Fellheimer v. Hainline

65 Ill. App. 384, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 1076
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 29, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 65 Ill. App. 384 (Fellheimer v. Hainline) 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
Fellheimer v. Hainline, 65 Ill. App. 384, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 1076 (Ill. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Me. Pbesidino Justice Pleasants

deliveebd the opinion OF THE CoUET.

On December 12, 1893, Mrs. Jennie Stiebel confessed judgment in favor of three several parties for $4,290.85, $2,500 and $1,590.60 respectively, on which executions were issued and levied, according to the sheriff’s return, upon “ a stock of goods, ready made clothing, gent’s furnishing goods, trunks, valises and fixtures, situated in building known as the Model Corner, Bushnell, McDonough county, Illinois;” and on the 26th .the “ above described goods,” excepting those specifically selected by and allowed to her as exempt, were by him sold as an entirety for $9,225, to Louis Ií. Kohn, of Chicago, and possession given with the keys of the store. In the back part of the room, on one side, was a hollow counter twelve or fifteen feet long, made with lids shutting down with hinges, in which were stowed a lot of clothing, then unseasonable, but recognized as a part of the stock and shown to be of the value of $416.75. It was made two or three years before the sale for that purpose and had been so used; and was among the ' articles selected and allowed as exempt. But other goods being piled upon it, neither the sheriff nor Iiohn knew it contained anything until some days after the sale.

On the 18th of December the Parotte-Andrews Co. recovered a judgment before A. W. Fallenthal, a justice of the peace of McDonough county, against Mrs. Stiebel for $146.50, and on the 27th she confessed a judgment for $721 in favor of S. Spear & Sons, on which executions were promptly issued and placed—one in the hands of E. A. Lane, a constable, and the other in those of J. S. Barker, the sheriff. When the counter goods were discovered these officers levied upon them, the constable taking on his writ a part, appraised at $300, and the sheriff on his the remainder, appraised at $116.75.

Thereupon Kohn sued out a writ of replevin against them directed to the coroner, defendant in error, on which he took the goods and delivered them to Kohn, who at the next term of the court dismissed his suit without a trial. Judgment therein was rendered against him for costs but without a retorno.

The cases here reviewed were actions of debt upon the bond so given to the coroner, brought in his name for the use, respectively, of the creditors under whose executions the defendants in said suit had taken and held the goods replevied: By agreement they were consolidated and tried together by the court without a jury and resulted in a finding for plaintiff in each and judgment in debt for the penalty and damages in the amount of the value of the goods replevied.

In the first, for the use of the Parotte-Andrews Co., the declaration averred the execution by the defendants of the bond set forth and containing the usual conditions for the prosecution of the suit with effect and return of the goods if awarded, the replevy and delivery of them to Kohn, his dismissal of his suit, a judgment thereon against him awarding a return, his failure to make it, and that same defendant in said suit held the goods under an execution upon a judgment theretofore “ recovered ” by said Parotte-Andrews Co. against Mrs. Stiebel, before A. W. Fallenthal, a justice of the peace of said McDonough county.

It is to be noticed that two recoveries are alleged in this declaration, one by a judgment of the Circuit Court against Kohnin the replevin suit, which is alleged to have awarded a return of the goods, and the other by a judgment of a •justice of the peace in favor of the Parotte-Andrews Co. against Mrs. Stiebel.

The pleas on which issues of fact wrere made, that of nil debet having been held bad on demurrer, were, first, non est factum; second, “ that there is not any record of the recovery inthe said declaration mentioned remaining in the Circui t Court of the county of McDonough and State of Illinois, in manner and form,” etc.; and third, in bar of all but nominal damages, because the replevin case was not tried on its merits, and the goods there in controversy were not the property of Jennie Stiebel, but of the defendant Kohn.

To the second of these pleas plaintiff replied there is such record of the said recovery remaining in the said justice of •the peace court, etc., to which the similiter was added. •

If this plea was intended and understood to deny that a return was awarded, the replication was not an answer in substance or form, and upon attention called to it should have been stricken from the files as a nullity. But counsel for defendant in error claim to be greatly surprised by the contention of their adversaries, or that anybody should suppose it really applied to the judgment in the replevin suit, although that was the only judgment of the Circuit Court mentioned or referred to in the declaration. They say it was not so treated on pthe trial; that no allusion to such an issue was made in the evidence, propositions of law submitted, motion for a new trial or assignment of errors; that applied to that judgment it was not a good plea, but to that of the justice of the peace it was; that at best it was ambiguous because both judgments were mentioned in the declaration, and being taken most strongly against the pleader, should be held to apply to the one to which it was a good plea; that the introduction of the justice of the peace judgment was objected to by the defendant, but that of the replevin judgment was not, and finally, that the similiter is conclusive. It is therefore contended that the allegation of the award of a return, not being denied by plea, was conclusively admitted, whatever might be the evidence, as held in Williams v. Boyden, 33 Ill. App. 477.

The record of the judgment in the replevin suit was introduced in evidence and failed to show an award of the return of the goods. No other proof upon that point was offered, and therefore but little was to be said upon it. If the plea traversed the allegation that a return was awarded, the onus was upon the plaintiff, if he sought to recover the value of the goods, to show a judgment awarding it, and failing to show it he would be entitled to no more than nominal damages. Vineyard v. Barnes, 124 Ill. 346; Williams v. Boyden, supra.

That the finding and judgment for the value of the goods were against the law and the evidence and that the damages allowed were excessive, were among the reasons stated in support of the motion for a new trial and in the assignment of errors. There is no ambiguity in the plea, nor .do we know of any reason for holding it better as applied to the justice of the peace judgment than to the other, if its terms admitted as well of the one application as of the other. But they do not. They specify a record of the Circuit Court by its title, and can not be applied to a judgment of any other, especially of one that is not a court of record.

The addition of the similiter must, therefore, have been due to oversight, easily accounted for by the fault in the replication. The corresponding pleadings in the two cases were exactly alike, excepting in some as to names, value of the goods and warrants under which they were held by the defendants in the replevin suit; and the latter only in the designation of the courts from which they issued, both being executions on judgments, one of the Circuit Court and the other of a justice of the peace.

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106 Ill. App. 322 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1903)

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Bluebook (online)
65 Ill. App. 384, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 1076, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fellheimer-v-hainline-illappct-1896.