Barnes v. Barber

6 Ill. 401
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 Ill. 401 (Barnes v. Barber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnes v. Barber, 6 Ill. 401 (Ill. 1844).

Opinions

The Opinion of the Court was delivered by

Thomas, J.

This was an action of trover and conversion commenced by the appellant against the appellees, and Castle Churchill, for four oxen.

The defendant Churchill was not found. The pleas interposed by the other defendants, were

1. The general issue, by all of said defendants, which was joined by the plaintiff.

2. By the defendants Levi C., and Clark L. Barber, justification under a judgment rendered and execution thereon issued by the said Levi C. Barber, as a justice of the peace, and a levy and sale of the property in question, thereon by the said Clark L. Barber, as a constable.

3. By the defendant Clark L. Barber in justification, that an execution issued by Levi C. Barber as a justice of the peace of the said county of De Kalb, “whereby the people of the State of Illinois commanded any constable of the said county, of the goods and chattels of Eli Barnes, of said county, to make the sum of if 57-72, which Castle Churchill, who sues as well for himself, as for the county of De Kalb, lately recovered against the said Eli Barnes, in a certain plea against the said Eli Barnes,” &c., and a levy upon and sale of the said oxen, by him the said Clark L. Barber, as constable of the said county by virtue of the said execution, &c.

The plaintiff demurred generally to the second and third pleas aforesaid, and they having been held good by the Court, withdrew his demurrer to the said second plea, by leave of the Court, and thereto replied de injuria, &c., and standing by his demurrer to the said third plea, the said demurrer was overruled, and judgment thereon rendered against the plaintiff for costs, and discharging the said defendant, Clark L. Barber.

The cause was then submitted to the Court for the trial of the issues formed upon the first plea and the replication to the second plea, without the intervention of a jury.

The plaintiff having closed the testimony on his part, the Court on the request of the defendant, Henry Barber, passed upon the issue joined as to him, and upon the ground that the evidence, although tending to prove his guilt, was wholly insufficient to warrant his conviction, found him not guilty and discharged him.

The defendant Levi C. Barber, was then permitted, against the plaintiff’s objections, to call the aforesaid Clark L. Barber, and examine him as a witness on the further trial of the cause, whereupon the plaintiff suffered a voluntary nonsuit, on which a judgment was rendered, discharging the defendant, Levi C. Barber.

The plaintiff, prosecuting his appeal, assigns for error the judgment of the Circuit Court, overruling the demurrer to the third plea, and discharging the defendant, Henry Barber, and the order of said Court permitting the defendant, Clark L. Barber, to testify as a witness, and the questions as to the regularity of discharging the said defendant, Henry Barber, and as to the competency of the said Clark L. Barber as a witness, having been preserved by bills of exceptions taken during the progress of the trial.

Before proceeding to the consideration of the assignment of errors, it becomes necessary to dispose of a preliminary question raised by the appellees. They insist that the appellant is precluded by reason of his having suffered a voluntary non-suit in the Circuit Court from asking a reversal of the judgment of that Court, by the adjudication of this. Their general proposition, that a plaintiff may not prosecute his appeal or writ of error, for the reversal of judgment of voluntary non-suit, is undeniably true. If the plaintiff considers the adjudication of the Circuit Court, on questions arising during the progress of the trial, erroneous, he may, by suffering a judgment in bar to go against him, entitle himself to a revision of such adjudications, on appeal or error, and if found erroneous, to their reversal; but if he prefer to take a nonsuit, his only remedy is found in the Court in which the action was commenced, by motion to set aside such nonsuit, when entered with leave to make such motion, or in the institution of proceedings de novo, in that or some other Court having original jurisdiction of the subject matter; and not in a resort to an appellate Court. The judgment in such case is the consequence of his own volition, and consequently he cannot allege that there was error in its rendition by the Court. Van Wormer v. City of Albany, 15 Wend. 263; Ibid. 18 do. 172, 173. But the operation of this principle is limited by the effect of the judgment of nonsuit in any case, and consequently such judgment as to one of several defendants, sued jointly in an action ex delicto, will not, although itself irreversible, preclude the plaintiff from prosecuting his appeal, or writ of error for the reversal of the judgment of the Court discharging any one or more of the other defendants in such suit, either on the pleadings or evidence. The judgment of nonsuit in such case is but a nolle prosequi as to one of several defendants, and whether entered before or after the discharge of the defendants not embraced within its operation, the judgment disposing of the case as to them is in no wise affected by it. In this view of the case, the record of the proceedings of the Circuit Court are closed from the view of this Court, only so far as they relate to Levi C. Barber, as to whom alone the judgment of nonsuit was rendered. The judgments of the Court in favor of the other defendants Henry, and Clark L. Barber, were in bar and as against the plaintiff in invitum, and are therefore properly inquirable into here.

I come, therefore, to consider the errors alleged to exist in those judgments, and first, as to the sufficiency of the third plea, as interposed by the defendant, Clark L. Barber, questioned by the first error assigned.

The question involved in this inquiry is, as to what an officer should show to justify himself in the execution of process issued by a Court of limited jurisdiction. This has long been a vexed question, although it has always been held that the process of a Court of general jurisdiction, fair upon its face, would protect the officer executing it. Many cases may be found, in which it is stated generally, that where an inferior Court exceeds its jurisdiction, its proceedings are entirely void, and afford no protection either to the Court, the party, or the officer executing its process. But Mr. Justice Marcy, in pronouncing the opinion of the Supreme Court of New York, in the case of Savacool v. Boughton, 5 Wend. 170, reviews all of those various adjudications and dicta on the subject in both England and the United States, and shows very clearly that that principle, although true in its applieacation to the Court and party, is not, and of right, should not be as against the officer executing the process. That case settles the doctrine, that a ministerial officer is protected in the execution of the process of a Court of limited jurisdiction, where it shows upon its face that the Court had jurisdiction of the subject matter, and nothing appears to apprise him that the Court had not also jurisdiction of the person of the defendant. That principle has since been uniformly recognized by the Courts of that State, and furnishes, I think, the only reasonable and safe rule on the subject. It is the policy of the law as well to encourage as to protect its officers, in the faithful and efficient discharge of their official duties.

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Related

In re Anderson
94 F. 487 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western North Carolina, 1899)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ill. 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnes-v-barber-ill-1844.