Grand Pacific Hotel Co. v. Pinkerton

118 Ill. App. 89, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 179
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 23, 1905
DocketGen. No. 11,697
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 118 Ill. App. 89 (Grand Pacific Hotel Co. v. Pinkerton) 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 Pacific Hotel Co. v. Pinkerton, 118 Ill. App. 89, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 179 (Ill. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Cook County for $1,109.70, obtained by the appellees William A. Pinkerton and Robert A. Pinkerton, doing business as Pinkerton’s National Detective Agency, against the appellant, the Grand Pacific Hotel Company. The cause was tried below by the court without the intervention of a jury, and the judgment was upon the finding of the court. The suit was in assumpsit, and based upon services alleged to have been rendered by the appellees in the line of their calling to the appellant under a contract made by one Albert E. Glennie acting, as alleged by the appellees, for the appellant, the Grand Pacific Hotel Company, in the conduct of the business of which company the said Glennie was concerned, and in connection with the business of which, as the proprietor of the Grand Pacific Hotel, the services are said to have been rendered. The detective service was used in an attempt to ascertain the guilty parties in thefts from guests alleged to have taken place in the hotel.

The suit was originally begun against the hotel company and Glennie, who pleaded separately to the declaration. After many amendments of the record and many interlocutory orders, the finding and judgment of the court below were made against the hotel company, the appellant, alone. One of the errors assigned by appellant is that “ the Superior Court erred in entering judgment against the Grand Pacific Hotel Company only,” and another that it erred in entering said judgment because at the time of entering the same, there were two defendants to said cause, and it was error to enter judgment against only one of said defendants without dismissing said suit against the other. Many other errors are also assigned.

The record is in a strange state of confusion, but two things of controlling importance in the disposition of this cause seem clear from a careful inspection of that record. The first is that no exception is preserved in the bill of exceptions to the finding and judgment of the court below, or to the overruling of any motion for a new trial, which is available here to raise the question of the erroneousness of such finding; and the second is, that although on motion' in this court leave was given to the appellees to assign cross-errors, no such cross-errors were assigned on the record. An assignment of alleged cross-errors is printed in the additional abstract of the record filed by appellees, but this is manifestly not an effective or valid assignment. Such assignment must be made on the record itself. The only things in the bill of exceptions which approach or suggest an objection or exception to either finding or judgment, are that after the court below, on September 26, 1903, “ found the issues for the plaintiff and against the Grand Pacific Hotel Company,” appellant made a motion “ to set aside the finding herein and to arrest judgment in said cause,” for certain specified reasons in said motion set out in writing, and when the court overruled said motion, to that ruling the appellant excepted. And also, that on said 26th day of September, 1903, “ as reasons for setting aside the finding heretofore made, counsel for defendant presented and asked the court to certify ” certain special findings, and on the court’s refusing, as the record says, “ to make and enter the special findings so requested by the defendant, or to make and enter any special findings in this cause after the trial and after the finding by the court,” the appellant excepted to said refusal. Such refusal, however, was plainly proper, and has not been assigned for error.

The nature of the reasons set forth in the motion in arrest of judgment will be hereafter alluded to.

It is true that the clerk in the record proper of the judgment (not in the bill of exceptions) has recited that the defendant excepted both to the finding and to the judgment and that a motion for a new trial was made by defendant and denied by the court, to which ruling also the defendant excepted. But the Supreme Court and this court following it, have in a long line of cases held that this is not sufficient, but that such exceptions to be available must be preserved in the bill of exceptions certified by the trial judge. From some of the earlier cases it might be argued that this necessity for the preservation of exceptions to the finding and judgment in a bill of exceptions in a case tried by the court without the intervention of a jury, related only to questions arising on the sufficiency of the evidence, or on the giving or refusing of instructions. Thus, in Martin v. Foulke, 114 Ill. 206, Mr. Justice Mulkey said that the rule is inflexible, that in order to take advantage of any improper ruling of the court pending the trial of a cause, which does not relate to the pleadings or appear on the face of the judgment itself\ the objection to be available in an appellate tribunal, must be preserved by a proper bill of exceptions. In. Firemen’s Insurance Co. v. Peck, 126 Ill. 493, Mr. Justice Baker said: “ We are strenuously urged by counsel for appellant, to * * * hold that if the proper motions and exceptions appear in the judgment order or order allowing an appeal, as made up by the clerk and certified by him, then it is not essential they should appear in the bill of exceptions signed and sealed by the judge. Were the question an open one, we might be inclined so to hold; but the rule now objected to is a settled rule of practice in this state, and has been announced and followed for so long a time and in so many cases, that it ought not to be departed from.”

But in Bailey v. Smith, 168 Ill. 84, Mr. Justice Cartwright, delivering the opinion of the court, placed the rule on the basis of a construction of the Practice Act, and declared it to be no technical rule established by decisions merely, but a legislative enactment which the courts have no right to ignore or change. Section 60 of the Practice Act,” he says, “ authorizing an assignment of error upon the finding and judgment of the court in such cases, is as follows: ‘ Exceptions taken to decisions of the court, upon the trial of causes in which the parties agree that both matters of law and fact may be tried by the court, and in appeal cases, tried by the court without the intervention of a jury, shall be deemed and held to have been properly taken and allowed, and the party excepting may assign for error before the Supreme Court any decision ,so excepted to, whether such exception relates to receiving improper or rejecting proper testimony, or to the final judgment of the court upon the law and evidence.i It is only a decision so excepted to that can be assigned for error, and the exception can only be taken and preserved by means of a bill of exceptions.” This language is followed and approved in the late case of Jones v. Milford, 208 Ill. 621.

The objections urged to the judgment at bar bj*" the appellant amount practically to these three: first, that there is no sufficient evidence in the record upon which the appellant could be held liable; secondly, that as the record shows that the suit was begun in assumpsit jointly against two defendants, The Grand Pacific Hotel Company and Albert E. Glennie, and no dismissal appears of record as to Albert E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 Ill. App. 89, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grand-pacific-hotel-co-v-pinkerton-illappct-1905.