Gardner v. Bunn

7 L.R.A. 729, 132 Ill. 403
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 7 L.R.A. 729 (Gardner v. Bunn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardner v. Bunn, 7 L.R.A. 729, 132 Ill. 403 (Ill. 1890).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the Court -.

This was an action of replevin, brought by John W. Bunn and others, against Thomas Gardner, to recover a stock of goods, under a chattel mortgage executed by J. B. Turner & Son to them. „ The principal question presented by the record arises upon the issue presented by the defendant’s sixth plea. In this plea defendant averred that he took the goods, as sheriff, under an execution directed to him from the circuit court of DeWitt county, in favor of Mack, Stadler & Co., against J. B. Turner & Son, the mortgagors; that the goods were the property of J. B. Turner & Son, and subject to said execution, and that plaintiffs derived their rights in and to the goods after the levy. To this plea the plaintiffs replied, that the execution therein relied upon was void, for the reason that the pretended judgment upon which it was issued was not rendered by the court in term time, but was entered by the clerk of the court in vacation, by confession under a pretended power of attorney, and that no affidavit of the execution of the power of attorney was filed. On the trial of the issue thus presented by the sixth plea, the court held that the judgment rendered by confession in favor of Mack, Stadler & Co. against Turner & Son was void, and that the execution issued on that judgment did not justify the sheriff in withholding the property from the plain-1 tiffs. The judgment of the circuit court was affirmed in the Appellate Court, and the defendant brings the case here on appeal.

Whether a judgment by confession entered by a clerk of a court of record in vacation, is void, where no affidavit proving the execution of the power of attorney is filed with the power of attorney when the judgment is entered by the clerk, is a question which has never been directly decided by this court, and it is a question not entirely free from difficulty. Section 66, chapter 110, of our statute, which authorizes the confession of a judgment, is as follows: “Any person, for a debt bona fide due, may confess judgment, by himself, or attorney duly authorized, either in term time or vacation, without process.”

In Roundy v. Hunt, 24 Ill. 598, construction was placed by this court on a statute regulating the practice wherein judgments may be confessed in Kane county, which provided that judgments by confession may be entered at any time in the vacation, before the clerk, by filing the proper papers with him, and that said judgment shall have the same effect as if rendered at a term of court.. It is there said: “As a condition to the right to confess a judgment in vacation, the proper papers must be filed with the clerk. This requirement of the statute could have referred alone to the established practice in cases ■ of confessions of judgment in courts of record. That practice requires the plaintiff to file a declaration on his cause of action; that he shall file the warrant of attorney, with proof of its execution, and a plea of confession. These, under the practice, constitute the proper papers to authorize the confession of a judgment.”

If the language of the act, “upon filing the proper papers,” did not change the common law practice in such cases, but required a full adherence to that practice, as held in the case cited, we see nothing in the present statute from which it can be inferred that the common law practice should in such cases be changed. The language of the statute authorizing the confession of a judgment in vacation by an attorney duly authorized, clearly required proof to be filed with the clerk, showing the execution of the power of attorney. The statute only empowers an attorney to confess judgment who is duly authorized, and how could it be known that the attorney was duly authorized unless proof of the execution of the .power of attorney was filed with that instrument ? It will be remembered that the clerk of the circuit court, before whom the judgment was confessed, possessed no judicial powers. He was a mere ministerial officer, entrusted with the power of entering up a judgment in vacation when certain papers had been filed with him. The sufficiency of the papers, however, he could not pass upon or determine. Of course, the clerk could refuse to act until papers were filed purporting to conform to the requirements of law; but he could not determine the legal sufficiency of such papers, as that would require the exercise of' judicial powers. The confession of judgment in vacation is-a statutory proceeding in derogation of the common law, and a. judgment of that character will not be valid unless there is a. strict compliance with the law under which it may be authorized;.

Again, as held in Chase v. Dana, 44 Ill. 262, an attorney in fact is held to a strict compliance with the authority conferred. "When he acts, it must, to be sustained, be within the scope of" his authority. It must be for the purposes prescribed, and in the mode required. Was there such compliance here ? If the-attorney who confessed the judgment was not duly authorized, he had no power to act, and his acts would be a nullity. A power of attorney was filed with the clerk, but no evidence-was filed that Turner & Son had ever executed that instrument. In the absence of such evidence there was no authority to enter the judgment. No jurisdiction was acquired over the persons-of Turner & Son,—an indispensable prerequisite to the rendition of a judgment.

In Durham v. Brown, 24 Ill. 94, where a judgment was confessed in vacation, no affidavit having been filed proving the-execution of the power of attorney, it was held that the judgment was unauthorized. The same rule was announced in Roundy v. Hunt, 24 Ill. 600. In the case last cited it is said: “If the plaintiff should fail to file a declaration, a warrant of attorney, with an affidavit of its execution, and a plea of confession by the attorney, the clerk should refuse to enter the judgment.”

In Tucker v. Gill, 61 Ill. 236, where a judgment by confession was rendered in vacation for a less amount than confessed by the cognovit, the judgment was held to be void. It is there said: “The plea of cognovit actionem was one of the papers to be filed, and was indispensable to his (the clerk’s) authority to-make the entry of judgment, and when filed, he must enter the judgment for the amount confessed, or not at all. * * * The proceeding having been in vacation, conducted under a special statutory authority, by a mere ministerial officer, we-must hold that the entry of this judgment in the manner stated was simply void.” It was also held, that the language of the statute, “upon filing the proper papers,” under which the judgment was confessed, includes everything requisite, by the common law practice, in such cases.

In Iglehart v. Chicago Marine and Fire Ins. Co. 35 Ill. 514, it was held to be necessary that proof should have been made of the execution of the warrant of attorney before the judgment is confessed, and when the judgment is confessed in vacation, the evidence of that fact must appear in the record.

From the cases cited, the only fair conclusion to be drawn would seem to be, that a clerk, in vacation, has no power to-enter a judgment by confession without proof of the execution of the power of attorney. A judgment can not be entered unless jurisdiction is first acquired of the person of the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
7 L.R.A. 729, 132 Ill. 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-bunn-ill-1890.