Corning Glass Works v. Adelman

248 Ill. App. 39, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 598
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 23, 1928
DocketGen. No. 31,906
StatusPublished

This text of 248 Ill. App. 39 (Corning Glass Works v. Adelman) 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
Corning Glass Works v. Adelman, 248 Ill. App. 39, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 598 (Ill. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilsoii

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action is based upon an appeal bond dated September 17,1923, by which the defendants obligated themselves to pay a certain judgment for $10,195.70, recovered in the municipal court of Chicago on August 29, 1923, in which proceedings the Corning Glass Works was plaintiff and the Chicago Glass Products Company was defendant. The judgment was in favor of the plaintiff in the original cause, and the bond provided that in case the Chicago Glass Products Company prosecuted this appeal with effect and paid the amount of the judgment, costs, interests and damages rendered, and to be rendered, then the obligation was to be void, otherwise in full force and effect.

The judgment in favor of the Corning Glass Works was affirmed in this court, and writ of certiorari to the Supreme Court being denied, this judgment became final.

By reason of the action of the defendants, in injecting into the trial every conceivable ground for defeating the action, what would otherwise be a simple cause, became an involved one.

The statement of claim filed by the plaintiff acknowledged the receipt of $6,731.43, and the suit was for the balance due under the bond.

A trial was had before a jury and a verdict was rendered in favor of the defendants. Judgment was entered accordingly, and it is from this judgment that this appeal is perfected.

It is contended on behalf of appellant that the trial court committed error in that: (1) it refused to receive evidence offered by the plaintiff, that a certain alleged claim of the Chicago Glass Products Company was the same claim which had been offered in the original suit; (2) there was no consideration for the alleged verbal agreement to extend the time of payment of the judgment, and such agreement was therefore invalid and unenforceable; (3) it was reversible error, for the court to receive any evidence of the alleged verbal notices to proceed to collect the judgment; (4) the court made prejudicial remarks during the course of the trial, to the injury of the plaintiff; (5) counsel for defendants made many prejudicial remarks, and conducted himself in a manner prejudicial to a proper hearing of the cause; (6) the court admitted improper evidence concerning the alleged claim of the Chicago Glass Products Company against the Corning Glass Works; and (7) the court committed reversible error in giving certain instructions. As to the first of these propositions, evidence was permitted by the trial court to be entered on behalf of the defendants, over the objection of the plaintiff, for the purpose of showing that the Chicago Glass Products Company, defendant in the original suit, had lost certain profits through the failure of the Corning Glass Works to fill orders sent to it by the Chicago Glass Products Company. Plaintiff attempted to meet this testimony by introducing in evidence facts showing that said claim was fully set out in an affidavit of defense in the original cause of action, and this was refused by the trial court. We believe the trial court erred in the first place in permitting any such testimony to be introduced on behalf of the defendant; and that it erred a second time in denying plaintiff the right to rebut this by introduction of testimony showing that it had been part of the original litigation.

This cause was before this court on the original hearing and as it grows out of the same subject matter and is predicated upon a liability based upon said proceeding on appeal in this court, we are of the opinion that the records of this court became competent and will be considered in connection with this cause for the purpose of ascertaining the real facts in connection with this proceeding.

This court said in the case of Dandridge v. Northern Trust Co., 218 Ill. App. 138, at page 140 :

“Garnishment proceedings are statutory; and it is a condition precedent to garnishment that there shall be a judgment, issuance of an execution, and a return 'No property found.'

“Where it appears, as it does here, that the garnishment proceedings are part and parcel of the same cause as that in which the original judgment was obtained— the original and garnishment proceedings bear the same general number — and the trial court takes, as it should, judicial notice of all that has transpired in the cause, we are of the opinion that it then becomes unnecessary to have the judgment and execution and return offered in evidence, and thereafter, on appeal or writ of error, made a part of the bill of exceptions.”

To the same effect see Wallace v. Meldahl, 202 Ill. App. 97; People v. Powers, 283 Ill. 438. We are of the opinion that this cause is so interrelated to the proceeding upon which this suit is predicated, in that it is an action to enforce an obligation on a bond given on the appeal from the original judgment, that this court has the right to- and should search its own record for the purpose of discovering the truth as to whether or not an issue sought to be raised by the defendants, was, in fact, presented to this court on an appeal from the original judgment. We find in the record in said cause on appeal in this court, that the matters attempted to be introduced in evidence by the defendant below in this proceeding were contained in the affidavit .of defense filed in the original cause, and therefore should have had no part in this proceeding. An offer to make this proof, which was set out fully in the offer of counsel-for the plaintiff, was denied by the court; and we think not only that it was error to refuse said offer, but believe that we can correct the error in this court from the record now on file before this court, brought here on the hearing of the original judgment. Moreover, the same facts are matters of record in the court wherein this cause was heard in the first instance.

Considerable space is given by counsel for appellee in his argument to the effect that a surety will be released from his obligation where a party undertakes to vary the terms of the suretyship agreement. This is a correct proposition of law, except that the change must be a material change and one which would affect the interests and rights of the surety. The cases cited in support of said rule are not in conflict with the view we hold in regard to that proposition, but it must be borne in mind that the present action is based upon an appeal bond, and the obligation on which has become certain and fixed. After the affirmance of the judgment in this court, and the denial of a writ of certiorari by the Supreme Court, the plaintiff had a right to compel payment of the judgment from the surety, as well as from the principal, when it appeared that the principal had failed to satisfy the judgment.

The Supreme Court of this State, in the case of McCarthy v. Alphons Custodis Chimney Const. Co., 219 Ill. 616, in its opinion at pages 622, 623, says:

“The very object of the parties in executing the bond was to prevent the collection of the judgment, and have the case re-heard in the circuit court; and the bond wás expressly conditioned for the payment of the judgment, in the event it should be affirmed. It was, therefore, a solemn admission by the defendant that there was such a judgment. He voluntarily entered into an engagement under his hand and seal for the payment of the judgment; and he could not afterwards deny what he thus deliberately asserted to be true — the existence of the ■ judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
248 Ill. App. 39, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corning-glass-works-v-adelman-illappct-1928.