Northwestern Benevolent & Mutual Aid Ass'n v. Woods
This text of 21 Ill. App. 372 (Northwestern Benevolent & Mutual Aid Ass'n v. Woods) 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.
Opinion
The assignment of errors upon this record questions the action of the court in assuming jurisdiction over the defendant upon the grounds:
First, that the sutnmms was void upon its face for uncertainty as to where the defendant was to appear; and second, that the summons was issued to a foreign county. It is claimed under the first ground that the summons being directed to the Sheriff of McLean County commanding him to “ summon the defendant, if it shall be found in your county, to appear before the Circuit Court of said county, on the' first day of the next term thereof, to be holden at Albion in said county on, etc.,” is so uncertain as to where the defendant is to appear as to render the process void. Under the rule announced in Orendorff v. Stanberry, 20 Ill. 89, and Gill v. Hoblit, 23 Ill. 473, if the above quotation from the writ -was all that appeared therein to apprise the defendant of the place where it was to appear, we should be obliged to hold that it fell within the cases named; but it is to be noticed that in the attestation clause of the writ in this case, the county of the venue is named as well as the town from which the writ issued, and therein is the case distinguished from those cited; the defendant is required to appear at a Circuit Court to be holden in Albion in said comity and the uncertainty consists in determining whether “said county” refers to the county of the Sheriff serving the writ or to the county of the clerk issuing it as stated in the venue of the writ; but when it is remembered that the place where the court is to be held is not only.named in the body of the writ, but is also stated in the attestation clause as being in 11 said Edwards County,” it is made quite • certain that “ Albion in said county ” named in the body of the writ refers to “ Edwards County ” as named in the venue of the writ and not to the County of McLean, to the Sheriff of which the writ is directed to execute, as was held in the case cited from the 23d Ill. “ A defendant has the right to certainly know where he is to appear,” and when the writ fails "to give him this knowledge he has the right to remain quiet and do nothing, as was held in Gill v. Hoblit, 23 Ill. 473. But if taking the whole writ together, the defendant can see therefrom where he is required to appear, it would seem that he could not be misled to his prejudice, and in such case the object of process would be sufficiently accomplished. The Sheriff returns, that he served the writ by reading it to the president of the company and giving him a true copy of it, and the presumption must be indulged that his return is true, and if so, can it for a moment be supposed that any man of reasonable intelligence with a copy of the entire writ before him would conclude that Albion,, the place designated for the defendant to appear, was in McLean County. It is stated in another part of the writ to be in Edwards County, and it would require extreme credulity to believe that the county seat of each county was a town or city named Albion. As the writ informed him that the defendant was to appear at .Albion and in which county Albion was situated, the ambiguity that appeared upon the face of the writ in the two cases relied upon does not exist in this case.
As to the second ground urged in support of the objection that the court below had no jurisdiction, it is sufficient to observe that the statute confers a mere privilege upon the defendant which he can waive, and will be deemed to have done so unless he shall especially' rely upon it by way of plea. Such is the holding of the court in Drake v. Drake, 83 Ill. 626, where it is said that all the cases since Kenney v. Greer, 13 Ill. 432, agree in this construction of the statute. No plea was interposed in this case, and the plaintiff in error is not in a position to rely upon the objection.
It is objected .to .the judgment that it is for a sum certain, when the certifícate gave the right only to participate in a relief fund to the amount of $3,000, or such part thereof as may be collected, etc. The record shows that the court heard evidence and assessed the damages, and there being no bill of exceptions, we are to presume that the evidence was such as to support the finding of a certain sum. From aught that appears in the record the court may have found from the evidence that all the requirements of the constitution and by-laws relating to the collection of the mortuary benefit provided for in this certificate had been complied with, and that the defendant had the money on hand at the commencement of this suit, but was wrongfully withholding it from the plaintiff. If so, we can not see wherein the judgment was not properly entered for the amount of the certificate. We find no substantial error, and the judgment will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
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21 Ill. App. 372, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwestern-benevolent-mutual-aid-assn-v-woods-illappct-1886.