delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a suit to recover for a bill of wall paper, sold by Jane way & Carpen der, of Chicago, a branch of the National Wall Paper Company, to appellants, amounting to $251.11.
Appellants defended upon the ground that they never dealt with, nor purchased the goods from appellee, but that the bill of wall paper sued for was purchased from Jane way & Carpender. Appellants also filed seven special pleas, numbered from three to nine, inclusive, whereby they sought to set up a defense under the act of June 20, 1S93, entitled: “ Trusts and conspiracies against trade.” (Hurd’s Statutes 1893, p. 519.) The court sustained a demurrer to these seven special pleas, and appellant abided by their pleas. We think the court did right in sustaining the demurrer to these pleas.
They were pleas in avoidance, and should therefore have given color to the plaintiff, that is, have given it credit for having an apparent or prima facie right of action, independently of the matter disclosed in the plea to destroy it. 1 Chitty’s Pl. (6th Ed.), p. 556; Andrews’ Stephen’s Pleadings, 266.
The pleas under consideration did not conform to this rule and were therefore demurrable. Nor did they set up any facts from which the court could see that if proven the unlawful trust or combination existed. Again, the pleas failed to show that the sale of the goods by appellee was in furtherance' of, or connected with, the unlawful combination, if any such existed.
There was no dispute that appellants purchased and received the goods, nor is it alleged or claimed that they were sold at unreasonable prices produced by any unlawful combination.
The defense appears to have been an afterthought and without merit. The amount due was admitted by appellant’s letter asking an extension of the time for payment, and the only excuse offered then for non-payment was hard times and slow collections. We think the verdict and judgment for $251.11, the amount of the bill, was right and should be affirmed. We find no error in the action of the court in giving or refusing instructions.
It is insisted that the court erred in placing the case on the first trial calendar, and refusing to strike it off upon appellant’s motion, it being claimed that this action was in violation of rule ten of the court in which the cause was tried.
No exception seems to have been saved to the ruling of the court on this motion, the bill of exceptions being entirely silent on this subject. There is no evidence as to what rule ten was beyond an alleged copy included in the motion, and that not being incorporated in the bill of exceptions is not properly before us. There is no evidence to show on what the court based its action in overruling the motion, and we must presume it decided properly.
The judgment will be affirmed.