Palmer v. Emery

91 Ill. App. 207, 1900 Ill. App. LEXIS 77
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 11, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 91 Ill. App. 207 (Palmer v. Emery) 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
Palmer v. Emery, 91 Ill. App. 207, 1900 Ill. App. LEXIS 77 (Ill. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Burroughs

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action of debt in the Circuit Court of De Witt County, by appellee against appellants, upon a replevin bond, where a trial by the court by consent of parties resulted in a finding and judgment against appellants for $2,400 debt and $542.93 damages, the debt to be satisfied upon payment of the damages and costs.

Appellants bring the case to this court by appeal and urge a reversal of the judgment on the grounds that the court improperly sustained a demurrer to appellants’ first, fourth, fifth and additional pleas; that the court admitted improper evidence against appellants; that the court improperly refused a proposition of law asked by appellants; and that the findings and judgment of the court are against the evidence.

The declaration was filed August 9, 1899; is in the usual form, and among other things, charges that appellant Sarah M. Palmer,on June 28,1898,commenced a replevin suit in the Circuit Court of DeWitt County, Illinois, against one Minor B. Meal, to recover certain pens of corn; and she, with appellant Frank M. - Palmer, gave appellee, as coroner of said county, their replevin bond in the penal sum of $2,400, conditioned that she would prosecute her replevin suit with effect; would make return of the corn, if the court in - that suit should so award, and would also keep appellee harmless in replevying the corn; and averred that thereafter appellee replevied the corn from Meal, under the replevin writ issued in that suit, and delivered same to Sarah M. Palmer; and afterward, at the March term, A. D. 1899, of said court, such proceedings were had in said suit that the court at that term herein considered and adjudged that Sarah M. Palmer should take nothing by her writ except two pens of said corn, and that said Minor B. Meal should have returned the remainder thereof, to wit, eleven rail pens of corn; but that she has failed and refused to return to Minor B. Meal that part of the corn awarded to him by the court; wherefore appellee, for the use of Minor B. Beal and the Middle Division Elevator Company, demands the penalty of the bond and $2,400 damages.

Appellants pleaded in bar of the action, six pleas which are designated in this record as one, two, three, four, five and additional pleas.

The first plea alleges, in effect, that after the writ of replevin was issued in said suit, Sarah M. Palmer sold the corn in question to the Middle Division Elevator Company, and it paid her for and shipped it away so she could not return it.

The second plea alleges that it was not considered and adjudged by the court that Sarah M. Palmer should take nothing by her writ except two pens of corn, and that Minor B. Beal should have return of the remainder, as alleged in the declaration.

The third plea, as amended, alleges that it was not considered and adjudged by the court, at its March term, A. D. 1899, that Sarah M. Palmer should return to Minor B. Beal eleven rail pens of corn, as alleged in the declaration.

The fourth and fifth pleas are substantially the same, and allege that appellee is estopped to sav that Sarah M. Palmer did not return the corn in question, because after the writ of replevin was issued in said suit, the Middle Division Elevator Company purchased said corn, paid her for it and shipped it away.

And the additional plea alleges that Sarah M. Palmer on July 1, 1898, had a landlord’s lien upon the corn in question, for rent due and unpaid to her from one George Gambrel, and on that day was about to sell the same under a chattel mortgage to pay said rent, when one H. H. Bewell, who was then and there the agent of, and acting for the Middle Division Elevator Company, said to her that he knew she had a landlord’s lien upon said corn; that she was entitled to have her rent out of it, and he wanted her to have it; and that the Middle Division Elevator Company then and there purchased said corn from Sarah M. Palmer, at the sale thereof under the chattel mortgage, and paid her for it, and then said company sold and shipped it, by reason of which premises, appellee is estopped from asserting a claim to have said corn returned.

The court sustained a demurrer to the first, fourth, fifth and additional pleas, and overruled it as to the second and third; and appellants’ printed abstract of the record, at page six, shows that appellants “ abide by the pleas to which the demurrer was sustained,” but it fails to show that they excepted to the action of the court in sustaining the demurrer.

And the case was tried upon the single issue of whether the court, in the replevin suit, had, at its March term, A. D. 1899, considered and adjudged that Sarah M. Palmer take nothing by her writ (except two of the pens of corn replevied) arid that Minor B. Heal should have returned to him the remainder of the corn, to wit, eleven rail pens of corn.

The bill of exceptions in the record shows that at the trial, appellee offered in evidence judgment record book number 10, which contains the entries of the judgments of the Circuit Court of De Witt County, Illinois, and on page 453 appears the following :

“ Circuit Court record, 8th day, March term, 1899, April. 4, 1899, Tuesday.
[[Image here]]
And now on this day comes the parties, and this .cause having been heard by the court at the December term last, and the court finds the issues for the plaintiff for two pens of corn raised on forty acres rented for grain rent, and finds, the issues for the defendant for the remainder of the corn replevied; wherefore it is considered by the court that the plaintiff have and recover the corn first aforesaid, and the defendant have and recover of the plaintiff the corn last aforesaid. Ordered further that defendant recover his costs, and that execution issue therefor, and writ of retorno for corn found to belong to defendant. And now comes the plaintiff by his attorney, prays an appeal and allowed;' bond in §500 in sixty (60) days, to be approved by the clerk, bv agreement, and bill of exceptions to be filed in sixty days.”

To which appellants made the objection that it is not a judgment of the court, and shows upon its face changes by interlineations and additions made after it was first written up, and which changes were made without any order of the court, and without any notice to the defendant and the plaintiff in the case in which it purports to be a judgment.

But the court admitted the record, subject to the objection, to which ruling appellants preserved an exception.

And the bill of exception further shows, at page 41 of the record, that appellants afterward offered in evidence page 7 of the judge’s docket of the Circuit Court of DeWitt County, Illinois, for the March term, A. D. 1899, which shows the following ;

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1. Trial last term by court by agreement.
7. Finding for plff. for 2 pens of corn raised on 40 rented for grain and that deft, have remainder of corn replevied and writ of retorno for corn found to belong to deft, and appeal-prayed and allowed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 Ill. App. 207, 1900 Ill. App. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmer-v-emery-illappct-1900.