
    Casper v. Mulone-Minneci Fruit Co., Appellants.
    
      Judgments — Foreign judgments — Counter-claim.
    On a rule for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense, to a suit on an exemplification of the record of a suit brought in Illinois, the defense set up was a counter-claim. It also appeared that .the- subject of the counter-claim had been specifically pleaded in the action in Illinois and that no reason had been indicated why the. remainder of it could not with equal propriety have been set up there as a bar or counter-claim. The defense made in Illinois, or which might have been made “in Illinois, as part of the same transaction, cannot be made in Pennsylvania after it had been adjudicated in Illinois. The affidavit of defense was, therefore, insufficient.
    Argued April 26, 1926.
    Appeal No. 159, April T., by defendants, from judgment of C. P. Allegheny County, July T., 1924, No. 407, in the case of G. A. Casper v. Frank Mulone and John Minneci, doing business as'Mulone-Minneci Fruit.Company.
    Before Porter, P. J., Henderson, Trexler, Keller, Linn, Gawthrop and Cunningham, JJ.
    Affirmed.
    
      Assumpsit for commissions. Before Rowand, J.
    The facts are stated in the opinion of the Superior Court.
    Rule for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense.
    The court made absolute the rule. Defendants appealed.
    
      Error assigned, among others, was the decree of the court.
    
      C. F. Patterson, and with him John M. Redden, of Redden & Weddell, for appellants.
    
      A. B. Churchill, and with him R. T. M. McCready, for appellee.
    July 8, 1926:
   Opinion by

Linn, J.,

This ¡appeal is from judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense in a suit on an exemplification of the record of a judgment recovered by the plaintiff in a state court in Illinois. The learned counsel for appellant, who was not in the case until after the appeal to this court was taken, very properly conceded at the oral argument (German Trust Co. v. Plotke, 274 Pa. 483) that the constitutional requirement of full faith and credit eliminated from our consideration the question of jurisdiction of the Illinois court sought to be raised in the affidavit, and limited the point for consideration here to whether an alleged set-off and counter-claim could be made in the court below. Without considering appellee’s criticism that the counter-claim is not well pleaded, we are of opinion that its subject matter was such an integral part of the transaction which was the basis of the suit in Illinois, that it must have been set up there to be available, and that in fact, it was there pleaded.

The exemplification of the Illinois judgment shows that plaintiff averred that he had been employed by defendants to obtain contracts on tbeir behalf for the purchase of peaches, for which services (with inspection, etc.) defendants' had agreed to pay him 15c a bushel; that after contracts for 14,000 bushels had been obtained,, defendants had defaulted and that he was entitled' to his compensation earned. To that claim, defendants pleaded that they had engaged plaintiff to make contracts on their behalf for the purchase of peaches and that plaintiff had made such contracts and had paid on account thereof $3,450, but that plaintiff did not have all the peaches packed and loaded so that they could, be shipped to defendants and that defendants never received them, by which breach of plaintiff’s contract with them they had sustained losses to be taken account of in that suit.

Defendants appeared by counsel who participated in the trial; plaintiff obtained judgment for $1,657.50.

In the present suit the counter-claim proposed to be made, avers that plaintiff owes defendants $2,766 on the same transaction, and’, recites seven transactions in detail, all of which had been itemized in the plea in the Illinois suit as contracts obtained by plaintiff and for which a payment of $3,450 was made. Appellants aver that plaintiff accepted delivery on his own account of 1,383 bushels of peaches so purchased for. defendants and thereby converted them to his own use, and also that the growers were unable to deliver the balance contracted for of the quality contemplated by the parties and that defendants for that reason refused to accept them. It is obvious therefore ’that the subject of the counter-claim had been in these particulars specifically pleaded in the action in Illinois, and no reason has been indicated to us why the remainder of them could not with eqjual propriety have been set up there as a bar or counterclaim. The defense made in Illinois, or that might have been made in Illinois as part of the same transaction, can of course not be made here after it has been adjudicated there: German Trust Co. v. Plotke supra; Hunt v. Snyder, 261 Pa. 257, 259.

Judgment affirmed.  