Carey v. Funk

64 N.E.2d 180, 327 Ill. App. 274, 1945 Ill. App. LEXIS 413
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 18, 1945
DocketGen. No. 42,875
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 64 N.E.2d 180 (Carey v. Funk) 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
Carey v. Funk, 64 N.E.2d 180, 327 Ill. App. 274, 1945 Ill. App. LEXIS 413 (Ill. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scanlan

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiffs, Hattie Gabl and Charles J. Bussell, appeal from a decretal order entered by Judge Miner on June 15,1943, striking the third amended complaint from the files “on the ground that the matters and things therein set forth, and the issues tendered thereby, aré res judicata, as to both plaintiffs,” and ordering that the cause be dismissed and judgment entered in favor of defendants and against plaintiffs for costs. In the original complaint John P. Carey, Administrator of the Estate of Prank Gabl, Deceased, and Hattie Gabl were, the sole plaintiffs, and Anna Funk, Charles. J. Bussell, Elizabeth Hanck and Matthias Hanck were the defendants. Carey appeared as the attorney for the plaintiffs. The record is silent as to who were the plaintiffs in the amended complaint. In the second amended complaint Carey, as Administrator, Hattie Gabl and Charles J. Bussell were made parties plaintiff and Bussell was dropped as a defendant. Carey appeared as the attorney for all of the plaintiffs. In the third amended complaint, the one now before us, Carey, as Administrator, ceases to be a plaintiff, and Hattie Gabl and Charles J. Bussell are the .sole plaintiffs. Carey appears as their attorney.

On February 11, 1935, the estate of Karoline Gabl owned four notes, executed by Matthias W. Hanck and his wife, Elizabeth Hanck, two of the defendants in the instant case. Two of the notes, one for $2,000 and the other for $1,700, were secured by real estate mortgages, and they constituted the res of the present litigation and a prior one, hereafter referred to. The other two notes were not involved in the prior case nor in the instant proceeding. Two sons of Karoline Gabl were the sole executors of her will. One of them, Frank Gabl, since deceased, and his second wife, Hattie Gabl, became the central figures in a flood of litigation over the ownership of the two notes. In Gabl v. Gabl et al., Intervening Petitioners — Funk v. Gabl, 305 Ill. App. 620, we had before us an appeal from a decree entered in that proceeding in which the ownership of the two notes was Involved. Our opinion upon that appeal was abstracted in the report, and as the chancellor’s decision in the instant cause was based upon our judgment in the former case, we deem it necessary to quote verbatims, part of our opinion:

“The only question originally involved in this proceeding was whether Frank Gabl or his wife, Hattie Gabl, was the owner of two first mortgage notes for $1,700 and $2,000, respectively, and two separate trust deeds securing same, said securities having been received by Frank Gabl as part of his share of his mother’s estate. Hattie Gabl had not been living with her husband at the time he received these securities or for some time prior. thereto. After same were delivered to him she returned to live with him as his wife, but left him again some time thereafter. The then attorney for both Frank and Hattie Gabl [Charles J. Russell], who is the attorney for appellant, Hattie Gabl, on this appeal, instituted separate actions in her name on May 31,1935, to foreclose the aforesaid trust deeds. In each of the foreclosure suits Frank Gabl filed an intervening petition, which alleged inter alia that the note and trust deed involved therein belonged to him and were wrongfully withheld .from him by his wife. Hattie Gabl filed sworn answers to the intervening petitions, in which she alleged substantially that she acquired the securities involved as the result of a contract entered into between herself and her husband. Both cases were referred to a master on the issues formed by the intervening petitions and the answers thereto. On March 27, 1937, by leave of court, Hattie Gabl filed a verified amendment to her answer theretofore filed in each of the foreclosure proceedings, in which amendment without deleting or withdrawing any of the allegations of her original answer she averred that the notes and trust deeds were delivered to her as a gift by her husband. Thus her sworn answers as amended presented two inconsistent (not alternative) versions of the manner in which she acquired title to the notes and trust deeds from her husband. Thereafter Frank Gabl by a written assignment sold, transferred and assigned to his sister, Anna Funic, ‘his title, right and interest’ in all of his personal property, including and specifying the aforesaid notes and trust deeds and two additional notes. G-abl died July 4, 1937, and, his death having been suggested, Anna Funk under her assignment was substituted as intervening petitioner in his place and stead. After a full hearing the master filed his report finding that the assignment of Anna Funk was valid and further finding the- issues in favor of the intervening petitioner. A decree was entered in accordance with the findings and recommendations of the master. Hattie Gabl appeals from this decree, assigning as error that said decree is contrary to the law and the evidence.” The opinion then takes up the motion of Anna Funk, an appellee, “ ‘to affirm the decree of the court below’ because of the failure of appellant to furnish an abstract of the record ‘ sufficient to show the errors relied upon by said appellant, as required by the rules in that behalf, ’ ’ ’ which motion we had reserved until the hearing. After a consideration of the abstract filed by the appellant, we decided that the motion to affirm the decree had to be allowed, and the decree was affirmed. In our opinion we stated that “We have, however, notwithstanding that appellant’s original and reply briefs are well nigh unintelligible, patiently and carefully read them with as much understanding as they would afford and are of opinion that there is no substantial error in the decree.” The plaintiffs in' the instant proceeding contend that we' should treat that statement as mere dictum; that we should hold that our judgment was based upon a technical ruling and that we did not pass upon the merits of the case, and, therefore, our judgment cannot be made the basis for the defense of res judicata that is interposed by defendants. There is, of course, no merit in this contention. When the Supreme court denied an appeal in that case (306 Ill. App. xxiii) the judgment of the Circuit court of Cook county became final. We may add that the foregoing italicized part of our opinion was our considered judgment in the case. After an examination of the instant record and the abstract filed by appellants, we are satisfied that we would be justified in affirming the decretal order because of the failure of plaintiffs to comply with rule 6 of the Rules of Practice of this court. Moreover, what we stated in our opinion in the former case as to the nature of the appellants’ original and reply briefs applies with equal force to appellants’ original and reply briefs filed in the instant appeal.

After the Supreme court denied leave to appeal in the former proceeding a mandate issued from this court and was filed in the Circuit court on February 10, 1941, and on the same date the Circuit court entered an order ordering Hattie Gabl to execute an assignment of the judgment she had taken in the Municipal Court of Chicago on February 21, 1935, on the $1,700 judgment note, and on her failure to do so the master should execute such assignment. On February 19,1941, Charles J. Russell, in his own name, filed a petition in the Circuit court moving that the order of February 10 be modified or vacated. That petition was denied, and on February 24, 1941, Hattie Gabl appeared in this court and asked us to expunge the order entered by the Circuit court on February 10,1941. We refused, of course, to enter such an order.

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Bluebook (online)
64 N.E.2d 180, 327 Ill. App. 274, 1945 Ill. App. LEXIS 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carey-v-funk-illappct-1945.