Marquette National Fire Insurance v. Minneapolis Fire & Marine Insurance

233 Ill. App. 102, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 169
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 30, 1924
DocketGen. No. 28,317
StatusPublished

This text of 233 Ill. App. 102 (Marquette National Fire Insurance v. Minneapolis Fire & Marine Insurance) 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
Marquette National Fire Insurance v. Minneapolis Fire & Marine Insurance, 233 Ill. App. 102, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 169 (Ill. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Thomson

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff company brought this action of assumpsit against the defendant company in the Superior Court of Cook county, to recover the amount of a loss, basing its claim on an alleged reinsurance contract. By the prcecipe filed, the plaintiff directed that summons be directed to the sheriff of Peoria county, for execution. That was done and the summons was duly returned by the sheriff of Peoria county, as executed on the defendant “by leaving a true and correct copy thereof with William E. Cable, the agent of the said defendant, Minneapolis Fire & Marine Insurance Co., a corporation. The President of said defendant, Minneapolis Fire & Marine Insurance Co., a corporation not being found in my County.”

The defendant failing to appear, default was entered, and plaintiff’s damages were assessed and judgment entered against the defendant, on February 16, 1.922, for $1,558.51 and costs. Thereafter on July 26, 1922, at a subsequent term of the Superior Court, the defendant filed its special appearance and a motion in writing, being a motion in the nature of a writ of error coram nobis, under the provisions of Section 89 of the Practice Act [Cahill’s Ill. St. ch. 110, ¶ 89], asking that the default and judgment entered against it be vacated and set aside, setting forth specifically, the grounds on which the motion was based. The trial court, after a hearing, denied the defendant’s motion. Thereafter, the defendant sued out this writ of error.

The defendant was sued, and is described in the plaintiff’s declaration as a foreign insurance corporation. It is admitted that the plaintiff purported to get service of process on the defendant under and by virtue of the provisions of our statute as to the service of process on such corporations. Ill. Sts. ch. 73, par. 150. It is there provided that any foreign insurance company, desiring to transact insurance business by any agent or agents in this State, “shall first appoint an attorney in this State on whom process of law can be served, and file in the office of the insurance superintendent a written instrument duly signed and sealed, certifying such appointment, which shall continue until another attorney be substituted * * * and any process issued by any court of record in this State and served upon such attorney by the proper officer of the county in which such attorney may reside, or may be found, shall be deemed a sufficient service of process upon such company, but service of process upon such company may also be made in any other manner provided by law.”

The return of the sheriff of Peoria county is not to the effect that he served the summons in this case by leaving a copy with the attorney of the defendant, who had been duly appointed by it,.by its certificate filed in the office of the insurance superintendent of this State, but merely that the service was by leaving a copy with “William E. Gable, the agent of said defendant.” The prcecipe was filed by the plaintiff in this case on December 7, 1921, and the return of the sheriff of Peoria county was under date of December 13, 1921.

One of the grounds for the defendant’s motion to vacate the judgment, as set forth by it in the motion was as follows:

“The said William E. Gable, upon whom the supposed service was made by the Sheriff of Peoria County is not and was not on December 7th, 1921, or any time thereafter, nor was he for a long time before that date any agent of the defendant corporation, but to the contrary the said William E. Gable has been no agent of the defendant corporation since February, 1915; that since the year 1915, the defendant corporation has annually filed a sworn statement with the Insurance Department of the State of Illinois, in which said sworn statement the said defendant corporation has named its agent for service in the State of Illinois; that by statutes and regulations of the Insurance Department of the State of Illinois said defendant’s license extends for a period of twelve months only; that the said defendant has not discontinued doing business in Illinois at any time before or after the year 1910; that at the time of the supposed service of summons upon it by the said Sheriff of Peoria County, Illinois, and from thence hitherto said defendant has continued to be licensed to do business by and in the State of Illinois by annually filing such sworn statement with the said Insurance Department of the State of Illinois, and that in each of the said sworn statements so filed said defendant did name its agent for service; that on and after March 26th, 1915, William E. Gable was no agent of this defendant, and was not in the said sworn statement filed by the said defendant with the said Insurance Department in any year thereafter named as agent for service by the said defendant, but that subsequent thereto and until March 1st, 1917, William E. Fish was so named as agent for service by defendant; that thereafter until November 1st, 1921, Fred S. James & Company was named in the said annual return as agent for service by the defendant; and that thereafter to the present time Harvey C. Wetzel was named as agent for service by the said defendant in said sworn statement filed with the Insurance Department of the State of Illinois; and that the supposed service upon the said William E. Gable was not any lawful service of process upon this defendant in the month of December, 1921.”

No issue of fact was made on the defendant’s motion, by any plea filed by the plaintiff, denying the truth of the alleged errors of fact, as set up in that motion. Where such a motion is interposed by a defendant, after the judgment term, the plaintiff may raise an issue of fact upon it, by filing a plea denying the truth of the error in fact, alleged by the motion, or the legal sufficiency of the motion may be raised by demurrer to the motion. Smyth v. Fargo, 307 Ill. 300. The only point made by the plaintiff in this court, in support of the action of the trial court, is one of law, to the effect that the parties to a suit at law are conclusively bound by the sheriff’s return, after the judgment term has ended, and that the motion to vacate, filed by the defendant, is insufficient on its face, for it fails to set forth any error in fact, sufficient to support such a motion. Apparently, from the record, that was also plaintiff’s position in the trial court, thé court treating that position as a demurrer ore terms.

The practice, upon the motion which has been substituted by the statute for the writ of error coram nobis, has been pointed out by the Supreme Court in a number of cases. Mitchell v. King, 187 Ill. 452; Cramer v. Illinois Commercial Men’s Ass’n, 260 Ill. 516; People v. Noonan, 276 Ill. 430; Chapman v. North American Life Ins. Co., 292 Ill. 179; Marabia v. Mary Thompson Hospital, 309 Ill. 147. While the statute has substituted a motion for the common-law writ of error coram nobis, these cases hold that the essentials of the proceedings upon the motion are the same as they were at common law upon the writ. In the case last cited, the Supreme Court held that the errors of fact which could be made the basis of a writ of error at common law and which can now be made the basis of a motion to set aside and vacate a judgment under section 89 [Cahill’s Ill. St. ch.

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Related

Mitchell v. King
187 Ill. 452 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1900)
Cramer v. Illinois Commercial Men's Ass'n
103 N.E. 459 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1913)
People ex rel. O'Connell v. Noonan
114 N.E. 928 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1916)
Chapman v. North American Life Insurance
126 N.E. 732 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1920)
Smyth v. Fargo
138 N.E. 610 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1923)
Adams & Pigott Co. v. Aleen
310 Ill. 119 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
233 Ill. App. 102, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marquette-national-fire-insurance-v-minneapolis-fire-marine-insurance-illappct-1924.