delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellee was arrested upon.a ca. sa. issued in a cause in the Superior Court, wherein the appellants obtained judgment against him for $1,361.05. He thereupon applied for and was granted leave by the County Court to schedule as an insolvent, and upon a hearing was discharged.
From that judgment the arresting creditors, the appellants here, appealed to the Circuit Court, where, on verdict of a jury and judgment, he was again discharged, and this appeal has followed.
Upon the trial in the Circuit Court the declaration in the original suit in the Superior Court was introduced in evidence by the appellants. That declaration was in an action of trespass on the case, and consisted of three counts, in the first two of ivhich malice was charged as the gist of the action, and the third of which "was an ordinary count in trover.
Fío proof was made, or attempted, of what evidence was heard in the Superior Court in support of the declaration in that suit, and it seems that the judgment was taken by default of the appellee; and although the judgment in the Superior Court ivas offered in evidence it was excluded, and no question, either by argument or assignment of error, is made here that it was wrongly so done.
There can be no inference from the declaration in the Superior Court case that the judgment there rendered was upon the counts that charged malice rather than upon the count in trover that did not. Kitson v. Farwell, 132 Ill. 327.
“ If it appear that several distinct matters may have been litigated, upon one or more of which the judgment may have passed, without indicating which of them was thus litigated •and upon which the judgment was rendered, the whole subject-matter of the action will be at large, and open to anew contention, unless this uncertainty be removed by extrinsic evidence showing the precise point involved and determined.” Russell v. Place, 94 U. S. 606.
It is impossible to determine from the declaration alone, and even though the judgment had been introduced and would have shown a finding of the issues generally for the plaintiffs, it would have been equally impossible from that, to determine whether the appellee had been found guilty of the fraud and malice charged in either of the two first counts, or of a mere finding and taking under the trover count. Proof of what was alleged under either count would sustain the judgment. And it can not be said with certainty what the judgment would have been if the count in trover had not been in the declaration. Kitson v. Farwell, supra.
The burden was upon the appellants, who invoked the estoppel of the Superior Court judgment, to show with reasonable certainty what the facts were upon which that judgment rests. Althrop v. Beckwith, 14 Ill. App. 628; Kitson v. Farwell, supra.
But it is argued under the assignment of error that the verdict was against the evidence; that it appears from the testimony of the appellee in this cause that the matters constituting the fraud and malice charged in the first count of the declaration in the Superior Court suit, were sustained and were true. We will not attempt a detailed analysis of appellee’s testimony. The jury under most favorable instructions for the appellants did not so regard appellee’s testimony, and neither do we. He testified explicitly and particularly to the truth of every item of the statement which he gave to appellants, and which furnished the basis of the charge of fraud in said first count; and, taken as a whole, his testimony quite thoroughly overcame all the charges of fraud made against him, in either count of the declaration, on-account of his transactions with appellants.
And so, even though, as contended by appellants, the onus was upon him to show the judgment in the case was not for the fraud and malice charged in the two first counts of the declaration, we think he succeeded, there being no extrinsic evidence except that found in his own testimony and in the statement which was the basis of the credit given him by appellants, to the truth of which he testified, of what the transactions were that were declared upon in the Superior Court suit.
Whatever may have been previously decided by this court in cases partaking of the character of this one, we must now hold that whenever they conflict with what is laid down in Farwell v. Kitson, supra, the latter must prevail. The substantial questions involved in this appeal were decided in that case, and we have endeavored to follow it.
From what we have said it follows that there was no error in the refusal of the peremptory instruction asked by appellants, to find that the first of the action or judgment upon which appellee was arrested was malice.
The instruction given for appellee, that fraud is not to be presumed but must be proved by him who alleges it, is also the correct doctrine, as laid down in the cases already cited.
If there wTould, otherwise, have been error in the admission of evidence of the conversation between appellee and his attorney, there was none here, for the reason that appellants had elicited part of the conversation, and it then became the right of appellee to have it all put in.
It is, finally, assigned for error that the Circuit Court adjudged as costs against the appellants, the costs of the appeal from the County Court.
The only reasons given why such adjudging was wrong, were mere irregularities, at most, and unless they were such irregularities as would cause a reversal, which they were not, it was right to adjudge costs against appellants, as was done.
We see no error in the record, and therefore affirm the judgment of the Circuit Court.