Mexican Asphalt Co. v. Mexican Asphalt Paving Co.

61 Ill. App. 354, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 780
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 30, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 61 Ill. App. 354 (Mexican Asphalt Co. v. Mexican Asphalt Paving Co.) 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
Mexican Asphalt Co. v. Mexican Asphalt Paving Co., 61 Ill. App. 354, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 780 (Ill. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from an interlocutory order granting an injunction.

As showing the scope of the injunction, for which, however, no order appears ever to have been entered, except in so far as an indorsement by the judge of the Superior .Court on the back of the bill directing a writ of injunction to issue as prayed, may be construed as an order of record for an injunction, we copy the ordering part of the writ that was issued restraining the defendants, appellants here, Omar D. Hall, the Mexican Asphalt Company, and James Pease, sheriff of Cook county, as follows :

“ From" taking possession of certain or any asphalt now in possession of the Mexican Asphalt Paving Company, complainant in said bill, or which is now in bond, as in said bill alleged, and from removing same or any part thereof from the possession of said complainant or from the State of Illinois or beyond the jurisdiction of this court, or in any way interfering with the possession of said Mexican Asphalt Paving Company of said asphalt, at the instance or request of any or either of said parties defendant, or in any way, shape or manner, injuring the business of said Mexican Asphalt Paving Company.”

The appellant, the sheriff of Cook county, was the only defendant upon whom the writ was served. In the writ there is no allusion to any process in his hands to which the restraining order, as against him, has application.

We will not comment upon the condition the sheriff might find himself in before a court jealous of the respect due to its orders, if a writ of execution should come to his hands, the levying of which might, in some “ way, shape or manner,” injure the business of the complainant; but make note of the fact as illustrative of the reckless practice prevailing in this county concerning injunctions, against which a corrective should be applied.

A motion to dissolve the injunction on the face of the bill was made, argued and overruled. Afterward a demurrer to the bill was filed and overruled, and thereupon this appeal from the order granting the injunction was allowed.

It is urged that this appeal should be dismissed because of the appellants having chosen in the first instance to move to dissolve, and then to demur, and having failed therein it was too late to appeal from the injunction order. We think not. It was a commendable practice to do as was done, in order that the court below might be fully informed concerning the bill and injunction order. The injunction, motions, demurrer and orders thereon, were all at the same term and within about ten days from the filing of the bifi.

Counsel for appellee, in their brief, state the case made by their bill as follows :

“ The substance of the facts as shown by the bill are that complainant was under a contract with the city of Chicago to pave and curb a certain portion of Wabash avenue in said city with asphalt, in a manner and within a time therein provided, and had given a bond in the sum of $28,000 for the faithful performance of its contract; that the work was partly completed, and a large force of men with teams, machinery, etc., were then engaged in the work at large expense to complainant; that in order to complete said contract it was necessary for complainant to send its president to the Eepublic of Mexico to get the asphalt necessary to complete the work according to the contract; that in August last its said president went to Mexico for that purpose and there purchased the necessary asphalt to complete said work, and at a great labor, trouble and expense had it removed from the natural deposits, transported to the sea coast, and thence by steamship transported to the city of Baltimore, and thence by railroad to the city of Chicago, where it had just arrived. The bill states that said asphalt was the sole property of complainant and that no other person or persons whatsoever had any title to or interest in said asphalt, or any right to the possession of the same or any part thereof except complainant. It also states that it had on hand, in Chicago, other asphalt theretofore shipped there, of which it was the sole owner and had the sole right to possession. The bill alleges that the said -asphalt was absolutely necessary to the completion of said contract, and that no other of the kind or quality required by said contract could be obtained in time for the completion of the contract according to its terms, and that if said asphalt was taken from its possession it would thereby be prevented from fulfilling its said contract, and that it would lose the benefit of it, be liable for the penalty of the bond, $28,000, and would be otherwise greatly damaged, and would also be greatly injured in its business standing and reputation, the amount of which it would be impossible to accurately estimate, but not less than $100,000, and thereby would suffer great and irreparable injury.

The bill further alleged that the defendants, Hall and the Mexican. Asphalt Company, with others, to the complainant unknown, had theretofore entered into a conspiracy to injure the complainant and ruin its business, and to prevent it from completing its said contract with the city of Chicago according to its terms; that in furtherance of such conspiracy they had tried to prevent complainant from obtaining said asphalt in Mexico, tried to foment a strike among its workmen, hired some of them to leave its employ, raised the price of boxes, barrels, etc., necessary for the shipping of the asphalt, got an 1 embargo ’ to prevent the shipping of the asphalt, and by divers ways and means, harassed, annoyed and interfered with complainant, and caused it great trouble and expense in its efforts to ship said asphalt from Mexico; that when said asphalt arrived at Baltimore, the said defendants, though having no interest in said asphalt or right to the possession of the same, in furtherance of said conspiracy, undertook to replevin the same, and partly succeeded, and had the same shipped to the city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, but that finally complainant, at great trouble and expense, was able to have the same brought on to Chicago, and that it was about to be turned over to complainant by the United States custom officials in whose hands it then was; that said defendants, Hall and the Mexican Asphalt Company, in the furtherance of said conspiracy, were about wrongfully to replevin the said asphalt so shipped, together with other asphalt then in complainant’s possession, and owned by it, and theretofore shipped; that for that purpose they had begun a suit in replevin in the Circuit Court of Cook County, and gotten out a writ of replevin for the said asphalt, which said writ was then in the hands of Janies Pease, the sheriff, who was about to take possession of the same under said writ, and would do so immediately and turn the same over to said other defendants, who would at once ship the same out of this State and beyond the jurisdiction of the court, and wholly deprive the complainant of the same, unless prevented. The bill further alleges positively that defendants, Hall and Mexican Asphalt Company were non-residents and had no property whatever in this State, and that, upon information and belief, they were wholly insolvent. That the replevin bond was only $8,000, and wholly insufficient and inadequate to protect complainant.”

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Bluebook (online)
61 Ill. App. 354, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mexican-asphalt-co-v-mexican-asphalt-paving-co-illappct-1895.