Fisher v. Tribby

5 Ill. App. 335, 1879 Ill. App. LEXIS 50
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 19, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 Ill. App. 335 (Fisher v. Tribby) 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
Fisher v. Tribby, 5 Ill. App. 335, 1879 Ill. App. LEXIS 50 (Ill. Ct. App. 1879).

Opinion

Pleasants, J.

This is an appeal from a decree for damages assessed upon dissolution of an injunction.

The bill sets forth that appellee, Tribby, some years ago, recovered a judgment in the Circuit Court of Woodford county, against appellants, complainants, and others, which was reversed and remanded by an order of the Supreme Court dated January 22, 1872; that plaintiff in said suit delayed filing said order in the Circuit Court until Hay 11,1874, and then filed the same and docketed the cause without .notice; that defendants entered their motion to strike said cause from the docket, but the presiding judge, having been of counsel, changed the venue to Peoria, where said motion, aftér full argument and consideration, was allowed and the cause ordered stricken off; that the clerk in entering said order upon the record, by error and through mistake added the words “withleave to reinstate,” no such leave having been in fact given; that the defendants were informed by their counsel and' believed that said cause was “ended forever,” but that the plaintiff afterwards, without notice to defendants or their attorneys, caused the same to be again placed iipon the docket, empanelled a jury to try it, and on Oct. 9, 1877, obtained a verdict against the defendants for $706.28, on which judgment was entered; of which proceedings neither the defendants nor their attorneys, all residing in another county, had any notice until the following term of said court and when execution issued upon said judgment on the 7th day of Dec., 1877, was in the hands of the sheriff of Wood-ford county, who is threatening to levy the same; that they thereupon, on Jan. 30, 1878, entered their motion to amend the record, vacate said judgment and recall said execution, which motion was overruled because the term at which said judgment was rendered had expired; that for the reason before stated they did not and could not have any bill of exceptions filed in said cause, nor make any motion in arrest of judgment or otherwise therein, and so their remedy at law was lost. The prayer was for an injunction to restrain appellee Bullock (the sheriff of Woodford county) from levying said execution, or, if he had levied, from taking any further steps thereunder, and appellee Tribby (plaintiff in the execution) from enforcing or attempting to enforce or collect said judgment, “and that upon the final hearing hereof the court will enter a decree finding said judgment and the proceedings thereon null and void; and will make said injunction a perpetual one, forever enjoining the collection of said judgment, and will grant such other and further relief as to equity and justice shall be meet, etc.”

The bill duly sworn to was presented to the judge on the 4th day of March, 1878, at 4 o’clock, p. m., pursuant to notice given on the same day, and an order then made postponing the hearing until the 7th, and restraining the defendants in the meantime from proceeding under the execution or judgment.

On the 7th the application was heard and a writ of injunction allowed, which was issued and served upon Tribby on the 13th.

On the 16th the defendants entered their motion to dissolve said injunction for want of equity, &c.; but nothing appears to have been done to bring it on forbearing until the 5 th of September, when said cause coming on upon the motion of complainants for leave to amend their bill so as to pray for a new trial it was ordered, adjudged and decreed that said motion be allowed, and that the “ complainants in this cause, the same be, ing the defendants in the original cause of Tribby v. Harbers et al., shall file their amended bill in this cause, praying for a new trial upon the merits, as of this day. And that said cause of Tribby v. Harbers shall be placed upon. the com mon law docket of this court for trial upon its merits at the next October term thereof, ” which amendment, striking out the prayer for injunction and inserting one in lieu thereof for a new trial of said original cause upon its merits and that the same be placed on the docket for such trial at the next October term of said court, was then made "and filed. And on the same day, upon the motion of defendants, it was also ordered “ that the said injunction be and the same is hereby dissolved with costs.”

Four days thereafter, on the 9th, defendants filed their suggestion of damages, which on the 13th of November were assessed by the court, without a jury and in the absence of complainants’ solicitors, at $100, as “reasonable” solicitors’ fees; upon which a decree was entered that complainant pay the same within twenty days and that in default thereof execution issue.

On the 15th defendants filed a general demurrer to the bill as amended, and on the 30th complainants entered a motion to set aside the decree of the 13th on the assessment, which was-taken under advisement.

The record goes on to state that on the 23d of December the. cause coming on to be heard upon the motion of complainants to strike from the files the demurrer to the “ supplemental” bill praying for a new trial of the original cause, the court finds that in vacation after the Hay term, to wit, on 5 th of Sep-' tember, an order or decree was entered of record dissolving the injunction granted on the “ original” bill, and further finds that thereupon, at the time aforesaid, the court granted leave to complainants to file a “supplemental” bill praying for a new trial, strictly upon the merits of said law case, and complainants having filed the same as per leave so had and obtained, it is considered and adjudged by the court that the demurrer of defendants to said supplemental bill'was improperly filed, and it is therefore stricken off, and said cause coming on for further hearing upon complainants’ motion to set aside the decree on the asr sessment of damages, the court doth overrule the same; and then it is further ordered that this cause be stricken from the docket, and that complainants pay the cost of this proceeding.

On the 23d of January, 1879, an appeal was prayed and allowed from the decree upon the assessment of damages and duly perfected.

We have seen no shorter way to a clear statement of the question presented than this abstract of the record, lengthy as it is—which exhibits a course of procedure somewhat difficult to understand—but which we think sufficient to demonstrate the injustice of the damages complained of.

The bill as originally framed showed on its face a right on the part of appellants to an injunction against or a stay of proceedings under the judgment. The practice of re-docketing a case more than two years after the order remanding it, and bringing it on for trial without notice to the adverse party, cannot be sanctioned. Practice Act. §§84, 85 R S. of 1874. The remedy at law being gone, without fault of the defendants, they were entitled to resort by bill to chancery and there to obtain relief, at least to the extent of being heard, on a new trial upon the merits, with a stay of proceedings in the meantime. The preliminary injunction, therefore, was properly allowed, and ought not to have been dissolved upon demurrer to the bill or motion grounded on the alleged want of equity in it, until and unless a new trial upon the merits was granted. We see no necessity for an amendment of the prayer, as the “other or further relief ” prayed for, entitled complainants to any that was justified by the stating part of the bill.

Whether the order of Sept.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Ill. App. 335, 1879 Ill. App. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-tribby-illappct-1879.