LaSalle Opera House Co. v. LaSalle Amusement Co.

124 N.E. 454, 289 Ill. 194
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1919
DocketNo. 12682
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 124 N.E. 454 (LaSalle Opera House Co. v. LaSalle Amusement 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
LaSalle Opera House Co. v. LaSalle Amusement Co., 124 N.E. 454, 289 Ill. 194 (Ill. 1919).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

The Goes Lithographing Company recovered a judgment on June 4, 1916, in the municipal court of Chicago, against the LaSalle Opera House Company for $1348.18 and costs, and on March 6, 1917, filed with the clerk of that court the affidavit required by section 1 of the Garnishment act, whereupon a garnishee summons was issued and served on the LaSalle Amusement Company. The garni-' shee answered, denying any indebtedness to the judgment debtor or the possession of any property belonging to it, and the judgment creditor took issue on the answer. The cause was heard by the court without a jury, and at the close of the evidence the garnishee moved that it be discharged, but the court overruled the motion and rendered judgment against the garnishee, for the use of the judgment debtor, for, the amount of its judgment. The Appellate Court, having affirmed the judgment, granted a certificate of importance, and the garnishee has appealed.

The LaSalle Opera House Company was engaged in conducting a theater in projperty for which it held a lease. In 1913 it issued $40,000 of bonds, upon which it defaulted in 1914. Besides the bonds it owed other debts which were a lien upon its property. On June 9, 1914, the LaSalle Opera House Company sold its lease and all its furniture, fixtures, equipment and tangible property, together with the good will of the theatrical business, its trade-mark and trade names, and all other property which it owned, to the LaSalle Amusement Company for the consideration of $50,000, which was paid to it by the purchaser. The Goes Lithographing Company was at the time a creditor of the LaSalle Opera House Company and no notice was given to it of the sale. The LaSalle Opera House Company had no other assets. It paid its bonds with the purchase money received and applied the residue of the purchase price to the payment of other debts which were liens upon the property.

The principal question is whether the Bulk Sales act, which was passed in 1913, (Laws of 1913, p. 258,) applies to this sale, and the appellant argues that the personal property employed by a non-trading or non-mercantile corporation which is not the subject of purchase and sale in the ordinary course of its business is not governed, as to the transfer thereof, by the requirements of the Bulk Sales act. We had this question under consideration at the last term in the case of Weskalnies v. Hesterman, 288 Ill. 199, where it was claimed that the sale by a farmer and dairyman of all the live stock, agricultural implements and farm machinery used on his farm was not subject to the provisions of the Bulk Sales act; that the act did not apply to farmers but only to those engaged in selling merchandise, commodities and other wares. The conclusion reached was that the act applied to any sale in bulk of the major part or all of the goods and chattels of the vendor’s business otherwise than in the ordinary course of trade and in the regular and usual prosecution of the vendor’s business.

The appellant insists that the judgment should be reversed because the record does not show an execution was issued on the judgment against the LaSalle Opera House Company and returned “no property found” before the issue of the garnishee summons, as required by section i of the Garnishment act. The record of a judgment, the issue of an execution, its return “no property found;” and the affidavit of the plaintiff or other credible person that the defendant has no property, within the knowledge of the affiant, in his possession liable to execution, and that the affiant has just reason to believe that any other person is indebted to the defendant or has effects or estate of the defendant in his possession, custody of charge, are conditions precedent to the issuance of a garnishee summons. These acts are indispensable to maintain the proceeding, which is a statutory mode of obtaining execution after the means known to the common law have been employed and failed, and can only be resorted to after the requirements of the statute have been complied with as conditions to issuing the process. (Michigan Central Railroad Co. v. Keoliane, 31 Ill. 144.) In the absence of any one of the required conditions the court has no jurisdiction of the proceeding.

The appellee meets this objection by referring to the affidavit for the summons against the garnishee and the fact that the bill of exceptions does not contain all the evidence, and argues that therefore the presumption is that there was sufficient evidence to warrant the court in finding the issue and return of the execution.' The affidavit does state that an execution was issued and returned “no property found,” but this is not evidence of the fact. The statute does not require an affidavit in regard to the issue and return of the execution but does require that the execution shall have been actually issued and returned, and it has not made the affidavit evidence of that fact. The question of . the issue and return of the execution was not material to the trial of the issue as to the truth of the discovery made by the garnishee, and therefore no evidence on that question could have been introduced on the trial of that issue or would have had a proper place in the bill of exceptions. Garnishment is a statutory proceeding, in which no presumption of jurisdiction is indulged but a compliance with the statutory requirements must appear. The proceeding being a means of procuring satisfaction of the original judgment, the garnishee .may inquire into the validity of the proceedings by which the court acquired jurisdiction of the judgment debtor. (Kirk v. Dearth Agency, 171 Ill. 207.) All portions of the record in the original proceeding having a bearing on the question of the jurisdiction of the court in rendering a judgment are part of the record in the garnishee proceedings. (Dennison v. Taylor, 142 Ill. 45.) The execution issued and its return are not part of the common law record in the original proceeding, but they, together with the affidavit for the summons against the garnishee, are the means of - acquiring jurisdiction in the garnishee proceedings, and are therefore a part of the record which must be shown to sustain a judgment against the garnishee. The absence of them from the record is fatal to the judgment.

The appellant contends that the property sold was subject to liens to its full value, which were paid by the vendor out of the purchase money; that there was therefore nothing of value which the creditor could have reached, and that the liens should not be regarded as extinguished by their payment without the right of the appellant to subrogation. It claims the benefit of the equitable principle that when a conveyance of property has been avoided by creditors of a grantor it may be upheld in favor of a grantee who is free ■from actual fraud to the extent of the actual consideration, and he may be subrogated to the rights, of the holders of liens whose incumbrances he- has paid. (Phelps v. Curts, 80 Ill. 109; Lobstein v. Lehn, 120 id. 549; Lewis v. Wilkinson, 113 N. Y. 485; Adams v. Young, 200 Mass. 588.) In the last case cited this rule was applied to a sale ipade in violation of the Bulk Sales act of Massachusetts, and it was said that the merely constructive fraud of a purchaser would not prevent him from being protected in this manner if he had not himself actually participated in the fraud.

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Bluebook (online)
124 N.E. 454, 289 Ill. 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lasalle-opera-house-co-v-lasalle-amusement-co-ill-1919.