Buck v. Buck

60 Ill. 105
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 60 Ill. 105 (Buck v. Buck) 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
Buck v. Buck, 60 Ill. 105 (Ill. 1871).

Opinion

Mr. Justice SheldoN

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a proceeding against the appellant, by attachment for contempt, in not complying with a decree of the circuit court of Kane county, in a suit for a divorce, ordering him to support and educate an adopted child of the parties.

The first point made is, that the court erred in ordering the attachment, for the reason that there was no jurisdiction of the person of the defendant in the suit wherein the decree was rendered, as there was no sufficient service of the summons.

The return of service was, by leüving a copy of the summons with the defendant. %

The service required by the statute, is by delivering a copy to the defendant. It is supposed, that here was an essential difference. We fail to perceive it. We regard the two forms of expression as equivalent, and that the return shows the required service by delivering a copy of the summons to the defendant.

In the court below, interrogatories had been filed, to which defendant had filed his answer. The court ruled, that notwithstanding the answer, the defendant must purge himself of the contempt in open court, whereupon the defendant was sworn, and testified.

This ruling of the court is assigned as error:

A difference obtains between the practice, in this respect, in courts of law and in courts of equity. In the former, if the defendant clears himself by his answer, he will be discharged, and the complaint totally dismissed; whereas, in the courts of equity, after the party has answered the interrogatories, his answer may be contradicted and disproved by the adverse party. The attachment for this species of contempt, the disobedience of an order to pay money, is to be looked upon rather as a civil execution for the benefit of the injured party, though carried on in the shape of a criminal process for a contempt of the authority of the court. 4 Black. Com. 288; Crook v. The People, 16 Ill. 535.

It is a singular mode of trial, admitted in this particular instance of contempt, where ordinary rules governing criminal trials do not apply; and we see no sufficient objection in this case to the adverse party having resort to the testimony of the defendant, as might be done in a civil case. No replication to the answer was necessary, as claimed. The practice of the courts of chancery recognizes no such thing as a replication to an answer to interrogatories filed in such a proceeding as this.

We hold there was no error in this ruling of the court.

It is objected, that the sum of $251, which the court ordered the defendant to pay, as money which had been expended in the support and education of the child, was exorbitant and unjust, and especially so the two items of $81.50 and $75, for tuition at a boarding school at Rockford. It is said, the child was within the reach of free schools in Aurora, and no allowance in such case should be made for those items, under the decision in Plaster v. Plaster, 47 Ill. 290. There is an absence of proof in the record, that the child was within reach of any free school.

It appears, that she had previously been placed at this boarding school by the defendant himself, about September 1, 1866 ; that he paid for her support and education there, until July 1, 1867, and the items in question were for tuition there, from that time to February, 1868; that when the child returned to the school in the fall of 1867, after a vacation, defendant informed the principal of the school he would not pay the child's bills. No sufficient reason appears for this step. Defendant never expressed any willingness, or took any steps, to provide for the child's education elsewhere; that her education at this school was suitable and proper, in view of her own needs, and the circumstances of the defendant, is evidenced by his own act in placing her there to be educated. The education was needful for the child, and defendant was required, by the decree in the divorce suit, to furnish it to her. In his neglect to do so, he was rightly adjudged to pay the expenditures incurred therefor, which must be held, in his own estimation, to have been necessary and proper. The same neglect appears, to furnish support for the child.

After an examination of the answer of the defendant, and the proofs in the case, we are satisfied with the finding of the court as to the sum due.

The order of the court below is affirmed.

Decree affirmed.

Justices 'Walker and ThorNTON dissent.

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Bluebook (online)
60 Ill. 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buck-v-buck-ill-1871.