Goding v. MacArthur Co.

Mr. Presiding Justice Gridley

delivered theopinion of the court.

On November 8, 1911, George Goding commenced an action of the fourth class in the Municipal Court of Chicago against The MaeArthur Co., a corporation, defendant, to recover money claimed to be due him on a note executed by the defendant. A copy of the note was attached to his statement of claim, from which it appeared that the note' was dated Chicago, February 4, 1911, and that the defendant promised to pay to the order of plaintiff, at Chicago, the sum of $100, thirty days after said date, for value received. Plain-tiff also caused to be filed an affidavit of claim, sworn to by an agent, showing that there was due plaintiff from defendant the sum of $103.75. The defendant entered its appearance and filed an affidavit of merits', claiming that it had a good defense to the whole of plaintiff’s demand and setting forth the nature of that defense. On December 7, 1911, the court ordered that said affidavit of merits be stricken'from the files. The record does not disclose that defendant asked leave to file an amended affidavit of merits. The court, for want of sufficient affidavit of merits, thereupon entered a finding and judgment against the defendant for the amount stated in plaintiff’s affidavit of claim, viz: $103.75. It is here.assigned as error that'the-court erred in striking defendant’s affidavit of merits from the files, and in entering the judgment.

If the affidavit of merits did not on its face state a legal defense to plaintiff’s demand on said note, the court was. justified in striking said affidavit from the files. And as defendant, by not asking leave to file an amended affidavit, in effect elected to stand by the affidavit, it was proper for the court to enter the judgment by virtue of certain provisions contained in Buie 17 of the Municipal Court, as follows: “Where the defendant’s affidavit of merits is stricken from the files for insufficiency, the court may then and there enter judgment as in case of default for plaintiff upon the plaintiff’s affidavit of claim in said cause, or such further evidence as the court may require. ’ ’ The sole question, therefore, is whether or not defendant’s affidavit of merits stated a good defense to the note.

By section 55 of the Practice Act a defendant is required, in his affidavit of merits, to specify the “nature” of his defense, and Buie 17 of the Municipal Court requires a defendant in a fourth class case to specify “the nature of such defense * * * in such a manner as to reasonably inform the plaintiff of the defense which will be interposed at the trial.” In an action on a note, the execution of which is not denied, a presumption exists that the same “was regularly issued for a valuable consideration, and that the payee is a bona fide holder, and entitled to recover the full amount thereof.” Perry State Bank v. Elledge, 109 Ill. App. 179. And in such an action the defendant may plead “want of consideration, or that the consideration has wholly or in part failed.” Section 9, chap. 98, Hurd’s Ill. Stat. “To constitute a good plea of failure of consideration under the statute, the pleader must set out what the consideration was, and specify wherein it has failed; that in setting up the defense of want of consideration, although when there is a supposed consideration, and an alleged insufficiency of it to support the instrument, the pleader may set it out for the purpose of referring its want of sufficiency directly to the judgment of the court. Still, the rules of pleading do not require that to be done; and the plea is sufficient if it aver, in the language of the statute, or any equivalent language, that the defendant made the note in the count without any good or valuable consideration therefor.” Honeyman v. Jarvis, 64 Ill. 366, 371. While by section 3 of the Municipal Court Act it is provided “that in all cases of the fourth class * * * the issues shall be determined without other forms of written pleadings ’ ’ than those in that Act expressly prescribed, we apprehend that a judge of that court, in passing upon the sufficiency of an affidavit of merits, wherein is stated the “nature” of the defendant’s defense in an action upon a note, should apply the same tests as would be applied to a plea.

While the affidavit of merits in this case states in general terms that “said note was accommodation paper and was without a good and valuable consideration,” it also specifies other facts by which it was attempted to show wherein the said note was accommodation paper and without a good and valuable consideration. As we construe these specific allegations, which the defendant was not required to make but which he might make and did make, they do not show a good defense to the note. It appears from these allegations that the defendant was loaning to the National Textbook Company $300 per week to pay the running expenses of the business of the text-book company, including salaries; that plaintiff was one of the employes of the text-book company; that at the time of the execution of the note the defendant did not have $300 in cash to loan to the text-book company,but loaned to it $200 in cash and gave the note sued on for $100 payable to the plaintiff; and that at said time the defendant did not owe anything to the text-book company or to the plaintiff. The affidavit should be construed most strongly against the defendant. There is no allegation that at said time the text-book company did not owe the plamtiff $100 for salary. If this was so, and the inference from the facts as stated is very strong that it was so, there was a good consideration for the note. The transaction was in effect the same as if at said time the defendant had loaned the text-book company $200 in cash and given its accommodation note to the text-book company for $100, and the textbook company had endorsed that note over to the plaintiff for value, in which case, even though the plaintiff knew at the time that the defendant was only an accomodation party, the defendant would be liable on the note. Section 47, chap. 98, Hurd’s Stat. 1912.

The affidavit of merits sets forth at length certain other happenings occurring in April and June, 1911. In effect, it states an attempted novation, but there is no allegation that the plaintiff ever knew of or consented to the same.

The judgment of the Municipal Court is affirmed.

Affirmed.