Beveridge v. Hewitt

8 Ill. App. 467, 1881 Ill. App. LEXIS 45
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 4, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 8 Ill. App. 467 (Beveridge v. Hewitt) 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
Beveridge v. Hewitt, 8 Ill. App. 467, 1881 Ill. App. LEXIS 45 (Ill. Ct. App. 1881).

Opinion

Bailey, J.

The jurisdiction of a court of chancery, where a proper case for its exercise is made out, to set aside a judgment at law and award a new trial, though once a matter of serious controversy, is now7 conceded and fully established. But before such jurisdiction should be exercised, it should be made to appear that the complainant has a good and meritorious defense, and that, without fault or negligence on his part, he has been prevented from availing himself of it by accident, mistake or fraud. In Walker v. Kretsinger, 48 Ill. 502, the court say : “ The doctrine is well settled in equity, that when a party has a complete and adequate remedy at law, and tails from any cause to rely upon it in that forum, he will not be permitted to assert it in equity unless he was prevented by accident, or such circumstances as he was unable to control. Any laches on his part in failing to assert his rights in a court of law when called upon to do so, will prevent him from obtaining relief in equity. If it appears that the judgment complained of is unjust, and that the party in good faith has used or endeavored to employ the means given him by the law to assert his rights, and has been active and vigilant in his efforts to make his defense, and is still prevented from presenting a meritorious defense, equity will grant a new trial at law.” In Marine Ins. Co. v. Hodgson, 7 Cranch, 332, Chief Justice Marshall states the rule as follows : “ It may safely be said, that a fact which clearly proves it to be against conscience to execute a judgment, and of which the injured party could not have availed himself in a court of law, or of which he might have availed himself at law, but was prevented by fraud or accident, unmixed with any fault or negligence in himself or his agents, will justify an application to a court of chancery.”

Were the complainants in this case chargeable with negligence in failing to present their defense in the county court? The answer to this question must depend in a great measure u] on the force and effect to be given to the rules of practice of that court, and the degree of reliance the complainants were warranted in placing upon said rules in preparing and presenting their defense.

It is a well established principle that all courts of record possess an inherent power to adopt and establish rules of practice, subject only to the limitation that such rules are not unreasonable or contrary to the constitution or statutes; and ■when established such rules have the force of law and are obligatory upon the court itself as well as upon the parties to causes pending before it. While the court may at any time modify or rescind its rules, yet until it does so it should administer them according to their terms, and it can have no discretion to apply them or not, according to its convenience, unless such discretion is reserved in the rules themselves.

The terms of.the County Court of Cook county commence on the second Monday of each month in the year, and that court in December, 1877, for the purpose of providing for the convenient and orderly disposition of causes pending before it, adopted and entered upon its records rules requiring the preparation of a trial calendar for each term, such calendar to be made up on or before the Tuesday next preceding the first day of the term, and to be composed of causes in which at least one of the parties should file with the clerk a written request to place the cause on the calendar, and it was provided that causes should stand for trial in the order in which they should appear on such calendar.

So long as these rules remained in force they were the law of the court. It was not within the province of the court to enforce or dispense with them as convenience might dictate,- and parties were warranted in relying upon their enforcement and governing their conduct accordingly. Were it otherwise, such rules, instead of simplifying aud facilitating the business of the court, would become mere snares and traps for the feet of litigants. In this case, when the complainants’ attorney ascertained that no trial calendar had been prepared for the January term on which this case appeared, but that the court instead of having such calendar prepared was engaged to a late period in the term in trying another class of causes, he had a right to assume that this suit was not in a situation in which it was liable to be called for trial before another term. Under these circumstances he was not called upon to watch the call of the calendar, and is not chargeable with negligence for failing so to do. Nor do we see that the situation of the case is at all changed by the fact that the “court had already disregarded its rules to the extent of continuing to call from the September calendar until the close of the October term. Parties were not bound to assume that because the court had violated its rules to that extent, it would continue to do so still further, or to anticipate that near the close of the January term it would, notwithstanding its rules, resume the call of a calendar which it had abandoned more than two terms before.

In our opinion, then, the complainants were not chargeable with laches in failing to present the.ir defense at the trial in the county court, but that such failure was due to circumstances for which they were not responsible, and over which they had no control; thus bringing the case, so far as the question of laches is concerned, within the terms of the rule as above stated. It only remains to be seen whether the facts set up by the complainants in their bill and proved at the hearing, constitute a good defense upon the merits, so as to make it unjust and inequitable to execute the judgment.

The defenses are, firs that the alleged indebtedness for which the judgment was recovered, grew out of and was the result of certain unlawful and gambling transactions carried on by Hewitt, Bliss & Co. on the Chicago Board of Trade, as the agents and brokers of McCurdy; and, second, that as to all or the greater part of said indebtedness Beveridge was not jointly liable with McCurdy, but was an entire stranger to the transactions out of which the indebtedness arose. Either of these defenses, if made out, would be a good and meritorious defense, and would entitle the complainants to the relief prayed for in the bill. Let us consider the evidence bearing upon each in its order.

It is undisputed that said indebtedness was for the balance of an account in favor of Hewitt, Bliss & Co., growing out of a series of transactions on the Board of Trade, in which they acted as the agents and brokers of McCurdy or McCurdy & Beveridge, said account, with the exception of credits for certain moneys furnished Hewitt, Bliss & Co. for margins, being made up exclusively of credits and charges for differences arising out of the settlement of their various deals, and their commissions for conducting the business.

The evidence shows that Hewitt, Bliss & Co. commenced dealing for McCurdy about the 1st of January, 1879, and that between that date and sometime in April following, they took ■ and closed out for him forty-four different deals. These deals were all inform contracts for the purchase or sale of wheat, pork, corn or lard, for future delivery, the period of delivery in each case being the first or second month subsequent to that in which the contract was made.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Ill. App. 467, 1881 Ill. App. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beveridge-v-hewitt-illappct-1881.