Johnson v. Von Kettler

66 Ill. 63
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 66 Ill. 63 (Johnson v. Von Kettler) 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
Johnson v. Von Kettler, 66 Ill. 63 (Ill. 1872).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This cause was before the court at a former term, and was reversed, for the reasons stated in the opinion in Wilhelmina Von Kettler v. Johnson et al. 57 Ill. 109.

On the remandment of the cause the defective pleas were amended and the cause was tried on its merits. The jury found the issues for appellee, and assessed his damages at four thousand dollars, of which amount he remitted the sum of two thousand dollars, and the court overruled a motion for a new trial, and entered a judgment on the verdict for two thousand dollars.

One error assigned is, that the court improperly changed the venue of the cause on the application of appellee, after having twice overruled previous motions for the same purpose. If there was error in awarding a change of venue on the third application, appellant is in no condition to avail of it. Having gone to trial in the county to which the cause was sent, without objection, he will be deemed to have waived any irregularity that may have intervened in changing the venue. Hitt v. Allen, 13 Ill. 592.

The proper practice, where a party complains of irregularity in changing the venue, is, to move to remand the cause to the county from which it was sent, and if the motion does not prevail, to take exception, and embody the motion and rulings of the court in a bill of exceptions. This the appellant did not do, and there is nothing before the court on that question to be considered.

Appellee, together with his wife, who was the administratrix of her former deceased husband, were arrested and imprisoned in the common jail of Jo Daviess county, by virtue of process issued by the county court, for contempt in not complying with an order which had been previously entered against the administratrix, requiring her to pay to Julius K. Graves the amount of his claim against the estate of her intestate, which process and order of committal, it is alleged, were issued without authority of law as to appellee, and this action was brought by him to recover damages for false imprisonment.

It is not controverted that appellant filed the affidavit and procured the arrest and imprisonment of appellee, and the most serious question in the case is, whether he can justify his conduct under the order of the county court.

If the court had jurisdiction to commit appellee, although it may have proceeded irregularly, still appellant could justify under its orders, but if there Avas a Avant of jurisdiction, then all persons Avho assisted in procuring the illegal arrest would be liable in trespass for such damages as appellee sustained. Let us see whether the court had jurisdiction.

The proceedings were evidently instituted under the provisions of the 126th section of the Statute of Wills, K. S. 1845.

The proceedings authorized by the 139th section of that statute have no application to the facts of this case. By the l’26th section it is provided that “ if any executor or administrator shall fail or refuse to pay over any moneys or dividend to any person entitled thereto, in pursuance to the order of the court of probate, lawfully made, within thirty days after demand for such money or dividend, the court of probate, on application made, shall attach such delinquent executor or administrator, and may cause him to be imprisoned until he shall comply with the order aforesaid, or until such delinquent is discharged in due course of law.”

It was sought to imprison appellee for the reason that he was the husband of the regularly appointed administratrix, and had taken upon himself the burden of the administration by virtue of his marital rights, and was, in a qualified sense at least, administrator of the estate of George Karman deceased.

Assuming that the position taken by counsel can be maintained, and that appellee received the assets of the estate in the capacity of administrator, still, it was as indispensable, before he could be put in default for non-payment of the claims against the estate, that he should first be required by an order “lawfully made” to pay such claims, as though he had been the actual administrator.

There was, in fact’, no order on appellee to pay the claim of the creditor, Graves. The only cause specified in the statute, in this regard, for which he could be imprisoned, was for the non-compliance with an order of court after the proper demand had been made on him to do so. It is difficult to comprehend on what principle a party can be committed for not complying with an order of court when none has been entered against him. The proposition itself is absurd, and need not be elaborated. It is not sufficient that an order was entered against the administratrix. The appellee was no party to that proceeding, on the record or otherwise. It is no answer to this view to say he may have been actually present in the court room. Ho proceedings were being had against him, and what may have passed orally between him and the judge of the court, and not entered of record, is wholly immaterial.

The question of imprisoning appellee for the non-compliance of the administratrix with the order of the court, is a very different one from that of his pecuniary liability for such neglect. The failure of the administratrix to comply with the order of the court, lawfully made, to pay claims against the estate to parties entitled thereto is, itself, by the express terms of the statute, deemed and taken, in law, to amount to a devastavit, and it might fix the liability of the husband, and at all exrnnts it is quite clear that equity would compel him to deliver up the trust funds in his hands for the benefit of the creditors, or perhaps the same end might be attained by a proceeding against him in the county court under the 90th section of the Statute of Wills.

There is also another fatal defect in the proceedings of the county court affecting the question of jurisdiction. There was no sufficient demand on the administratrix, or appellee, to pay the Graves claim. Indeed there was no demand at all. In the former opinion this was held to be a jurisdictional fact. It is only after the expiration of thirty days after the demand that the party may be imprisoned. The right to imprison at all is only conferred by .the statute, and by its provisions the expiration of thirty days from the demand is made a condition precedent to the issuing of the attachment.

The order required the administratrix to pay the creditor ■ his claim'xvithin thirty days, and she had all that time within xvhich to make payment. No demand could rightfully be made until after the expiration of that period. The only pretense that any demand had been made is, that immediately upon the court announcing its judgment, appellant went up to appellee, his wife standing by his side, and told him the court had made an order on him to pay the judgment to Mr. Graves in thirty days, and he xvanted him to do it. What is said in the former opinion in regard to making the demand after" the entry of the order to pay, was said in regard to a case xvhere the court had ordered the immediate payment of the claim, and not in reference to the case xvhere a day in the future had been fixed for payment.

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66 Ill. 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-von-kettler-ill-1872.