be declared in instructions in his behalf. Con. Coal Co. v. Haenne, 146 Ill. page 614. We think there is no force in the suggestion that the instruments or some of them signed by the firm and produced in evidence, were not promises to pay. In legal effect they were notes for the payment of money. It may be true, as is asserted, that the appellant will be wronged if the judgment is not reversed; but if true, it is because he was deceived and unjustly dealt with by his partner. The judgment must be and is affirmed.