Fleet v. Hertz

98 Ill. App. 564, 1901 Ill. App. LEXIS 305
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 12, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 98 Ill. App. 564 (Fleet v. Hertz) 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
Fleet v. Hertz, 98 Ill. App. 564, 1901 Ill. App. LEXIS 305 (Ill. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a j udgment rendered in an action of debt on a replevin bond, executed by appellant and Barbette Lehman, his surety, to Henry L. Hertz, the coroner of Cook county, in a replevin suit by appellant against James H. Gilbert, formerly sheriff of said county. The alleged breaches of the condition of the bond are that appellant did not return the goods replevied, and did not prosecute his replevin suit with effect. That there were such breaches is not controverted. It appears from the evidence that appellant dismissed the replevin suit without a trial on the merits, which fact was pleaded by appellant in the present suit, and also that he had title to the property replevied, in accordance with section 26 of the practice act. Such proceedings were had that the jury found the issues for appellee, under the instructions of the court, and found the debt to be $7,000, the penalty of the bond, and assessed the damages at the sum of $2,248.93, and judgment was rendered on the verdict.

Appellant’s counsel urge that the court erred in admitting secondary evidence of the bond, because it is not averred in the declaration that the bond was lost, and urge further that there was no proof of the loss of the bond sufficient to warrant the admission of secondary evidence of its contents. Profert of the bond is not made in the declaration, nor is its loss alleged, nor did appellant crave oyer. Chitty says:

“ But where a profert, or excuse for the want of it, is necessary, if the plaintiff profess to produce the deed when he is not prepared to do so, the defendant is entitled to oyer, and if he plead non est factum, the plaintiff will be non-suited on the trial, as it will not be sufficient in such case that the deed was lost or destroyed, or in the defendant’s possession,” etc. 1 Chitty on PL, 5th Am. Ed. 314, 315.

It will be observed that what is said in the above quotation applies only to cases in which profert, or the excuse for the want of it, is necessary; also that the consequence of failing to produce the deed, on oyer craved, after making profert, is limited to a case in which the defendant pleads non est factum. But under our practice it is not necessary in any case to make profert, and consequently it can not be necessary to aver any reason or excuse for not making it. Section 19 of the practice act is as follows:

“It shall not be necessary, in any pleading, to make profert of the instrument alleged; but, in any action or defense upon an instrument in writing, whether under seal or not, if the same is not lost or destroyed, the opposite party mav have oyer thereof, and proceed thereon in the same manner as if profert had been properly made, according to the common law.”

Again, the consequence of being non-suited, in the case put by Chitty, results from the effect of the plea of non est factum at common law. At common law that plea was not required to be verified, and it put the plaintiff on prooi of the execution of the deed declared on, whereas, by section 34 of the practice act, the plea of non est factum, to have that effect, must be verified by affidavit, which appellant’s plea of non est factum is not. In the present case, appellant did not crave oyer, and had he' so done, appellee might have alleged any matter of fact as ground why oyer should not be demanded, as, for instance, that the bond was lost. Heard’s Stephens on PL, 9th Am. Ed., Sec. 72.

By section 11 of the practice act the officer taking a replevin bond is required to return the bond into court, with the replevin writ, and the bond, on being so returned, becomes a record of the court.

At common law proferí of a record was not necessary, nor could oyer of it be demanded. Heard’s Stephens on PL, Sec. 69; Jevens v. Harridge, 1 Saunder’s Rep., 8 b.

In that case the following occurs:

“ The defendant in the common bench could not have oyer of the record of a judgment in the court of Kings ton-u'pon-Hull, because the record was not in the court of common bench, but remained in the inferior court.’’

In the present case, the declaration avers, in accordance with the fact, that the bond sued on was filed in the Superior Court of Cook County.

In a suit on a lost note, it is not necessary to declare on it specially as a lost note. Dormady v. State of Illinois, 2 Scam. 236-244.

Appellant’s counsel, in their argument, say:

“It would be manifestly unjust to permit a party to declare upon an instrument alleged to have been executed by the defendant, in such form as to lead the defendant to believe that the original itself will be produced on the trial, and then to confront him, at the trial, with secondary evidence of its contents only.”

In the present case, appellant could not have been so deceived, because he knew, as appears by evidence hereinafter mentioned, that the bond sued on was lost. We can not perceive that appellant was prejudiced by the omission -of appellee to aver loss of the bond. The fact that he did not crave oyer, as by the statutes he might have done, is evidence that he did not deem the production of the original necessary for his defense.

Albert G. Mang, deputy clerk of the Superior Court, testified where such bonds were usually kept, and that he had made a thorough search for the bond in every place where it would be likely to be, and could not find it. There was also put in evidence an order of the Superior Court in the replevin suit, of date April 10, 1897, finding that August 24, 1900, William H. Fleet and Barbette Lehman executed to Henry L. Hertz, coroner, etc., a bond, reciting the bond so found to have been executed, and ordering Fleet to present to the court within ten days a new replevin bond in the sum of $7,009; also an order made by said Superior Court, in said replevin .suit, of date July 14, 1897, as follows :

“ On motion of plaintiff’s attorneys, it is ordered that leave be given and is hereby given .the plaintiff to file a copy of his declaration, nune pro tune as of August 31,1892; and leave to file a copy of affidavit for replevin, nune pro tune as of August 23, 1892; and leave to file a copy of replevin writ and bond, nune pro tune as of September 8, 1892; alLof the same in lieu of originals lost.”

On such proof being made, the court .admitted in evidence a copy of the bond, the same in terms as the bond recited in the order of the Superior Court, of April 10, 1897, and which that court found was executed by appellant and his surety, Mrs. Lehman. Appellant’s counsel objected to the admission of the evidence, on the ground that the bond was not deblared on as lost, and that the proof of loss was insufficient, which objections were, as we think, propérly overruled. In their argument counsel urge that there was no proof that the copy offered in evidence was a true copy of the original. As to this objection it is sufficient to say that it was not made when the copy was offered, and it can not properly be made here. Had the objection been made in the trial court, we think it should have been overruled, the copy being in terms the same as the Superior Court found the original was.

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Related

Beggs v. Chicago Bonding & Surety Co.
207 Ill. App. 621 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
98 Ill. App. 564, 1901 Ill. App. LEXIS 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fleet-v-hertz-illappct-1901.