Long v. Frank

117 Ill. App. 207, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 216
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 28, 1904
DocketGen. No. 11,489
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 117 Ill. App. 207 (Long v. Frank) 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
Long v. Frank, 117 Ill. App. 207, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 216 (Ill. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

On April 17, 1899. Bernhardt J. Frank began an action of replevin before Olaf F. Severson, a justice of the peace of Cook county, against Julius Moses, James W. Long and Mamie Corcoran (misdescribed until a subsequent amendment as Mamie Coughlin). All parties defendant were finally personally served. The property described in the writ was demanded of them and they refused to return it. On May 1, 1899, the suit was tried before Justice Severson, and after the evidence was heard the suit was dismissed on motion of the plaintiff as to the defendant Julius Moses, and a judgment in trover for $200 and costs was entered by the justice against James W. Long and Mamie Corcoran.

On May 20, 1899, James W. Long took an appeal from this judgment before the justice, filing his appeal bond with said justice. On August 24, 1899, the appeal bond of Long and the transcript from the justice’s docket, with the other papers in the case, were filed in the clerk’s office of the Circuit Court. LTo summons was issued from the Circuit Court to any other party to said suit. On June 27, 1901, the cause being called for trial and the defendant Long failing to prosecute his appeal, an order was entered by the Circuit Court dismissing the appeal at the said defendant’s costs, with procedendo.

On June 15,1903, Long entered his motion in the Circuit Court to set aside the order dismissing his appeal, and the judgment for costs against him in said Circuit Court, and said motion was overruled and denied. At the same time an order was entered on motion of the attorney for Frank, amending all papers and proceedings “ herein” “ by discontinuing as to defendant Mamie Corcoran without costs.” From both the orders—th'e one denying the motion to set aside dismissal and judgment, and the one allowing plaintiff Frank to discontinue against Mamie Corcoran—the defendant Long prayed an appeal to this court, which was allowed. This appeal was not perfected, but by writ of error the record in the cause in the Circuit Court was brought by Long to this court in October, 1903. In this court the plaintiff in error assigns as error, in various forms, the dismissal by the Circuit Court at his costs of the appeal on June 27, 1901, and the refusal on June 15, 1903, by said Circuit Court of his motion to vacate said order of .dismissal and said judgment.

With the portion of the order of June 15, 1903, which provided “ that ali papers and proceedings herein be'and the same are hereby amended by discontinuing as to defendant Mamie Corcoran without costs,” this court has nothing to do. Whether it was error on the part of the Circuit Court to make such part of the order, and whether it had jurisdiction in June, 1903, to do so, although apparently suggested in plaintiff in error’s argument as relevant questions, are plainly of no consequence in this proceeding. The question really is, was the order of dismissal and judgment entered June 27,1901, within the power and jurisdiction of the Circuit Court at the time it was made? FTo reason is given or suggested why said order and judgment should be considered improper or erroneous, if the court had jurisdiction at the time to enter them; but the reliance of the plaintiff in error is wholly on the proposition that such jurisdiction did not exist. If the order of June 27, 1901, was not erroneous, it follows, of course, that the refusal of the Circuit Court on June 15, 1903, to vacate or set it aside was proper.

The plaintiff in error urges that under a section of the statutes of Illinois concerning Justices and Constables— which section he quotes in his argument as “ Section 180 of Chapter 79 of Hurd’s Eevised Statutes ”—the Circuit Court in which an appeal from a justice of the peace is pending obtains no jurisdiction over the case unless all the parties to the judgment are brought in, either by personal or constructive service or appearance filed, and that there was no such service on or appearance of Mamie Corcoran in this cause on June 27, 1901.

The clause of the statute in question is section 70 of “An Act to provide for the election and qualification of Justices of the Peace and Constables, and to provide for the jurisdiction and practice of Justices of the Peace in civil cases and fix the duties of Constables, and to repeal certain Acts therein named,” approved April 1, 1872, and in force July 1, 1872. It is as follows:

“ When an appeal shall be taken by one of several parties from the judgment of a justice of the peace, the clerk of the court shall issue a summons against the other parties, notifying them of the appeal in said court, and requiring them to appear and abide by and perform the judgment of the court in the premises, which summons shall be served as other process is served in-appeal cases, and in case such summons shall be returned that parties are not found, the cause shall at the first term of the court be continued, but at the second term may be tried, and the court shall have power to give the same judgment as though all the parties to the judgment had joined in the appeal, unless the appearance of the appellee shall be entered as herein provided.”

On June 26, 1895, the Legislature of Illinois passed, and on July 1, 1895, there went into effect an Act entitled “ An Act to revise the law in relation to Justices of the Peace and Constables.” It is divided into 18 articles, and contains an aggregate of 176 sections. It purports to be a code governing the practice before justices of the peace, their jurisdiction, and the election, tenure and duties of justices and constables. Article 10 treats of appeal and certiorari, and contains the provision that “one or more of several plaintiffs or defendants may appeal or sue out a certiorari without the consent of the others, and all further proceedings shall thereupon be stayed, the same as if all had united in such appeal or certiorari; ” but it does not contain section 70 of the Act of April 1, 1872, nor anything similar thereto.

The Act of June 26, 1895, does not contain any specific or general repealing clause, and because of the view which we take of other matters involved in this clause, we are not called upon to express our. opinion as to whether this revision of the law concerning justices left in force this section in question of the law of 1872.

Counsel for defendant in error make. no ’point in their brief or argument upon the effect of this revision, although it is evident that if the section in question has been repealed by implication, there is no basis for the claims of plaintiff in error in this cause.

Since the passage of the Act of 1895, the Branch Appellate Court has, in at least two cases—Ernst v. Friedl, 93 Ill. App. 5, and Counselman v. Sullivan, 101 Ill. App. 307— treated the section as still in force. But in neither case was the point raised, and we desire again, as we did in Gormley v. Hartray, 105 Ill. App. 628, to call attention to the fact that we are not to be understood to be exoressinv. by implication or otherwise, an opinion that the section involved is now the law of Illinois. But, as we have indicated, our view is, that even on the hypothesis that it is still the law, the plaintiff in error can not successfully maintain his contention here.

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Bluebook (online)
117 Ill. App. 207, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-frank-illappct-1904.