People Ex Rel. Ames v. Marx

18 N.E.2d 915, 370 Ill. 264
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1938
DocketNo. 24732. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 18 N.E.2d 915 (People Ex Rel. Ames v. Marx) 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
People Ex Rel. Ames v. Marx, 18 N.E.2d 915, 370 Ill. 264 (Ill. 1938).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Gunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

George M. Marx was a distributor of gasoline in Cook county, Illinois. For the month of December, 1931, he reported sales of 275,392 gallons of gasoline upon which he was required to collect for the State of Illinois three cents per gallon fuel tax. The amount he was required to remit, less two per cent for expense of collection, amounted to $8096.52, and on January 16, 1932, he remitted this amount by check to the Director of Finance of the State of Illinois in payment of said tax. This check was drawn on the Stockmen’s Trust & Savings Bank of Chicago, and upon presentation by the Director of Finance payment was refused, because, at that time, the bank had been closed and a receiver appointed. Previously, in compliance with the law, Marx had delivered to the Director of Finance a bond in the sum of $5000 payable to the People of the State of Illinois, signed by himself, as principal, and the American Bonding Company, as surety, in which it was provided that if the principal should pay to the State of Illinois all moneys becoming due under the provisions of the Motor Fuel Tax law by reason of the sale or use of motor fuel, together with all penalties and interest accruing thereon, then the bond was to be void, otherwise it was to remain in full force and effect.

In November, 1932, Marx had a conference with the Director of Finance and the Attorney General, after which an intervening petition was filed by the Director of Finance in the bank-receivership case, claiming, on behalf of the People of the State of Illinois, the said sum of $8096.52 deposited in the name of Marx, as tax money due the State and entitled to priority of payment, over other debts of the bank. In April, 1934, suit was filed in the circuit court of Cook county by the People, upon the relation of the Director of Finance, against Marx and the American Bonding Company, upon the bond in the sum of $5000, and against Marx, alone, for the further sum of $3096.52, the amount due in excess of the principal of the bond. Judgment was entered in the circuit court of Cook county against the defendant and he has appealed.

After several amendments to the complaint, an answer was filed by the defendants which alleged a state of facts substantially as those alleged in the complaint but asserting, as a defense, that the Director of Finance and the Attorney General, by filing the intervening petition against the receiver of the insolvent bank, had made an election of remedies, thus preventing recovery upon the bond, and further alleging that the bond, itself, had been canceled by the Director of Finance marking across the face thereof the word "cancelled.”

A motion made by Marx to strike the complaint, as amended, was denied. After the answer was filed, a summary judgment was prayed by the plaintiff and an affidavit of claim filed. The defendant, Marx, filed a counter-affidavit of merits setting forth substantially the same matters contained in the answer, and attaching a copy of the intervening petition of the Director of Finance in the bank-receivership case. This counter-affidavit also set forth that Marx had paid the Director of Finance the sum of $18,000 between September 16, 1931,. the date of the bond, and January 20, 1932, but did not specify that the tax of $8096.52 due for December, 1931, had been paid. His answer expressly admits that the December, 1931, tax was not paid, except by a check on which payment was refused, as above stated.

It is claimed the .affidavit of claim of plaintiff is defective in that the person making the affidavit nowhere stated the facts to be true, and that the bond mentioned in such affidavit did not have the word “cancelled” upon the face, as did the one attached to the complaint. No motion was made to strike the plaintiff’s affidavit of claim upon which judgment was entered. The Civil Practice act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1937, chap. 110, par. 181) provides for summary judgment upon an affidavit to be made upon personal knowledge of truth by the person making the affidavit, which will entitle the plaintiff to judgment unless the defendant files an affidavit of merits showing a good defense to all or a part of the demand. The answer and affidavit of merits of the defendant allege that he was a licensed distributor, and executed the bond in question; that he collected the excise tax as an agent of the State of Illinois; that he deposited the money in the bank in question; that he made monthly reports; that he drew a check payable to the Director of Finance for $8096.52 for the month of December, 1931; that the check was returned unpaid, because the bank was closed. It will be observed that these allegations contained in the answer are substantially identical with those contained in the complaint, and hence there is no controversy as to the facts constituting the plaintiff’s claim because there is an agreement between both parties as to those facts.

It is elementary that the admission in pleading, either by way of demurrer or direct admission, or the statement of facts concurring with those alleged in the complaint, does not require additional proof to authorize judgment. (Severy v. McDougall, 259 Ill. 272; Loughridge v. Northwestern Mutual Life Ins. Co. 180 id. 267.) When the complaint is sufficient, and its essential facts are admitted, it would destroy the object of the Practice act to hold that, where a party is entitled to judgment upon the complaint and answer, such judgment may be denied upon the insufficiency of the affidavit of claim filed for the purpose of proving the same facts agreed to by both plaintiff and defendant. We think this point without merit.

The defendant, however, in his affidavit of merits and answer shows additional facts which he claims constitute a defense. If such is the case judgment should not have been entered, but if such affirmative matters do not, as a matter of law, constitute a defense, they may be disregarded as surplusage and judgment entered. Briefly, the contention of Marx is that he owed $8096.52 to the State of Illinois for motor fuel tax; that he gave a check for this amount payable to the Director of Finance, which was not paid because the bank on which it was drawn was closed. There is no contention that this account stood in the name of the People of the State of Illinois, and “Exhibit b” attached to the affidavit of claim shows it was drawn upon the personal account of “Marx Bros.” After a conference with Marx, the Director of Finance filed an intervening petition and attempted to procure from the receiver of the closed bank the said sum of $8096.52. Marx alleged that the bond was canceled by the Director writing across the face thereof “cancelled,” and that the effect of this procedure upon the part of the Director of Finance constituted an election which released Marx from the payment of the tax money. It is to be noted that the intervening petition filed by the Director of Finance does not allege or set forth that he had canceled or released the bond, nor is it alleged in the affidavit of merits of defendant that the director released him from his primary liability to remit the taxes collected by him. The question presented is: Assuming these facts to be true, do they constitute a defense, either to the action on the bond, or to the excess claim of $3096.52 against Marx ?

It appears from the photostatic exhibit attached to the complaint that the word “cancelled” was written across the bond sued upon.

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Bluebook (online)
18 N.E.2d 915, 370 Ill. 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-ames-v-marx-ill-1938.