Consolidated Coal Co. v. Oeltjen

91 Ill. App. 123, 1900 Ill. App. LEXIS 63
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 11, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 91 Ill. App. 123 (Consolidated Coal Co. v. Oeltjen) 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
Consolidated Coal Co. v. Oeltjen, 91 Ill. App. 123, 1900 Ill. App. LEXIS 63 (Ill. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Burroughs

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action on the case, brought at first by Frederick Bolliger against appellant in the Circuit Court of Macoupin County, where on February 10, 1898, it was dismissed under the authority contained in a power of attorney executed .by Bolliger on December 18, 1897, but was afterward, on February 6, 1900, reinstated by a motion presented to that court by appellee, as the conservator of Bolliger, he having been appointed such conservator by the County Court of that county on April 3, 1899. After the case was reinstated, the declaration was amended by substituting appellee (as such conservator) as plaintiff instead of Bolliger.

The declaration as originally drawn, and as amended, charged that Bolliger received personal injuries while he was in the service of appellant by reason of the negligence of appellant, and claimed damages therefor.

After the case was reinstated and the declaration amended to show substitution of appellee as plaintiff, appellant pleaded first, a subsequent suit pending in the same court between the same parties, and for the same cause of action in abatement of the writ, but that plea being demurred to and demurrer sustained, appellant pleaded not guilty in bar of the action.

The case ivas then tried by jury and resulted in a verdict and judgment against appellant for $5,000, to reverse which appellant prosecutes this appeal and urges as grounds therefor (1) that the court improperly heard appellee’s motion to vacate the judgment without a jury; (2) the court improperly allowed the motion upon improper and insufficient evidence; (3) the court admitted improper evidence before the jury; (4) the court gave an improper instruction; and (5) that the court improperly overruled appellant’s motion for a new trial as the verdict was excessive.

At the same term of the Circuit Court at which this case was pending, there was also pending against appellant, similar cases by Seniger, Henry, Bangert, Bause, Ficker and De Vies, each of whom therein respectively claimed to have been personally injured by the same negligence of appellant that caused Bolliger’s injuries. To economize time, and save expenses, the parties in the seven cases stipulated in writing that the Seniger case should be tried first, and if a verdict was returned for him, the remaining six cases should each be then tried with respect to the amount of damages alone, and verdicts returned in each, similar to the one in the Seniger case, with the amount of damages the jury should find for each of the other plaintiffs respectively, but if a verdict be returned for the defendant in the Seniger case, then a verdict for the defendant should be entered in each of the other cases; and that each of the cases not tried should abide the final result of the Seniger case when tried.

The Seniger case was tried and resulted in a verdict and judgment against appellant for $3,000, which was afterward affirmed in the Appellate and Supreme Courts. 179 Ill. 370, and 79 Ill. App. 456.

On December 18, 1897, after the Seniger case had been tried and a verdict returned therein, Bolliger executed the following power of attorney:

“ I do hereby constitute and appoint Frank W. Burton my attorney in fact to dismiss a certain action pending in the Circuit Court of Macoupin County, Illinois, wherein I am plaintiff and the Consolidated Coal Company of St. Louis is defendant. I have received from said company full satisfaction of the damages by me claimed in said action, and hereby ratify and confirm any and every action my said attorney may do hereunder.
Dated this 18th day of December, A. D. 1897.
Frederick Bolliger.
[Seal.]” J
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Which was afterward filed in the Bolliger case, and the court, on February 10, 1898, dismissed his case “ as per power of attorney on file.”

On April 3, 1898, appellee was appointed by the County Court of Macoupin County, conservator of Bolliger; and on January 24,1900, he, as such conservator, filed in the Circuit Court of that county, a motion in writing, verified by his affidavit, asking the court to set aside and vacate its order dismissing Bolliger’s case, and to enter an order to reinstate it, on the ground that such dismissal was improperly entered in pursuance of the power of attorney, dated December 18, 1897, which was signed by Bolliger, when at that date, and the date of the dismissal, he was non compos mentis, had no conservator or other legal guardian, and it averred that he is still non compos mentis.

On January 30, 1900, appellee, by leave of court, filed a number of affidavits supporting the averments of his motion as to the mental condition of Bolliger as therein stated; and on February 2, 1900, the court ruled.appellant to present counter affidavits, which was not done, but appellant entered into a written stipulation with appellee to the effect that for the purposes of the motion, it should be considered (1) that appellee as such conservator had, on May 12, 1899, begun a second suit against appellant in the Circuit Court of Macoupin County, upon the same cause- of action as that sued upon in the case sought to be reinstated, which second suit is still pending and undetermined; (2) that the attorneys of record for Bolliger in the case sought to be reinstated, had notice of the execution of the power of attorney by virtue of which the same was dismissed and protested orally in the court against such dismissal; (3) that the stipulation above mentioned concerning the agreement to try the Seniger case first and the Bolliger case afterward upon the question of damages alone, etc., was made, and that that case had been tried with the result above stated.

On February 6, 1900, the motion was heard by the court without objection, upon the above mentioned affidavits.and stipulation, which were submitted by appellee without objection; and upon the above mentioned power of attorney which was submitted by appellant; and the court allowed appellee’s motion, set aside its order dismissing the case, and reinstated it, appellant Excepting.

Appellee then, over the objection and exception of appellant, was permitted to amend the declaration so as to show that he (as such conservator) was substituted for Bolliger as plaintiff.

Appellant then obtained leave to withdraw its plea of not guilty, and to present a plea in abatement, setting up the pendency of the second suit instituted by appellee as such conservator, against appellant as set forth in the first part of the stipulation last above referred to, alleging that the second suit was for the same cause of action as the first.

The court sustained a general demurrer to the plea in abatement, after which appellant pleaded not guilty to the amended declaration, and a trial was had by jury with the result above stated.

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Bluebook (online)
91 Ill. App. 123, 1900 Ill. App. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-coal-co-v-oeltjen-illappct-1900.