Kripner v. Lincoln

54 Ill. App. 675, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 205
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 26, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 54 Ill. App. 675 (Kripner v. Lincoln) 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
Kripner v. Lincoln, 54 Ill. App. 675, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 205 (Ill. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Judgments by confession were entered against the plaintiff in error, and two others, as maker of two promissory notes. '

The notes and powers of attorney to confess judgment were substantially alike except as to amounts and dates. The one earliest in date was as follows:

$100. Chicago, August 18, 1893.
One year after date, we jointly and severally promise to pay to Rad Lincoln, Cis. 52, C. S. P. S., or order, the sum of $100, with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum, payable after date, annually.
Value received.
Matej Kripner,
Katerina Kripner.
Martin Kripner.

Know all men by these presents, that, whereas, the subscribers, Matej Kripner and Martin Kripner, are justly indebted to Rad Lincoln, C. 52, C. S. P. S., upon a certaipromissory note, bearing even date herewith, for the sum of $100 and no cents, made payable to said Ead Lincoln, Cis. 52, C. S. P. S., or order, and due one year after date thereof.

Kow, therefore, in consideration of the premises, and of the sum of $1, to us in hand paid by the said Rad Lincoln, Cis. 52, C. S. P. S., the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, we do hereby make, constitute and appoint Adolph Kraus, or any attorney in any court of record, to be our true and lawful attorney, irrevocable, for us and in our names, place and stead, to appear before any court of record, in term time or vacation, in any of "the States or Territories of the United States, at any time after maturity, to waive service of process, and confess a judgment in favor of the said Rad Lincoln, Cis. 52, C. S. P. S., or his or their assignees, upon the said note for the above sum, or for as much as appears to be due according to the tenor and effect of said note, with interest thereon, together with costs; also for $10 attorney’s fees, to be added to the amount due on entering up judgment; also to file a cognovit for the amount that may be so due, with an agreement therein that no writ of error or appeal shall be prosecuted upon the judgment entered by virtue hereof, nor any bill in equity filed to interfere in any manner with the operation of such judgment, and to release all errors that may intervene in the entering up of such judgment, or issuing execution thereon, and also to consent to immediate execution upon such judgment, hereby ratifying and confirming all that our said attorney may do by virtue hereof.

Witness our hands and seals this 18th day of August, A. D. 1883.

In the presence of Matej Kripner, [seal.]

Chas. Drabek. Martin Kripner, [seal.]

Katerina Kripner.

Afterward, leave was given to Martin Kripner and Katerina Kripner to plead in said causes—the judgments to stand as security—and pleas were filed.

She pleaded the general issue verified, and a special plea. To the special plea a demurrer ivas sustained, and the cause went to trial on the plea of Katerina Kripner, as sole defendant, of the general issue verified, the other defendants having died in the meantime.

The verified general issue put the execution of the notes in issue, and testimony on the part of the plaintiff was heard on that issue, and such testimony had some slight tendency, also, to show that she had previously admitted her liability on the notes, as a maker of them.

The defendant, Katerina Kripner, the plaintiff in error in thisjcourt, testifying in her own behalf, denied that she signed the notes, or had ever admitted her liability on them. Then, on cross-examination, she was shown what purported to be her signature to the verification of her plea of the general issue, and asked if that was" her signature.

After answering that she could not see it, and that she had not her spectacles with her, she testified that she did not sign anything; that she did not know whether the signature was hers or not, and that she had not signed her name to any paper since she sold her house ten years ago. And, on re-examination by her counsel, she testified positively that she did not sign the verification.

Thereupon, on motion of plaintiff’s counsel, the court struck her verified plea of non-assump>sit from the files. Thereupon her counsel moved for leave to verify the plea then and there, which was denied, and the court, refusing all instructions offered by either party, directed the jury to bring in a verdict for the plaintiff for the amount of the principal and interest of the notes, and judgment was entered on such verdict.

It was error to strike the plea from the files. The defendant was entitled to have her plea stand as an unverified one, and thereunder to make any defense open to her under an unverified plea of the general issue.

While it is apparent that the defendant is an ignorant woman, and advanced in years, and quite likely, testified recklessly, although testifying, as she did, through an interpreter, it is not improbable that she testified mistakenly; her testimony would have afforded justification for striking out the verification of her plea, but did not justify the order striking the plea itself from the files, which was, in effect, visiting ]3unishment upon her, a thing the court could not do, notwithstanding her derelictions. Gordon v. Gordon, 141 Ill. 160; Ibid. 41 Ill. App. 137.

The plea of the general issue unsworn to, would have enabled her to show that she was not bound by the notes, although it would not have enabled her to deny their execution.

Although a defendant shall admit the execution by himself of a promissory note he will be permitted to deny that, as executed, it became his personal obligation, and this without a verified plea. Frankland v. Johnson, 147 Ill. 520; Stevenson v. Farnsworth, 2 Gil. 715.

It will be observed by looking at the note and warrant of attorney copied above, that Matej Kripner and Martin Kripner affixed their names on the right hand side of the bottom of the instrument, and that the name of the plaintiff in error, Katerina Kripner, is placed on the left hand side of the bottom.

It will be further seen that, although the three names are affixed in the usual place at the bottom of the warrant of attorney, two of them with a seal and hers without, the recital in the body of the warrant of attorney is that “ the subscribers, Mate] Kripner and Martin Kripner are55 the persons indebted upon the note.

In Camden v. McKoy, 3 Scam. 436, it is said, on page 447:

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Related

Kripner v. Lincoln
66 Ill. App. 532 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1896)

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Bluebook (online)
54 Ill. App. 675, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kripner-v-lincoln-illappct-1894.