Beatty v. Monahan

240 Ill. App. 240, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 236
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 5, 1926
DocketGen. No. 7,502
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 240 Ill. App. 240 (Beatty v. Monahan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beatty v. Monahan, 240 Ill. App. 240, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 236 (Ill. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Jones

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellees, copartners, doing business under the firm name of I. N. R. Beatty Lumber Company, began an action of assumpsit in the circuit court of "Will county against Edward Monahan and the appellant, James P. Monahan, residents of Cook county and copartners doing business under the firm name of Monahan Bros. Appellant was served with process in Will county; no service was had on Edward Monahan. Various pleas hereinafter mentioned were filed by appellant, James P. Monahan. A trial by jury was had and a directed . verdict against appellant for $244.49 was returned. Judgment was entered upon such verdict and the cause is brought to this court on appeal.

The suit was instituted by praecipe. Before the declaration was filed appellant filed two sworn pleas chailonging the jurisdiction of the. court. The first plea averred that both defendants were and are residents of Cook county, and that Edward Monahan was not found or served with process in Will county or in any other county. A demurrer to this plea was properly sustained under Sherburne v. Hyde, 185 Ill. 580. The second plea averred that appellant was a nonresident of Will county; that Edward Monahan was not found in Will county and that the alleged service of process upon appellant was had upon him while he was in attendance upon the trial of a chancery cause then being heard in the circuit court of Will county in which he was a defendant, and regularly served with process therein; that while he was so in attendance upon said trial in the court room in Will county and during the progress of said trial, and while the judge of said court was upon the bench hearing said chancery cause, a deputy sheriff of Will county served the summons in this case upon him and that no' other writ of summons in this cause has even been served upon him. The plea further averred that appellant was in said county of Will for no other purpose than to attend upon the trial of said chancery cause and had no occasion or reason to be there other than as a party defendant to said cause. A demurrer to this plea was also sustained by the court. Appellant has assigned error as to the rulings of the court upon the demurrers as well as upon certain other matters.

Preliminary to a discussion of the second plea, we are required to dispose of a contention made by appellees, in which they say that appellant waived the said plea by filing a general entry of appearance prior to the day when the demurrer was sustained. This contention grows out of an error of the clerk of the circuit court in placing the file mark on the entry of appearance. The clerk erroneously dated the filing November 1,1920, instead of the day the entry was actually filed, to wit, December 1, 1920. The demurrers were sustained November 30,1920. Since the abstract and briefs in this case were filed in this court, a diminution of record was suggested and the above-mentioned error has been corrected in the record. Consequently there is no longer any ground left to justify a contention of waiver.

Because of our views concerning the sufficiency of the second plea it is unnecessary for us to discuss any of the other errors assigned. The question raised by this plea is simply this: Is a nonresident suitor exempt from service of civil process while in attendance upon a trial of his cause in the county where such suit is pending and when he is there only for the purposes of his suit ? While this question has been often decided by the federal courts and also by the courts of last resort of nearly every state in the union, the Supreme Court of Illinois, in our opinion, has never been called upon to pass directly upon it. Several cases have been before that court which involved related matters but not the precise question, and we will briefly refer to them. But the Appellate Court of the Third District, in Gregg v. Sumner, 21 Ill. App. 110, has passed upon that question and held that it is an established and well-settled principle that nonresident suitors are privileged from service of legal process in civil actions while attending upon the trial of a cause in a court. In none of the cases before the Supreme Court did the plea aver that the defendant claimed an exemption because he was in attendance upon a court in a civil cause as a suitor; but the averments showed that the defendant was either (1) not before a judicial tribunal but before a commissioner or notary public taking depositions and under circumstances which did not compel his attendance, or (2) voluntarily in said county and not as a suitor, or (3) held upon a criminal process.

Thus in Greer v. Young, 120 Ill. 184, the court held that a citizen of Missouri who came into this State for the purpose of taking depositions in Chicago to be used in a suit in Missouri was not exempt from the service of civil process. The opinion contains some language intended to distinguish between cases where the suitor was served by summons and cases where he was placed under civil arrest. Yet the opinion of the court is not grounded upon any such distinction but upon the fact that the defendant had voluntarily appeared before a commissioner to take depositions and was not in attendance as a party or witness in any matter pending before a court or before any lawful tribunal having jurisdiction of the cause. It is clear that a commissioner in Chicago cannot compel one residing- in Missouri to appear before him, and the court held that the whole proceedings before the notary were purely ministerial and therefore do not fall within the category of any of the tribunals contemplated by the rule relating to exemptions from civil process. The decision also rested on the holding of the court that the question was improperly raised upon affidavit instead of by a plea in abatement.

In Cassem v. Galvin, 158 Ill. 30, the defendant had gone to another county voluntarily to take depositions before a notary public and was not before a court.

In McNab v. Bennett, 66 Ill. 158, it is said that if a man voluntarily leaves his residence or goes into another county or, if seized, when properly charged with crime and taken into another county he would not be exempt from the service of civil process. But if his arrest was caused by false and fraudulent pretense or by abduction for the sole purpose of obtaining service in a civil proceeding, it would be a base and utter perversion of the object of the law to permit him to be served with civil process while there, and it was declared that if such a thing were allowed, the statute would be no protection against the machinations of bad men who are willing to prostitute their oaths for selfish purposes and that under such a state of facts the defendant was not found in the county but was entrapped there.

And again in Willard v. Zehr, 215 Ill. 148, a resident of Jasper county, Missouri, was brought into Tazewell county, Illinois, under arrest on a criminal charge. While in the latter county he was served with civil process. A plea in abatement was filed and the court in substance held that if the plea had set up facts showing that the indictment was wrongfully, fraudulently and deceitfully procured, it would have been a good plea, but that the plea was defective because it contained inferences and conclusions of the pleader and not the facts upon which such conclusions were based.

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Bluebook (online)
240 Ill. App. 240, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beatty-v-monahan-illappct-1926.