Loew v. Krauspe

150 N.E. 683, 320 Ill. 244
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1926
DocketNo. 16991. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 150 N.E. 683 (Loew v. Krauspe) 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
Loew v. Krauspe, 150 N.E. 683, 320 Ill. 244 (Ill. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

Edward C. Loew brought an action of assumpsit against Harry F. Krauspe in the circuit court of Cook county, laying the damages at $5590. The suit was placed, when brought, on calendar No. 4, which was then Judge Scanlan’s calendar. After defendant filed a plea and affidavit of merits of his defense the cause was placed on the short-cause calendar. It was called as a short-cause case February 18, 1924, and no one appearing for defendant, a jury was empaneled, evidence heard and a verdict and judgment rendered for plaintiff for $4000. After the term had adjourned at which the judgment was rendered an execution was issued, which was served on defendant in April. Thereupon defendant filed a motion, supported by affidavits, under section 89 of the Practice act, to set aside the judgment on the ground that its entry resulted from an error of fact. Counter-affidavits were filed by plaintiff, and the court allowed the motion to set the judgment aside. The plaintiff below appealed to the Appellate Court, which court reversed the judgment of the circuit court. This court granted the petition of defendant below for a writ of certiorari. The parties will hereafter be referred to as plaintiff and defendant, as they were in the trial court.

The parties have filed elaborate briefs and reply briefs, but we believe the material merits of the controversy are confined to reasonably narrow limits.

The affidavit to place the case on the short-cause calendar was filed January 25, 1924, and a notice and copy of the affidavit were served on defendant the same day. No contention is made as to the manner in which the case was caused to be placed on the short-cause calendar. It was on the short-cause calendar February n before Judge Swanson but was not noted for trial on the call that day and was not tried, as the judge was engaged in trying a case which he had entered upon the previous week but had not concluded. The case was on the short-cause calendar and noted on the trial call for February 18, when, as we have stated, it was tried in the absence of defendant and judgment rendered against him.

Defendant contends that there are three errors of fact which caused the judgment to be, entered and which would not have been entered if the court had known of their existence: (i) The unauthorized act of the clerk in putting the case on the trial call for February 18 when it had been set for trial on the short-cause calendar February n; (2) the unauthorized act of the minute clerk in placing the case on Judge Swanson’s trial call when it should have been on the trial call of Judge McGoorty; (3) that when the case was not called or tried February 11 it constituted a continuance, which resulted in taking it from the short-cause calendar, and it could not be restored without filing a new affidavit and service of notice. Plaintiff’s affidavit in opposition to the motion stated, and it is not disputed, that defendant’s attorneys were subscribers to the Law Bulletin; that the call of all cases to be heard by Judge Swanson was published in the Law Bulletin on February 16, the same as the call sheet made out by the clerk.

As we understand the facts, when this action was begun it was placed on calendar No. 4, which was the calendar of Judge Scanlan prior to his assignment to hear special chancery cases. In July, 1923, and before the commencement of this suit, under the authority of the rules of the circuit court of Cook county the executive committee made an order assigning Judge Swanson, after August 1, 1923, to hear short causes. Judge Scanlan was later assigned to hear special chancery causes, and in December an order was made by the executive committee transferring common law calendar No. 4 to Judge McGoorty, and it was repeated in this order that Judge Swanson was assigned to hear short causes.

Section 27 of the Practice act provides that upon any party or his attorney filing an affidavit that he believes the trial of a suit will not occupy more than one hour, and upon ten days’ previous notice to the other party or his attorney,the cause shall be placed upon the short-cause calendar. Section 28 provides for the designation of one day a week for the trial of cases upon the short-cause calendar and such cases shall be tried and disposed of in their order upon the calendar, and the short-cause calendar shall be a continuous calendar, and suits once placed upon it shall remain thereon until disposed of in their order. Section 30 provides that a suit upon the short-cause calendar may be passed or continued “for good cause shown,” the same as other suits, and if so passed or continued it shall lose its place up.on the calendar.

The rules legally authorized the action of the executive committee of the circuit court in assigning the judges and transferring the different calendars, including the assignment of Judge Swanson to hear cases on the short-cause calendar. The orders of the executive committee in that respect were not contrary to any statute. Notice of these transfers and assignments were ordered to be printed and distributed among the members of the bar generally, and were also published in the 'have Bulletin. Defendant knew, or by the exercise of reasonable care might have known, of these orders, and there is no merit in the contention that the case should have been on Judge Scanlan’s calendar after it was placed on the short-cause calendar, or upon Judge McGoorty’s calendar. Defendant knew, or had reasonable opportunity to have known after the case was placed on the short-cause calendar, the cases on that calendar were transferred to Judge Swanson. The earliest date after the case was placed on the short-cause calendar that it could have been placed upon the trial call was February 11, but it was not noted on the trial call for that day, and could not have been reached for the reason Judge Swanson was engaged in the trial of a case he had entered upon the week previous but had not completed on Monday, February 11. Under the statute, cases placed upon the short-cause calendar shall remain thereon until disposed of. Common law rule 5 of the circuit court provides that Monday of each week is set apart and assigned as the day for the trial of actions on the short-cause calendar, and cases not reached for trial on the Monday designated shall stand continued until the following Monday. This cause was designated on the trial call of Judge Swanson for February 18 and notice of it was published in the Law Bulletin of February 16, and notice was published in the same publication on February 18 that judgment had been rendered in favor of plaintiff for $4000. Defendant’s attorneys were subscribers to the Law Bulletin, and their clerk who had charge of the trial docket in their office made affidavit that he read the calls published February 8 and 9 but did not find this cause noted; that he did not read the Law Bulletin of February 15 or 16, did not know the case was on the call for February 18, and did not inform defendant’s attorneys (his employers) that the case was noted for trial February 18. The abstract and record show one of defendant’s attorneys stated on the hearing of the motion that his docket clerk had made a “bull” and the fault was entirely in his office; that all notices were taken to the docket clerk, but said clerk had “slipped up, and that is all there is to it.” He further said that he was not personally to blame but that his office was, and he was responsible for his office.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
150 N.E. 683, 320 Ill. 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loew-v-krauspe-ill-1926.