Ilg v. Burbank

59 Ill. App. 291, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 615
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 28, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 59 Ill. App. 291 (Ilg v. Burbank) 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
Ilg v. Burbank, 59 Ill. App. 291, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 615 (Ill. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Appellee ivas sheriff of Winnebago county and as such received a writ of attachment in favor of Fuller & Fuller Co. against Joseph E. Ilg. On June 27,1894, he went with his deputy, Peter Anderson, to the house where the defendant in the writ and the appellant, his daughter, and his son resided and gained admission by knocking at the door. They were admitted by appellant and upon being seated appellee told her that he had come up to levy on the property in the house. She claimed the property, and cried and begged him not to take it, saying that some of the articles had been her mother’s and were valued very highly for that reason. He levied on all the property in the house, carpets, beds, dishes and general furniture, against her protests, and insisted upon taking the property away unless a custodian was placed in the house in charge of it. She consented to have the custodian rather than to have it removed, and appellee put Anderson there as such custodian, and kept him or some other person there from that time until July 17, 1894. In the meantime she told the custodian that her attorney said for her to lock up the house and for him to get out of there. She said that it was her property and she wanted to lock up. The custodian said that he would not go and that she could send for the attorney to come over and put him out. The next day, on Thursday, she told him again to leave. Her attorney also told appellee that he had no right there and should vacate. There was a trial of the right of property in the County Court, except as to a desk and penny slot machine not claimed by appellant, and judgment was entered July 17,1894, in her favor, finding that the property was hers, and thereupon the levy was released and the custodian left the house. She brought this suit in trespass for entering her dwelling house and taking the property. The case was tried on issues made by a plea of not guilty and plea of license, and resulted in a verdict and judgment" for appellee.

On the trial the foregoing facts were proved, and all the circumstances of the levy and holding possession were given to the jury in the testimony of defendant and the deputy.

The other evidence before the jury established plaintiff’s ownership and possession of the property levied on. There was no evidence tending to prove a license to commit the trespass by levying on her property. The testimony of defendant and his deputy emphatically contradicted that claim. Both testified that she was alone at the time and that she claimed the property, and begged them in tears not to levy on it. The only claim of license is based on the fact that she preferred to have her property remain in the house in charge of a custodian rather than to have her carpets taken up and the house stripped of all its furniture and housekeeping utensils. Attention is also called to the gentlemanly conduct of the custodians, and that their personal relations with her were pleasant. The custodian in charge slept on the sofa and played cards in the parlor, and she was well satisfied with his conduct while sitting around the house, and so expressed herself. All this evidence was competent on the question of damages, to show that she was not subjected to unnecessary indignity or inconvenience, but had no tendency to prove a license to levy on her goods. The verdict was against the evidence.

The court reiterated to the jury by six different instructions the rule of law that if the property levied on was plaintiff’s and in her possession, the levy was a trespass and defendant was liable. The only objection to them would be the repetition, which does, not seem to have impressed the jury enough to make them adopt the rule. Perhaps some confusion was created in their minds by instructions given at the instance of defendant. The first so given was misleading and upon no issue in the case under the evidence. It assumed to state what would be a license for entering the house in the first instance, June 27,1894, and one of the conditions was that the levy was with the consent, expressed or implied, of the plaintiff. Since there was no evidence tending to prove such consent, and the defendant himself proved that plaintiff was vigorously objecting, the instruction should not have been given. Defendant’s witness, the deputy, had testified that she ordered him on two occasions to vacate the premises, and there was no propriety in leading the jury away to a consideration of questions of how defendant came into the house and the consent to Anderson staying there the night of June 27th, to which date the instruction was limited. The second instruction also related to the original entry. It assumed that the house was the dwelling house of Joseph E. Ilg, and told the jury that the law ivas that defendant had a right to enter it for the purpose of levying his writ. It should not have assumed a fact in controversy. The third instruction after warning the jury not to be influenced by the fact that plaintiff was a girl, nor the fact that her mother was dead, nor the fact that she kept house for her father, proceeded with a statement of legal presumptions where a family live together, receiving mutual favors and bestowing mutual services, as to the gratuitous nature of such services, and as to who is the head of the family, and then informed the jury that the head of a family would not be entitled to any exemptions until he should make a schedule of his property, debts and cash on hand. An instruction should contain a statement of the law applicable to the case, so as to aid the jury in deciding it; and aside from the warnings on the subject of influence, the statements of law had nothing to do with the case. The fourth instruction again submitted the question of plaintiff’s consent to the levy with no evidence to sustain it. The fifth instruction told the jury that under the conditions therein stated defendant would not be liable for entering the house and levying on the desk and penny slot machine of Joseph E. Ilg. This suit was not about the desk or penny slot machine, and the instruction afforded no aid in deciding the case.

It is not to be understood that these instructions contained no correct legal propositions upon the law of trespass, but the issue between the parties under the evidence did not embrace all the law of trespass; that is a proper form of action for seizing property exempt from levy and sale, but this suit was not of that character; and information touching the rights of parties in such a suit was of a disturbing nature. While engaged in sober reflection on the issue in this case the minds of the jury should not be disquieted with the exactions of the law in requiring a schedule in the other kind of suit. So also the question of license may be of importance, but instructions should not be given based on no evidence, or on evidence of permission to enter a house where the license is revocable, and the uncontradicted evidence is that it was revoked.

Plaintiff proved that she was the owner and in possession of the personal property levied on, and while the evidence showed that defendant and his custodians were gentlemanly and considerate in their conduct, and that the custodian contributed to the pleasure and entertainment of plaintiff by playing cinch with her and her guests, it also showed the illegal intrusion upon her possession. Ho reason was shown why she should not have recovered damages in some amount.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 Ill. App. 291, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ilg-v-burbank-illappct-1895.