O'Connell v. McClenathan

94 N.E. 21, 248 Ill. 350, 1911 Ill. LEXIS 2258
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 94 N.E. 21 (O'Connell v. McClenathan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Connell v. McClenathan, 94 N.E. 21, 248 Ill. 350, 1911 Ill. LEXIS 2258 (Ill. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a judgment of the county court of Vermilion county against appellant, dismissing his inter-plea in an action of garnishment and awarding costs against him. The garnishment proceeding was brought in the name of Henry O’Connell, for the use of Fred C. Wilson, against C. V. McClenathan, executor of the last will and testament of Daniel O’Connell, deceased. At the September term, 1908, of the county court of Vermilion county, Fred C. Wilson obtained a judgment against Henry O’Connell for the sum of $229.78. A writ of garnishment was issued October 13, 1908, upon said judgment and served upon C. V. McClenathan, executor-of the last will and testament of Daniel O’Connell, deceased, the father of Henry O’Connell, to reach the distributive share of said Henry O’Connell in said estate. Interrogatories were filed, and the executor answered that the estate of Daniel O’Connell, deceased, was not and would not be indebted to the said Henry O’Connell. The answer disclosed that by the terms of the will the executor was directed to convert into cash all property bequeathed to him as soon as practicable after the death of the testator, and, after payment of debts and certain bequests, to distribute the remainder among the children of the testator, including said Henry O’Connell, each to receive one-tenth part; that said estate had been converted into cash by the executor and the sum of $20,000 realized and that no order of distribution had been made. The answer stated that said Henry O’Connell, on October 2, 1908, by an instrument in writing under seal, for a valuable consideration had assigned all interest in said estate to his brother, John O’Connell. A copy of the assignment was served on the executor-on or about the second day of October, 1908, but was never filed in the probate court. The executor further answered that he had in his possession the sum of about $360, which would be the property of Henry O’Connell but by virtue of the assignment belonged and would be paid to John O’Connell. Upon the filing of the answer, on motion of plaintiff (appellee here) an order was entered making John O’Connell a party. Exceptions to the answer were filed on the ground that the assignment set forth therein was invalid as against the plaintiff. On January 29, 1909, the said John O’Connell filed his interplea, in which he set out the death of the said Daniel O’Connell, the appointment of the executor, the provisions of the will, the conversion of the property into cash and the assignment to him by said Henry O’Connell of his interest in said estate, and averred that by said assignment he had acquired all the interest of Henry O’Connell in said estate. By an amendment to the interplea, subsequently filed, it was alleged that the act in relation to the garnishment of administrators and executors, approved June 11, 1897, in force July 1, 1897, is unconstitutional and void. Exceptions filed by appellee to the answer of the garnishee were allowed to stand as exceptions to the amended interplea of the said John O’Connell, and were treated by the court as a demurrer and were sustained both to the answer of the executor and the interplea of the appellant, and judgment was rendered against the appellant dismissing his interplea and for costs. The court found that the executor.- had, at the time of the service of the summons upon him, the sum of $360 which was the property and estate of the said Hemy O’Connell, and rendered judgment in favor of Henry O’Connell, for the -use of Fred C. Wilson, for the sum of $246.90, and ordered the executor to pay that sum to the plaintiff. Separate appeals were- prayed by the executor and intervenor. .Both filed appeal bonds, which were approved, but the executor did not further prosecute his appeal, and this appeal is prosecuted by the intervenor, John O’Connell.

It is contended by appellee that this appeal should be dismissed because the executor has not prosecuted his appeal from the judgment rendered against him. Appellant was made a party to the proceeding upon the motion and request of the appellee. He filed an interplea, claiming the property sought to be reached by appellee as his property, setting up in his plea the title he claimed to the property and that the statute under which appellee sought to recover the property was unconstitutional and afforded no warrant for a judgment in appellee’s favor. The court held the appellant’s plea did not show any title in him to the money sought to be reached, that the statute under which the proceeding to recover the money by appellee was instituted was valid, and rendered judgment against appellant, dismissing his petition and for costs. We think he was entitled to ¡prosecute this appeal.

. Appellee relied on an act in relation to the garnishment of administrators and executors, passed in 1897, to sustain the proceeding. Appellant denied the constitutionality of the statute, and the appeal was therefore prosecuted direct to this court. The statute referred to is entitled “An act in relation to the garnishment of administrators and executors,” approved June n, 1897, in force July 1, 1897. (Taws of 1897, p. 231.) It is contended by appellant that said act is an amendment to the previous statute on garnishment and is in violation of section 13 of article 4 of the constitution of this State, which provides that “no law shall be revived or amended by reference to its title only, but the law revived or the section amended shall be inserted at length in the new act.” The act consists of one section, and authorizes the garnishment, of administrators and executors with respect to any moneys, goods, chattels, lands, tenements or other estate belonging to any devisee or legatee under any will or to any heir or distributee of any estate, but no final judgment can be rendered against such executor or administrator until after an order of distribution has been made by the court out of which letters - testamentary or of administration issued. It also provides that no assignment, transfer or other disposition by any heir, legatee or devisee, of his distributive share in the hands of an administrator or executor, shall defeat the garnishment unless the assignment is reduced to writing and filed with the clerk of the court out of which letters were issued, before service of process of garnishment upon, the administrator or executor. Appellee concedes that he was not entitled to judgment unless this statute was a valid enactment. ■ He contends that it is not an amendment to the Garnishment act but is a separate and independent act, complete within itself. It is not denied that if it is an amendatory act it is invalid. Prior to the passage of said act there was no specific authority in the statute on garnishment for summoning an administrator or executor as a garnishee by a judgment creditor of an heir, devisee or legatee, but it has been held by the courts that an executor or administrator might be summoned by garnishment process after an order of distribution had been made. The purpose of the act of 1897 was to subject administrators and executors to garnishment process at any timé after letters were issued, but it is not complete within itself, and it seems entirely clear that it was intended as an amendment to the existing statute although this is not indicated by its title. The title indicates that it is an independent act. The fact that the subject it deals with had been previously dealt with by the legislature in other statutes which the later act would repeal or modify would not render such later act invalid if complete within itself.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 N.E. 21, 248 Ill. 350, 1911 Ill. LEXIS 2258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oconnell-v-mcclenathan-ill-1911.