Corn v. Greenberg

181 Ill. App. 669, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 329
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 30, 1913
DocketGen. No. 19,530
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 181 Ill. App. 669 (Corn v. Greenberg) 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
Corn v. Greenberg, 181 Ill. App. 669, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 329 (Ill. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Graves

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit Court allowing an interlocutory injunction without notice on a verified creditor’s bill.

It is alleged in the bill that the complainant procured a judgment in the Municipal Court against Harry Greenberg, Ed L. Greenberg and Jacob C. Greenberg, as partners, for $450, on which had been paid $177.50; that there was still due thereon, including interest and costs, $330; that three executions had been issued on that judgment and delivered to the bailiff of the Municipal Court to execute; that two of such executions had been returned by that bailiff nulla bona as to the unpaid portion of the judgment, and that the third and last execution was then still in the hands' of the bailiff wholly unsatisfied; that the parties above named are no longer partners; that they are all residents of New York City and have no property in this state, known to the complainant, subject to execution, but that Samuel Lipshitz and William Turner, partners trading as Lipshitz & Turner, and Lundin & Company, a corporation, all of Chicago, are indebted to appellant, Harry Greenberg, in some amount not known. The relief prayed is that the amount due from Lipshitz & Turner and from Lundin & Co. to appellant be ascertained and that they be ordered to turn over to the bailiff of the Municipal Court of the amount so found due sufficient to pay the unpaid balance of the judgment, and that pending the final decree they be ordered to retain and be restrained from paying over to any one any money so found to be due appellant. Harry Greenberg, the appellant, and Ed L. Greenberg, Jacob C. Greenberg, his former partners, Samuel Lipshitz and William Turner, copartners, and Lundin & Co., a corporation, are all made parties. The injunction was ordered, as prayed for. Harry Greenberg alone appealed. A motion by appellee to dismiss the appeal was taken with the case.

Two grounds are urged in support of the motion to dismiss the appeal. First, that no injunction order was entered against appellant and, therefore, he has no right to appeal; and, second, that the statute under which the appeal is taken is unconstitutional.

Section 123 of the Practice Act provides that an appeal may be taken from an interlocutory order granting an injunction to the Appellate Court of the district wherein is situated the court granting such order. The terms of that section are general and the right to appeal is not limited to any particular class of partisans. In this respect this section is not distinguishable from section 91 of the same act, by which the right to have final judgments, orders, and decrees reviewed on appeal or writ of error, is given. So far as we are aware, it has never been denied that section 91 gives to all the parties to the suit, whose interests have been prejudicially affected by a final judgment, order or decree the right to appeal. On the contrary, the right of such persons to appeal has been recognized in Mundt v. Glos, 231 Ill. 158, where the court said on page 163: “A party against whom no judgment is rendered or who is not aggrieved thereby cannot appeal or prosecute error. ’ ’

In Henkleman v. Peterson, 40 Ill. App. 540, this court-had under consideration the right of appeal from an interlocutory order granting an injunction, and it was said: “The order granting an injunction restraining the sheriff from paying to the appellants the proceeds of property sold under executions upon their judgments, injuriously affected the appellants and they had the right to appeal, though in form the injunction was not against them, nor had they as yet appeared in the cause. ’ ’

Appellant is a party to this suit. His interests have been prejudicially affected by having his debtors prohibited from paying to him what they owe him. We have no doubt of his right, under the terms of the statute referred to, to bring the cause to this court for review by appeal.

The question whether section 123, chapter 110, R. S., is constitutional is, as to this court, coram non judice. The jurisdiction of this court is expressly limited by the law creating it to certain cases in which a franchise, a freehold or the validity of a statute is not involved. If the means now provided by law are inadequate for the determination of the constitutionality of the particular statute under consideration, it is a question to be taken up with the legislature and not the courts.

The motion of appellee to dismiss the appeal is, therefore, denied.

By statute and by the common law a creditor’s bill will lie when a judgment has been obtained and an execution has been duly issued thereon and returned milla bona. Chapter 22, section 49, R. S.; Durand & Co. v. Gray, Kingman & Collins, 129 Ill. 9.

A judgment in order to be the basis of a creditor’s bill must be one in the same jurisdiction as the court in which the creditor’s bill is filed. Ladd v. Judson, 174 Ill. 344. A judgment in a foreign state or in a federal court will not support a creditor’s bill in the courts of this state. Steere v. Hoagland, 39 Ill. 264; Winslow v. Leland, 128 Ill. 304; see also exhaustive note to Ziska v. Ziska, 23 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1, 20 Okla. 634.

It is urged by appellant tnat as the judgment here relied on was obtained in the Municipal Court, the territorial jurisdiction of which is limited to the city of Chicago, and the bill was filed in the circuit court which has jurisdiction not only in the city of Chicago, but in the balance of Cook county, the judgment is not in the same jurisdiction, and that the bill cannot be maintained in the circuit court, at least not until an execution has been issued on such judgment and placed in the hands of the sheriff of Cook county. We think this is a misconception of the rule. The circuit court has jurisdiction in the entire territory where the Municipal Court has jurisdiction, and the fact that it has also jurisdiction in more territory does not constitute the territory included in the jurisdiction of the Municipal Court a foreign jurisdiction. In Alkire Grocery Co. v. Baker, 91 Fed. 79; Feidler v. Bartleson, 88 C. C. A. 194, 161 Fed. 30, and Wilkinson v. Yale, 6 McLean 16, Fed. Cas. No. 17,678, it is held that a judgment creditor in a state court who had sued out an execution and obtained a nulla bona return mig’ht file a creditor’s bill based thereon in the Circuit Court of the United States for the district comprising the county in which the judgment in the state court was rendered, and in Bowman v. Wilson, 64 Ill. App. 73, the action of' the circuit court of Green county in entertaining a bill in the nature of a creditor’s bill based on a judgment in the Superior Court of Cook county was upheld, although the precise question here under consideration was not there mooted.

The right of a court of equity to entertain a creditor’s bill depends upon the same principles as general equity jurisdiction to the extent that, if there is ar. adequate remedy at law, relief in equity cannot bo afforded. If the rules of the common law and the provisions of our statute requiring the obtaining of a judgment, the issuance of an execution and its return nulla bona have been complied with, the presumption is indulged in that all legal means for the collection of the debt have been exhausted.

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Bluebook (online)
181 Ill. App. 669, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corn-v-greenberg-illappct-1913.