Smith v. Whitham

Mr. Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee sued appellant in assumpsit to recover a lumber bill amounting to $666.52. Defendant pleaded the general issue, and a separate plea of recoupment for damages alleged to have been sustained by appellant because the lumber was not delivered when it should have been. There was a jury trial and a disagreement. Thereafter appellant filed a qualified plea of the general issue and a plea of tender and payment into court of $474, made up of $8.95 accrued costs and $465.05 admitted to be due upon the bill. This plea of tender was filed February 5, 1916. Appellee filed a replication thereto, in which he said that he “freely takes and accepts the same out of court here; therefore as to said sum of $470 including court costs now taxed, the plaintiff is satisfied.” There was another jury trial, resulting in a verdict for plaintiff for $666.52. A new trial was denied, and plaintiff had judgment for the full amount, with an award of execution therefor. The defendant appealed to this court, and we reversed the judgment and remanded the cause because it was obvious that the verdict and judgment included the sum of $465.05 tendered and accepted, according to the replication. We granted a rehearing on the petition of appellee, in order to determine whether on the other questions litigated the verdict was right, so that a remittitur of" the amount of the tender could be entered here, and save the parties the expense of a third trial of the cause.

This qualified plea of the general issue and the plea of tender were in the proper form. County of Jo Daviess v. Staples, 108 Ill. App. 539. The replication was in proper form, where the plaintiff admits that a tender can be proved and is prepared to show that more is due than the sum tendered. 3 Chitty’s Pl. 1156, and note. The acceptance of such a tender does not bar the plaintiff from recovering more, if more is due. Higgins v. Halligan, 46 Ill. 173, which was approved in Alexander v. Loeb, 230 Ill. 454; Fowley v. Thompson, 173 Ill. App. 333. Where such a tender is in court the plaintiff has a right to take it, and, if necessary, it is the duty of the court to order it paid over. Dickinson v. Boyd, 82 Ill. App. 251. If the money has been tendered but not paid into court, the plaintiff is entitled to a judgment for the amount tendered. Supreme Tent Knights of Maccabees v. Hammers, 81 Ill. App. 560. We gave a proper form for judgment for plaintiff where a tender has been paid into court, and thereafter plaintiff recovers a verdict for a larger sum, in McConaughy v. Huston, 142 Ill. App. 230.

Here, $8.95, the court costs accrued up to February 5, 1916, and $465.05 upon the contract had been paid into court, and appellee either took these sums or was entitled to take them and was entitled to an order of court that they be paid over. The question to be submitted to the jury was whether any damages had been shown by appellant to prevent appellee recovering the full amount of the bill remaining unpaid, or more than the amount tendered. If the jury found for the full amount that plaintiff claimed, it could only have been for $201.47, to which interest could be added if a case for the payment of interest was made, and if he recovered any more than the sum tendered, he would be entitled to the costs which accrued after February 5, 1916. Here, though he pleaded his acceptance of the tender of part of the debt and costs to that date, and that he had taken the same out of court, he is given judgment and execution for the whole amount of the debt and for all the costs. It is impossible that this should be correct. On rehearing it is alleged that the tender is, in fact, still in the hands of the clerk of the court.

The recoupment sought by defendant was based upon his claim (1) that the agreement was to deliver the lumber by a specified time, and that that agreement was not kept; (2) that if the agreement was only to deliver the lumber within a reasonable time, that also was not done; (3) that defendant had a contract with a carpenter to erect a corncrib with this lumber, and that, because the lumber was not delivered when it should have been, his contractor went away for the, winter, and was not there to build the crib, and defendant was obliged to hire other carpenters and pay more to get his crib erected; and (4) that for want of a crib he was obliged to husk his corn late and to leave it on the ground all winter, and it became depreciated in value and sold for a less sum than it would have done if it had been properly covered and cared for. Plaintiff and defendant differed as to the terms of the agreement, but the jury were warranted in believing plaintiff’s testimony, and in finding that no time was fixed for the delivery of the lumber, and also in finding that it was delivered within a reasonable time in view of ‘the circumstances disclosed by the evidence. There is no proof that plaintiff knew that defendant had made a contract with a carpenter, and that it was an advantageous contract, and that the carpenter would abandon his contract if the lumber did not reach the ground promptly, and therefore no damage against plaintiff can be predicated upon the fact that defendant’s carpenter went away and abandoned his contract, and that it cost defendant more to build the crib than the contract price with the carpenter. The general principle that, to enable a vendee sued by a vendor to recoup damages for a specially advantageous use the vendee was to make of an article not delivered according to contract, he must show that the vendor knew of the intended use and its advantages to the vendee is variously illustrated and applied in Illinois Cent. R. Co. v. Cobb, Christy & Co., 64 Ill. 128; Carpenter v. First Nat. Bank of Joliet, 119 Ill. 352; and Rhea Thielens Implement Co. v. Racine Malleable & Wrought Iron Co., 89 Ill. App. 463. It is obvious that defendant could not leave his corn unhusked or husk it and pile it upon the ground uncovered and exposed to the elements all winter, and then charge plaintiff with its depreciation in value caused thereby. He should have promptly taken other steps to cover and protect his com, and there is no proof that he could not have done so. Whether any extra expense he would thus have incurred could be charged against plaintiff is a question not presented for our consideration.

There are two instructions which could be interpreted to say that appellant must prove all his damages for which he sought recoupment in order to be allowed for any of them, but upon a consideration of all the instructions we are of opinion that the jury would not so understand them.

The jury found for plaintiff the full amount of his bill, and thereby found- against defendant on all his items of recoupment. We would be satisfied with this judgment, but for the fact that it includes the sum tendered into court, and awards execution for the whole amount. This opinion will be lodged with the clerk and counsel for appellee notified thereof, and if within seven days he remits from the principal of his judgment $465.05, and also remits from said judgment for costs all costs accrued before February 5, 1916, the judgment will be affirmed in the sum of $201.47 and for the costs of said Circuit Court accruing on and since February 5, 1916, at the costs of appellee in this court. If such remittitur is not made the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.

Appellee having remitted $465.05, together with all costs accrued in said cause before February 5, 1916, the judgment is therefore affirmed in the sum of $201.47, and for costs of said Circuit Court accruing on and since February 5, 1916, at the costs of appellee in this court.

Affirmed.