This was an action of assumpsit brought by defendants in error against plaintiffs in error in the County Court of Morgan county on the following promissory note:
“886.25. Waverly, III., January 1st, 1878.
“ One day after date we or either of us promise to pay Crain & Manson or order eight hundred and eighty-six dollars and twenty-five cents, for value received, to bear ten per cent, interest from date until paid. If the interest is not annually paid, to become as principal and bear same rate of interest.
“ negotiable and payable without defalcation or discount.
“[Signed.] ' J. E. Barrett,
“Hutchinson Bros. & Co.”
To the declaration defendants, John M. Hutchinson and Jesse S. Allen, filed a plea of non-assumpsit sworn to.
A judgment was rendered against all the defendants below, from which they prosecute a writ of error to this court, and errors are assigned upon the instructions given and refused, and in overruling a motion for a new trial.
It is conceded that the firm of Hutchinson Bros. & Co. were securities on this note only, and that no part of the consideration of the same was received by them. It further appears by the evidence in the case, that the firm name to the note was signed by Daniel B. Hutchinson, in the absence of Allen, who testifies that he had no knowledge of the note until sometime after it was given, and that he never authorized the firm name to be signed to it.
Plaintiffs below sought to show by declarations and conversations of Allen, made after the execution of the note, that he had assented to its execution or ratified it afterwards. The evidence upon this subject w^as rather vague and unsatisfactory, and was contradicted by Allen. At the instance of defendants in error the court gave, among .others, the following instruction:
*233d. “ That upon the question of the ratification of the signature of the firm name of Hutchinson, Bro. & Cos. to the note •in suit in this case, the jury are instructed that they should consider all the facts and circumstances appearing in the evidence in this cáse, and if they find from the evidence that after the signature of said firm name to said note, that the defendant Allen admitted his liability thereon, and said in substance to the witnesses that he would have to pay said note, and that ‘ it would break him up,’ and made attempts to get Barrett to indemnify him for being such security, then these facts, if proven, should be considered by the' jury in determining the question of such ratification. And if the jury, from all the evidence in the case, believe that said Allen, after the signa-, ture of said firm name to said note, with a knowledge of the facts in the case, did ratify the same, their verdict should be for the plaintiffs as to said Allen.”
This instruction should not have been given, for two reasons. In the first place it misrecites the evidence; Crain does not say that Allen said “he would have the note to pay.” His statement in his evidence is that Allen said “ he’d be broke np if he had it to pay.”
Barrett says in his examination in chief: “Allen was security for me- on some other paper * * * In February, I proposed to Allen to go to Missouri and buy a mill, and he got mad and said, by about the time he’d paid off these notes he’d be ruined. * * * I understood him to mean this note sued on as well as the others on which- he was security. On his cross-examination he says in reference to the same conversation. I said to Allen, suppose you sell out here, and lets go to Missouri in the milling business. He just remarked that I had him in such a fix that he had nothing to sellout; that John M. and David Hutchinson had nothing, to pay with, and he would have to pay it. Following this he says that Allen said, if he had the Moffit note and also this one to pay, it would take all he had.
Take all these statements together, and they do not justify the recital in the instruction, made still more emphatic by italicizing the same. Again,-when the evidence is slight or *24is highly contradictory, it is unfair to select isolated portions of the evidence and give them prominence by calling the attention of the jury especially to them. Frame v. Badger, 79 Ill. 441.
The jury may well infer, from such prominence given to particular portions of the evidence, that they strike the mind of the Court as controlling features in the case. If any portion of the evidence bearing upon a particular point in issue is thus made prominent, it would seem but fair that all the evidence touching the same matter on both sides should be stated. Such a course would be less likely to work injury to either party. The practice of reciting the evidence in instructions does not seem to meet with the favor of the Supreme Court of this State. In the case of Frame v. Badger, supra, it is said: The Court should always instruct that if the facts averre'd in the issue are proven, reciting them, then they should find for the party in whose favor they shall find the facts; or, if either party holding an affirmation fail to prove the affirmative facts, the jury may be told that if they so find they should find against him.
We think in this case the giving the instruction complained of was well calculated to influence the jury to the prejudice of plaintiff in error, Allen, and for that reason, that the judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.