Grand Lodge, Independent Order of Free Sons of Israel v. Ohnstein

110 Ill. App. 312, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 619
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 12, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 110 Ill. App. 312 (Grand Lodge, Independent Order of Free Sons of Israel v. Ohnstein) 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
Grand Lodge, Independent Order of Free Sons of Israel v. Ohnstein, 110 Ill. App. 312, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 619 (Ill. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

The original transcript of record in this case was filed October 8, 1902. January 22, 1903, the appellant, by leave of the court, filed an additional transcript of the record. February 9, 1903, appellee, by like leave, filed an additional transcript, and February 13, 1903, moved to strike from and disregard certain portions of the transcript filed by appellant January 22, 1903. This motion was reserved to the hearing. The additional transcript filed by appellant purports to be an amendment of the bill of exceptions contained in the original transcript filed here October 8, 1902. It appears from the bill of exceptions contained in the original transcript, that a number of documents offered by appellee were admitted in evidence by the court, but are not contained in the bill of exceptions. After the recital in the original bill of exceptions of the admission of a document such words as these appear: “ Said document was marked Exhibit A. It is in words and figures as follows, to wit:” or, “The papers are in words and figures as follows, to wit:” or other like reference; but the documents are not copied into the bill of exceptions. Appellant’s additional transcript purports, by amendment, to supply these omissions in the original bill of exceptions. The case was tried at the Maxr term of the court, 1901, and the order allowing the amendments was made January 15, 1903. The order is as follows :

“ This cause coming on again this day to be heard, upon the motion of the defendant’s attorney to amend the bill of exceptions herein, and after notice duly given to the plaintiff, and all the parties being in court, and after a careful examination by the Honorable It. W, Clifford, judge thereof, of the stenographer’s transcript of the evidence heretofore filed herein and made a part of the records of this case by the bill of exceptions heretofore filed herein, and on the inspection of various papers and records now here produced before the court and identified by the court as the various papers and exhibits introduced in evidence in said cause and referred to in the bill of exceptions herein heretofore signed and sealed; to wit, on the 18th day of September, Á. B„ 1902, and the affidavit of the stenographer who took notes of the evidence offered, introduced,and rejected or admitted, who identified certain documents and'records as being the original documents and records; and the court being fully advised in the premises doth find that said records, and especially the said bill of exceptions and the identification marks and affidavit of said stenographer, A. M. Griffen, produced before the court here by said defendant’s attorneys, show and indicate and are sufficient memoranda and notes from which the court may find, and the court doth find, that said exhibits referred to in the motion of the defendant, and in said affidavit of said stenographer, and copies of which are set out in the bill of exceptions hereinafter specified, are the original exhibits offered at the hearing of said cause and referred to in said bill of exceptions, and that the same were omitted from and do not appear in said bill of exceptions heretofore filed herein.

And the defendant having presented such amendment to said bill of exceptions here now to this court, and the same having been settled, signed and sealed by this court,

It is ordered that the defendant have leave to file the same mono pro tuno as of the 18th day of September, A. D. 1902, as an amendment of said bill of exceptions heretofore filed herein, and that said bill of exceptions be, and the same is hereby so amended.”

Appellee’s attorney objected to the amendments shown by appellant’s supplemental bill of exceptions, but the objections were overruled by the court, and the court allowed to appellee a bill of exceptions, the certificate to which is as follows :

“ And the'court certifies that he thereupon allowed said supplemental affidavit of said Alonzo M. Griffen to be read and filed, and considered the same upon the hearing of said motion.

And the court certifies that the foregoing were all the affidavits and evidence, oral or documentary, offered or introduced by the parties, or considered by the court upon the hearing of said motion of said defendant.

The court further certifies that at the time of the hearing of the above entitled cause before him, upon the 28th and 29fch days of May, 1901, the branch of the court presided oxmr by the Hon. Richard W. Clifford did not have any official stenographer acting in the said court, nor had any official stenographer been appointed in his branch of said court, under or in pursuance of the terms of an act entitled £ An act to authorize the judges of the Circuit Courts to appoint shorthand reporters for the taking and. preservation of evidence and to provide for their cornpensation,’ approved May 31, 1887.

The court further certifies that counsel for plaintiff then and there objected to the granting of said motion of said defendant, and to the settling and signing of an amended and supplemental bill of exceptions in said cause by the court, as to any or either of exhibits omitted from the original bill of exceptions filed in said cause, on the grounds that said court had no jurisdiction or power to so settle and sign an amended bill of exceptions therein; that no showing had been made by the defendant warranting the settling and signing of an amended and supplemental bill of exceptions; that there was no record, memorandum or minute, official; or gwísá-official, of the court, or any officer thereof, upon which such an amendment as to an^v or either of such omitted exhibits might be predicated, and" that such amendment could not be predicated upon the recollection of the judge of said court having tried said cause, and now hearing said motion, nor upon his identification of any of the documents offered upon this hearing by the defendant; that there was no competent proof before the court showing that the documents, and each and every of them, offered upon this hearing, were the original documents offered upon the trial of said cause, and referred to in the original bill of exceptions filed herein; that the affidavit of Alonzo M. (xriffen, offered by the defendant upon said motion, was improper and incompetent, and could not form the basis of such amendment as to any, either or all of such omitted exhibits.

But the court overruled each and every of said objections.

To which action of the court in overruling said objections, and each of them, plaintiff, by her counsel, then and there duly excepted.”'

Appellee’s' motion “to strike out and disregard,” etc., includes all the documents and papers omitted from the original bill of exceptions and which are purported to be supplied by, appellant’s supplemental bill of exceptions. These documents are as follows: Exhibit A, being the original declaration of endowment of Lippman Lichtenstein, deceased, deposited with Moses Lodge No. 18, I. O. F. S. of L; Exhibit 2, being the endowment laws of appellant; Exhibit 3, purporting to be the last will of Lippman Lichtenstein; certain files of the Circuit Court in the case of Hannah Ohnstein et al. v. appellant; placita and judgment in the Circuit Court in suit Hannah Ohnstein and Julius Ohnstein v.

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Bluebook (online)
110 Ill. App. 312, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grand-lodge-independent-order-of-free-sons-of-israel-v-ohnstein-illappct-1903.