Mohr v. Messick

53 N.E.2d 743, 322 Ill. App. 56, 1944 Ill. App. LEXIS 688
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 29, 1944
DocketGen. No. 9,395
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 53 N.E.2d 743 (Mohr v. Messick) 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
Mohr v. Messick, 53 N.E.2d 743, 322 Ill. App. 56, 1944 Ill. App. LEXIS 688 (Ill. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Riess

delivered the opinion of the court.

Ernest J. Mohr and Sylvia Mohr, his wife, plaintiffs appellants herein, have appealed from decretal orders of the circuit court of Champaign county dissolving a temporary writ of injunction issued on March 28, 1942 and dismissing their suit against defendant appellee H. H. Messiek for want of equity. The plaintiffs had filed a second amended complaint in the above suit on said date, whereby, they sought to restrain an execution sale and to remove an alleged cloud from the title to certain farm lands in Champaign county owned in fee simple by plaintiff Ernest J. Mohr. The execution had been issued upon a common law judgment previously entered in the circuit court of Macon county in favor of H. H. Messiek and against Ernest J. Mohr, which judgment, execution and levy on his interest in said lands were alleged to be void and to constitute a cloud upon the plaintiffs’ title thereto. Upon dismissing the suit, the court had assessed damages in the sum of $100 and costs of suit against the plaintiffs.

It appears from the record that the judgment against Ernest J. Mohr on which an execution was issued on November 18, 1941, had been entered in the Macon county circuit court on March 17, 1936 for the sum of $1,170.53, with accrued interest and costs. Appellants contended that the judgment was void, alleging that it was a renewal and revival of a previous judgment entered against Mohr in said court in vacation on March 26, 1929, in the sum of $862.59, upon a forged promissory note and warrant of attorney held by Messiek as assignee, which instruments had never been signed nor executed by Mohr as their purported maker.

Defendant Messiek denied that either of said judgments or the executions issued thereon were void and averred that plaintiff Mohr liad in 1935, petitioned for an order opening the original judgment so entered on said note in 1929 and for leave to plead, which petition had been denied by the Macon county circuit court and from that order no appeal was taken; that the judgment now in force on which the execution was issued had been duly entered in the Macon county circuit court on March 17, 1936, was valid and binding and remained wholly unsatisfied; that said judgment had been so entered in Macon county after due personal service upon appellant Ernest J. Mohr by summons more than 20 days before return day; that said defendant had failed to plead thereto, and after default, the judgment in question had been duly entered against the defendant and was never set aside nor appealed from; that in such proceedings there was available to the plaintiff complete and adequate defenses or alleged defenses and remedies at law which might otherwise be available to him in a suit in equity, had he seen fit to assert the same by pleading therein; that said judgment recited the jurisdiction of the court upon its face, purports a verity and became res judicata of the issues herein and cannot now be collaterally attacked, set aside nor held to be void; that the judgment and execution levy thereunder was not a cloud upon the title to appellants’ lands but was a valid subsisting lien upon the interest of Ernest J. Mohr therein levied upon, in which Sylvia Mohr was stipulated to have had only an inchoate dower interest, not levied upon nor in issue herein, and that the lands were therefore subject to execution levy and the sale of so much thereof as became necessary to satisfy the said judgment, interest and costs due the appellee from Ernest J. Mohr.

Further allegations concerning suits and prior proceedings had between the parties are discussed or recited in the pleadings, which we deem to be immaterial in passing upon the issues and assignments of error set forth herein.

Appellants contend that the order dismissing the suit for want of equity is against, the manifest weight of the evidence; assigns error in holding that the doctrine of res judicata prevents plaintiff from collaterally asserting in this proceeding the invalidity of the judgment reviving an original judgment based upon a forged note; error in dissolving the temporary injunction prior to the time of the filing of pleadings and joinder of issue by the defendant and as being contrary to the law and the evidence. No error is assigned to the holding of the chancellor that the plaintiff, Ernest J. Mohr, as defendant in the common law suit of 1936 in Macon county, was given a complete and adequate remedy at law which might have been asserted and pursued by him by way of an affirmative defense of fraud or forgery and by direct appeal had he seen fit to plead or assert the same.

In dissolving the temporary writ of injunction, the trial court used the following language: “In the case at bar, the plaintiffs have had a full and complete remedy to their motion to vacate the judgment and for leave to plead, and if not, they certainly then had full opportunity to present the defense of forgery and fraud when the suit was brought to Macon county to revive the original judgment. Having failed either to assert this defense then or to prevail upon it when it was asserted, equity will not permit a relitigation of the same matters in defiance of the judgments of the court of Macon county adjudicating them.” In subsequently passing upon the case on its merits, the court adopted the above opinion as announced in the trial at the time of the dissolution of the temporary injunction; found that the defendant in the chancery suit did not specifically deny the allegations that the original note was a forgery but averred the validity of all judgments; set forth that the only interest of Sylvia Mohr was the inchoate right of dower as stipulated between the parties; that the plaintiff Ernest J. Mohr, against whom the original judgment was entered in 1929, had made a motion to vacate the same in the circuit court of Macon county which had been denied; that the court was not concerned with the question of laches which were not in issue under the pleadings in the instant proceedings (see Messiah v. Mohr, 292 Ill. App. 69, 10 N. E. (2d) 870); that the chancellor was without power to again litigate in a collateral proceeding the issues raised and adjudicated in the original judgment and denial of motion to open the same, from which no appeal was taken; .that the common law judgment of revivor entered in 1936 in the Macon county circuit court was a new suit under the Civil Practice Act.

Fraud or forgery, like any other affirmative defense, will not be presumed, but must be averred and proven. If the court has jurisdiction of the parties and subject matter of the suit and. such defense is available, it must be affirmatively asserted. A defendant having full knowledge of the facts cannot sit idly by and negligently permit a default and judgment at law to be entered against him and then seek to relitigate the same cause or defense by a collateral suit in equity wherein his defense at law, if asserted and availed of, would have been a complete and adequate remedy in the prior proceeding.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 N.E.2d 743, 322 Ill. App. 56, 1944 Ill. App. LEXIS 688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mohr-v-messick-illappct-1944.