Gilmore v. Lewinsohn

189 Ill. App. 546, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 408
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 19, 1914
DocketGen. No. 19,886
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 189 Ill. App. 546 (Gilmore v. Lewinsohn) 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
Gilmore v. Lewinsohn, 189 Ill. App. 546, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 408 (Ill. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scanlan

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant contends: “ (1) That the bond never having been approved according to the requirements of the statute, became a nullity and no action can be maintained thereon. (2) There was no consideration for the giving of the bond, in that such bond never having been approved, the defendant in the judgment appealed from as a matter of law obtained nothing by the giving of the bond, since such bond did not legally stay execution on such judgment. (3) The bond being either void or not founded on any adequate consideration cannot be sued on as a common law obligation. (4) The Appellate Court never had jurisdiction of the appeal.”

The plaintiff contends: (1) The appeal bond was for the sole benefit of the plaintiff, and the approval of the same by the court may be and was waived by him, and because of the said waiver, the approval of the bond by the court or the clerk of the court, under the order of the court, was not necessary to its validity; (2) the obligor on a bond, in a suit on the bond, is estopped from denying the truth of any of the recitals of the bond; (3) in the present suit, under the facts in the case, the defendant, an obligor on the bond in question, will not be heard to say that no valid appeal was ever taken; (4) a bond, under the facts of the present case, is valid as a voluntary contract, and the expenses incurred by the plaintiff in defending the appeal on the faith of the bond afford a sufficient consideration to support the contract.

Sections 92 and 93 of the Practice Act (J. & A. ¶¶ 8629, 8630) read as follows:

“92. Appeals shall be prayed for and allowed at the term at which the judgment, order or decree is rendered, and the party praying for such appeal shall, within such time, not less than twenty days, as shall be limited by the court, give and file in the office of the clerk of the court from which the appeal is prayed, bonds, in a reasonable amount, to secure the adverse party, to be fixed by the court, with sufficient security, to be approved by the court. If the appeal is from a judgment or decree for the recovery of money, the condition of the bond shall be for the prosecution of such appeal and the payment of the judgment, interest, damages and costs in case the judgment is affirmed. In all other cases the condition shall be directed by the court with reference to the character of the judgment, order or decree appealed from. The obligee in such bond may at any time, on a breach of the conditions thereof, have and maintain an action-at law as on other bonds.
“93. The clerk of the court may, by order of the court, made at the time of praying the appeal, and entered of record approve of the security offered upon such bond, and such approval may be made in term time or vacation. ’ ’

The first question for us to decide is, is the approval of the trial court, or the clerk of the court under the order of the court, entered of record, a sine qua non to the validity of a bond in an appeal case, or, to state the question in another way: If the trial court, or the clerk of the court, under an order of the trial court entered of record, has not approved an appeal bond, is the appeal thereby invalidated, even though all the parties in interest have affirmatively approved the bond! The defendant insists, that as the right of appeal is a matter of statutory creation, strict conformity to the statute is essential and a lack of it is jurisdictional, and that as the alleged bond was not approved in the manner required by the statute, the appeal was not legally perfected, and the defendant in the case obtained no benefit by the giving of the bond, because the said bond did not legally stay execution on the judgment; that the alleged bond, under the circumstances, was a nullity and no action can be maintained thereon.

It will be conceded that the mandatory provisions in a statute creating the right of appeal—that is, provisions which relate to the jurisdiction of the Appellate Court—must be complied with and cannot be waived, and it will be further admitted that where the legislature in clear and unmistakable terms has made the performance of a certain act a sine qua non to the validity of an appeal bond or of an appeal, the performance of the said act cannot be waived. It seems clear to us that it cannot be held that the legislature of this State has in clear and unmistakable terms made the approval of an appeal bond by the court or the clerk of the court a sine qua non to the validity of the bond. It is necessary for us to determine, therefore, whether the provision in question is mandatory or directory. If mandatory, it must be followed; if directory merely— that is, if it is intended solely for the benefit of the obligee in the bond—it may be waived by him.

In the late case of Krone v. Halbert, 263 Ill. 172, it is said that: “In the construction of a statute the courts are not confined to a literal meaning of the words, but the intention may be collected from the necessity or objects of the act and its words may be enlarged or restricted according to its intent. A thing which is within the intention is regarded within the statute though not within the letter, and a thing within the letter is not within the statute unless within the intention.” “The principle that remedial statutes will be liberally construed applies to statutes granting a right of appeal.” Encyc. of Pleading and Practice, vol. 2, p. 20.

We must, therefore, interpret the provision in question in the light of the rule announced by our Supreme Court. The bond in question was for the individual and sole benefit of the appellee. It is conceded that the plaintiff approved the bond before it was filed with the clerk. It is very plain that the purpose of the provision we are now considering is to secure to the appellee in an appeal case a good bond. The trial court is designated' as the official to decide on the amount of the bond and the qualifications of the sureties. Must the trial court always approve the bond or is this part of the provision intended merely to protect the judgment defendant, the principal obligor on the bond, from unreasonable demands and captions objections from the judgment plaintiff, the obligee on the bond, in the matter of the bond? Cannot the parties to the appeal, where their own individual interests are alone at stake, mutually agree upon a bond without being required to have the court pass upon the same? Does not the statute intend that the trial court shall act as an arbiter in case the parties in interest are unable to agree upon the bond? It seems to us that the construction of the provision in question contended for by the defendant is an extremely technical one, and one not in accord with the purpose of the act. It fixes a sine qua non that is entirely unnecessary to carry out the object of the law—in fact, in practice, it would tend to defeat it, to the injury of an appellee for whose benefit the provision was intended. It is' an interpretation predicated largely upon the theory that an appeal statute must always be followed in the letter, instead of the spirit. Such, as wé have seen, is not the law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 Ill. App. 546, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilmore-v-lewinsohn-illappct-1914.