Board of Supervisors of Fulton County v. Mississippi & Wabash Railroad

21 Ill. 338
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 21 Ill. 338 (Board of Supervisors of Fulton County v. Mississippi & Wabash Railroad) 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
Board of Supervisors of Fulton County v. Mississippi & Wabash Railroad, 21 Ill. 338 (Ill. 1859).

Opinion

Breese, J.

Very many important questions are presented by this record, and ably argued by counsel; but we do not deem it necessary to notice all of them, inasmuch as we are satisfied one of them alone is quite sufficient to determine the case in favor of the appellants. There are, however, some questions of practice determined against the appellants, which ought to be noticed for the government of future cases in chancery, and which, we think, were erroneously determined, and might, of themselves, be sufficient to reverse the decree.

It appears, by the record, that the answer of the individual defendants was sworn to. The answer of the corporation was not in the mode required by law in such cases. Formerly, it was uncertain whether defendants, as a body politic and corporate, were to answer in a suit against them in equity, under an oath; but now, it is well settled, that a corporation aggregate must make its answer, not as in common cases, under oath, but under the common seal. Angel & Ames on Corporations, 595. In the case of the Fulton Bank v. The New York and Sharon Canal Company, 1 Paige Ch. R. 311, Ch. Walworth said: “ Corporations answer under their seal, and without oath. They are, therefore, at liberty to deny everything contained in the bill, whether true or false. Neither can any discovery be compelled, except through the medium of their agents and officers, and by making them parties defendants. But no dissolution of an injunction can be obtained, upon the answer of a corporation, which is not duly verified by the oath of some officer of the corporation, or other person, who is acquainted with the facts contained therein.”

To the same point, is the case of Brumly v. The Westchester Manufacturing Company, 1 Johns. Ch. 366.

It is now the usual practice to make such of the individual members of a corporation parties, as are supposed to know something of the matters inquired after in the bill, and such was done in this case, two of the directors having been made defendants. They answered jointly with the corporation, under oath, and another defendant, Maple, separately, without oath; and on certain exceptions, filed and allowed, to the joint answer as well as to the separate answer of Maple, the respondents asked and obtained leave to amend their answer, which was done by erasures and interlineations of the original answer, and by attaching separate pieces of paper to it, to be read as parts of the answer; and then, by interlining and altering the original affidavit, the jurat was erased and a new one attached, and when so amended, the affidavit was re-sworn. On this appearing, complainants moved for a rule on the respondents, to strike out the interlineations and interpolations, and to restore the answer and affidavit to their original condition, which the court refused, and complainants excepted.

The practice in chancery, in this State, is understood to be substantially the same as in the English chancery, modified and changed, in some particulars, by our statute. In both, exceptions are treated and considered as allegations in writing, stating the particular points or matters with respect to which the complainant considers the answer scandalous or impertinent, or not sufficiently responsive to the matters charged in the bill. In his exceptions, he is to state particularly such parts of the bill as he conceives are not fully answered, and ask that the defendant may, in such respect, put in a full answer to the bill. Justice Story held, in Brooks v. Byam et al., 1 Story C. C. 296, that an exception to an answer for insufficiency, should state the charges in the bill, the interrogatory applicable thereto, to which the answer is responsive, and the terms of the answer verbatim, so that the court may see whether it is sufficient or not. 1 New-land Pr. 259. And it is a rule that such exceptions can only be sustained, when some material allegation, charge or interrogatory in the bill, is not fully answered. But it is said, exceptions will not lie to the answer of corporations, nor to an answer to which the oath of the defendant is waived, because such answers are not evidence for the party making them. 2 Daniel Ch. Pr. 879 ; 1 Barb. Ch. Pr. 177; Bartlett v. Gale, 4 Paige Ch. 504. So that in this case, the court below should not have regarded any exceptions taken to the answer of the corporation, purporting to have been made on oath, except as to the individual directors jointly sued with the corporation, nor to the unsworn answer of Maple. When exceptions are allowed, and the answer is adjudged insufficient, the defendant must file a further answer, within such time as the court shall direct, and on failure so to do, the bill may be taken for confessed ; and if such further answer is also adjudged insufficient, the defendant must then file a supplemental answer, and pay all costs attendant thereon ; if that is adjudged insufficient, the defendant may be proceeded against for a contempt. (Scates’ Comp. 141.) The further answer required, we understand to mean a formal answer,' specially directed to the matters excepted to, and to supply the deficiency of the first answer. We do not understand that the original answer is to be changed by erasures, interlineations, or in any other manner, except for scandalous or impertinent matter, or the jurat altered. They must remain as they were originally, as an unmutilated and unaltered file of the court; it must be preserved in its original style, so that it may be used as evidence, if necessary, in another case, or that perjury may be assigned upon it. We know the practice has obtained, on the circuits, to amend bills and answers, and declarations and pleadings, in this manner, and there is not so much objection to it, when such papers are not sworn to. It will be seen by the 22nd section, above cited, that on allowance of exceptions, it is not contemplated that the original answer shall be amended; the rule is, for “ a further answer,” which further answer must be wholly disconnected in fact, from the original answer, and must be in proper form, and on separate paper. 2 Daniel Ch. Pr. 912, (note.) The court even, cannot order an answer to be taken from the file, after exceptions to it, notwithstanding the answer be evasive. 1 Barb. Ch. Pr. 181. In mere matters of form, or mistakes of dates, etc., an answer can be taken from the file and amended, but it is not allowed to make.any material alteration in it, (2 Daniel Ch. Pr. 911, note 1, where all the authorities are referred to.) This objection was well taken, and should have been allowed.

It is further objected, that after the original answer was thus amended, by erasures, etc., it was not entitled properly, and the seal of the corporation was not attached.

Whereupon the complainants moved to strike the amended answer from the files, for the following reasons: First, that the paper is not properly entitled for an answer; Second, it does not show to what bill of complaint it was filed for an answer ; Third, the answer is not signed by the individual defendants, in their proper hands, respectively; Fourth, the company have not signed the same by its chief officer, nor has the seal of the corporation been affixed; Fifth, the original answer has been erased in part, interlineations made therein, and other alterations, to make an amended answer, without the consent of the court; and for other informalities not specified. The court denied the motion, and the complainants excepted.

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Bluebook (online)
21 Ill. 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-supervisors-of-fulton-county-v-mississippi-wabash-railroad-ill-1859.