Hunter W. Finch & Co. v. Zenith Furnace Co.

92 N.E. 521, 245 Ill. 586
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 92 N.E. 521 (Hunter W. Finch & Co. v. Zenith Furnace Co.) 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
Hunter W. Finch & Co. v. Zenith Furnace Co., 92 N.E. 521, 245 Ill. 586 (Ill. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellee, a corporation of this State, brought this action of assumpsit by attachment against the appellant, a corporation of the State of Minnesota, in the superior court of Cook county, and a debtor of the defendant was summoned as garnishee. The defendant was served by publication and appeared and filed a plea of the general issue and entered into a recognizance in accordance with the Attachment act, conditioned for the payment of any judgment and costs that might be rendered, whereupon the attachment was dissolved and the garnishee discharged. The declaration contained three counts, alleging a failure of the defendant to perform a contract in writing dated May 2, 1905, by which it agreed to sell, and the plaintiff agreed to buy, estimated tonnage of 50,000 tons of Ella coal to be loaded at the defendant’s docks, which were at Duluth, Minnesota, and the coal to be taken through the year ending March 31, 1906, in as nearly monthly installments as market conditions would permit. When the agreed selling price of Youghiogheny lump coal at the docks was three dollars a commission of ten cents per ton was to be paid to the plaintiff, and thereafter any premium obtained above three dollars for the coal was to be divided, three-fifths to the defendant and two-fifths to the plaintiff. The contract was subject to strikes, shortage of cars or other conditions beyond the control of the parties and the cars were to be supplied by the defendant. After filing the plea of the general issue the defendant obtained leave to file an additional plea, which was demurred to and the demurrer was confessed and leave was given to file a third plea instanter. Under that leave a plea was filed setting up a failure of the plaintiff to comply with the laws of this State relating to foreign corporations doing business in this State, and a like failure of the plaintiff to comply with statutes of Minnesota requiring certain things to be done by foreign corporations doing business in that State. This plea was demurred to and the demurrer was sustained by the court. The defendant then obtained leave to file a further plea, and did so, setting out the contract in the plea, averring performance and setting up a shortage of cars as a reason for not delivering the full amount. The court sustained a demurrer to this plea, which set up, among other things, that the matters of defense sought to be availed of, if otherwise admissible, would be admissible under the general issue. A trial resulted in a verdict and judgment against the defendant for $10,200, and the Appellate Court for the First District affirmed the judgment.

A motion was made to strike from the record a part of the bill of exceptions, and the motion was reserved to the hearing.

At the June term, 1907, of the superior court the defendant entered its motion to dismiss the suit for want of jurisdiction of defendant and of the subject matter, and in support of the motion offered in evidence the articles of incorporation of the defendant, with evidence that it never transacted any business in this State nor complied with the laws authorizing foreign corporations to do business in this State, and also the articles of incorporation of plaintiff as a corporation of this State, with evidence that it never complied with the statute of Minnesota authorizing foreign corporations to do business in that State. After hearing the evidence the court expressed some doubt upon the question, but said that his impression was against the motion. The attorney for defendant inquired whether the court held the judgment on the motion in reserve, whereupon the court said, “I will overrule it for the present,” and the defendant noted an exception. No bill of exceptions was taken at that time and no extension of time was asked for or given for a bill of exceptions. After the trial, which took place at the July term, a bill of exceptions was asked for and time was given for filing the same. The bill of exceptions contains the proceedings at the June term. A bill of exceptions must be taken at the term when the rulings excepted to are made or within such time as the court may at that term grant for the purpose. (Harris v. People, 138 Ill. 63; Wabash St. Louis and Pacific Railway Co. v. People, 106 id. 652; Village of Franklin Park v. Franklin, 228 id. 591; City of Chicago v. Hulbert, 235 id. 204.) When the bill of exceptions was being settled the plaintiff objected to having the matter in question included, but the court overruled the objection and refused to strike out such matter. A motion was made in the Appellate Court to expunge that part of the bill of exceptions, but the motion was denied, and it is now contended that the question cannot be raised by a motion here because no cross-errors were assigned in the Appellate Court. Cross-errors are not necessary to raise a question as to what is a proper part of the record in a cause, and it is proper to have that question determined on motion. The motion is sustained, and the proceedings at the June term recited in the bill of exceptions are expunged from the record.

Arguments are presented to this court that the defendant was excused from delivering the full amount of coal named in the contract by reason of a shortage of cars at the mine in Pennsylvania where it expected to procure the coal, and because the mine failed to produce as much coal as the defendant had contracted for, and the plaintiff did not prove damages to the amount assessed by the jury; but these are questions of fact finally disposed of by the judgment of the Appellate Court and are not proper subjects of controversy here.

It is assigned for error that the court sustained the demurrers to the third and fourth pleas. The defendant did not stand by the third plea but took leave to plead over and filed the fourth plea, which was a waiver of a right to question the ruling on the demurrer to the third plea. (People v. Core, 85 Ill. 248.) The fourth plea, which was filed under the leave, amounted to the general issue, and there was no error in sustaining the demurrer on that ground. Mosher v. Rogers, 117 Ill. 446.

It is argued that the judgment ought to be reversed because the court had no jurisdiction of the person of the defendant or of the subject matter and acquired no jurisdiction by service of the garnishee. The court had jurisdiction of the person of the defendant by its voluntary appearance and by filing the plea of the general issue and entering- into the recognizance to pay any judgment that might be recovered. So far as the subject matter is concerned, the argument is that the court had no jurisdiction because the defendant had never complied with the foreign corporation laws of this State and could not have brought a suit here. That is an incorrect notion as to the rights of the defendant, since our foreign corporation laws have no reference to a resort to the courts of this State to recover a contract liability. (Mandel v. Swan Land Co. 154 Ill. 177.) The defendant could have sued its debtor, the garnishee, in the courts of this State without complying with such foreign corporation laws or having an agent in this State. (Spry Lumber Co. v. Chappell, 184 Ill. 539; Alpena Cement Co. v. Jenkins & Reynolds Co. 244 id. 354.) The garnishee being liable to suit by the defendant for the collection of its debt and being subject to the process of the courts of this State, the debt could be reached under the Attachment act. Lancashire Ins. Co. v. Corbetts, 165 Ill. 592.

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.E. 521, 245 Ill. 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunter-w-finch-co-v-zenith-furnace-co-ill-1910.