McDonald v. City of Spring Valley

209 Ill. App. 7, 1918 Ill. App. LEXIS 576
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 12, 1918
DocketGen. No. 6,488
StatusPublished

This text of 209 Ill. App. 7 (McDonald v. City of Spring Valley) 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
McDonald v. City of Spring Valley, 209 Ill. App. 7, 1918 Ill. App. LEXIS 576 (Ill. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Carnes

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee, Margaret McDonald, a child 7 years old, brought this action March 27, 1917, by her next friend against the City of Spring Valley, the appellant, to recover damages for an injury to her person alleged to have been caused June 24, 1916, by the negligence of appellant in the care of its streets. She alleged in her declaration service of notice to appellant on March 14, 1917, in attempted compliance with section 2 of our Injuries Act of 1905 (Hurd’s Rev. St. p. 1370, J. & A. ¶ 6190), and further alleged, in attempted avoidance of the provision that such notice must be served within 6 months from the date of the injury, that on account of her tender years she did not know and was not informed of the existence of the statute and because of her physical and mental incapacity it was impossible to give said notice.

Section 2 reads as follows:

“Any person who is about to bring any action or suit at law in any court against any incorporated city, village or town for damages on account of any personal injury shall, within six months from the date of injury, or when the cause of action accrued, either by himself, agent or attorney, file in the office of the city attorney (if there is a city attorney, and also in the office of the city clerk) a statement in writing, signed by such person, his ageiit or attorney, giving the name of the person to whom such cause of action has accrued, the name and residence of person injured, the date- and about the hour of the accident, the place or location where such accident occurred, and the name and address of the attending physician (if any).”

A demurrer was filed on the ground that the declaration showed the plaintiff had failed to comply with the act, and overruled. The defendant electing to abide by its demurrer, a jury was called to assess damages and returned a verdict of $1,000, on which the court, after overruling the defendant’s motions for a new trial and in arrest, entered judgment.

It is conceded by appellee’s counsel, as it must be under numerous decisions of our Supreme Court, that the declaration must show a compliance with the statutory requirement. But they insist no statute can be construed as requiring an impossibility, and cite a number of Illinois cases, including Condon v. City of Chicago, 249 Ill. 596, holding that a construction of a statute which leads to an absurd consequence should be avoided, and say that to require service of notice by a child 7 years old incapable of appointing an agent for that purpose is absurd and the statute if so construed is unconstitutional and void. The contention in the above cited case was' somewhat similar, and the court refused to read an exception into the statute and also held the act constitutional.

The only question presented here is whether the plaintiff was excused from complying with that requirement of the statute; whether the words “any person” used in the act are to be read as qualified by the phrase not under disability, not an infant, or not an infant of so tender years as to be entirely iácapáble of knowing or understanding and citing upon the requirements of law. Appellee argues that at least the last suggested phrase be inserted.

Many statutes prescribing the time within which some act must be performed, as for instance the statute of limitations, contain saving clauses in favor of persons under disability. The law has for a long time been settled that where saving clauses are omitted by the Legislature the courts are powerless to supply them. It was said in Bank of Alabama v. Dalton, 9 How. (U. S.) 521, 528, the Legislature having made no exception, the courts of justice-can make none, as this would be legislation; that the Legislature had made exceptions wherever it was deemed expedient, and the rule is established beyond controversy that the courts cannot add exceptions, and that the court was not aware that the reverse is held in any state in the union. The Supreme Court of Ohio in Powell v. Koehler, 52 Ohio St. 103, 119, quoted from Chancellor Kent in the case of Demarest v. Wynkoop, 3 Johns. Ch. 129, that: “The doctrine of any inherent equity creating an exception as to any disability, where the statute of limitations creates none, has been long, and, I believe, uniformly exploded. General words in the statute must receive a general construction; and if there be no express exception, the court can create none.” Our Supreme Court in Stevenson v. Westfall, 18 Ill. 209, 217, treated the rule that a supposed disability not made an exception in the statute could not be made one by the court as so well established that it required only its statement without citation of authority. We find in the text of 25 Cyc. 1262, that no exception can be claimed in favor of minors in the statutory provision limiting the time for commencing actions given by such statute unless they are expressly mentioned by the statute as excepted. The author supports the text by reference to authorities of several states, as well as Schauble v. Schulz, 69 C. C. A. 581, 137 Fed. 389, holding that the exemptions usually accorded to infants do not rest upon any fundamental doctrine of the law but only upon expressed provisions therefor in the statute, and that it is competent for the Legislature to put infants and adults upon the same footing in this respect, and that such is the effect of a statute containing no saving clause exempting infants. In the late case of Atlanta & W. P. R. Co. v. Coleman, 142 Ga. 94, 82 S. E. 499, the- court cites authorities in support of the-above rule, and gathers from them the proposition that the question whether the statutory limitation applies to infants so that they would not be barred is “not .a matter of fundamental right, but of legislative intent.”

In 1 Corpus Juris 977, the text discusses notice required by statute as a condition precedent to an action, and a note is added as to personal injury cases, and it is there said on the authority of Hoffmann v. Milwaukee Elec. Railway & Light Co., 127 Wis. 76, 106 N. W. 808, that they apply to all persons, including minors.

■ We do not understand counsel to deny the rule as applied to the general statute of limitations, but they say the principle underlying the two statutes are different; that the statute of limitations affects the remedy only, while this statute denies a right. We see little force in this distinction. The statute of limitations is now generally regarded as one of repose for the object of suppressing fraudulent and stale claims from springing up at great distances of time and surprising the parties or their representatives when all the proper evidences and vouchers are lost, or the facts are become obscure from lapse of time or the defective memory or death or removal of witnesses. (25 Cyc. 983.) The theory of the law is not that the plaintiff has no right, but that he shall not be permitted to enforce his right unless he complies with the requirements of the statute to do certain things which the law requires to be done in a prescribed manner within a time limited by the statute. He must not only assert his right but he must observe the law that defines what is and what is not the beginning of an action, and failing to do so he is deprived of all remedy. It may be technically correct to say that he is still in possession of his right of property, but so far as the question has any bearing here it is a distinction without a difference. Our Supreme Court in Board of Education of Normal School Dist. v. Blodgett, 155 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
209 Ill. App. 7, 1918 Ill. App. LEXIS 576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonald-v-city-of-spring-valley-illappct-1918.