People ex rel. Gobin v. May

198 Ill. App. 625, 1916 Ill. App. LEXIS 505
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 17, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 198 Ill. App. 625 (People ex rel. Gobin v. May) 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
People ex rel. Gobin v. May, 198 Ill. App. 625, 1916 Ill. App. LEXIS 505 (Ill. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Higbee

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case, which in different phases, has been twice in this court before, arises out of the following facts and circumstances: On November 4, 1890, Edward Gobin, a child between five and six years of age, was injured by an engine of the Louisville, Evansville 6 St. Louis Consolidated Railroad Company in East St. Louis. On June 1, 1893, he obtained a judgment against said railroad company for $3,000. An appeal was prayed from this judgment to the Appellate Court and the bond was fixed by the court at $3,500 with “surety to be approved by the clerk of said court.” Thomas May, Jr., was clerk of the court and approved the bond with D. J. Mackey, the president of the railroad referred to, and a nonresident of Illinois, as sole surety. Appellee’s judgment was affirmed against the railroad by the Appellate Court on March 23, 1894. [See 52 Ill. App. 565.] During the pendency of the appeal, the railroad company became insolvent and went into the hands of receivers. A petition was filed for Edward Gobin in the United States court in an attempt to have the judgment paid out of the property of the railroad company in the hands of the receivers but the same was denied and the petition dismissed. On February 22,1897, judgment was obtained against said D. J. Mackey as surety on the appeal bond at his place of residence, Evansville, Indiana, and execution was afterwards issued thereon and returned unsatisfied, there being “no property found” upon which levy could be made. On November 20, 1900, suit was commenced against said Thomas May, Jr. and Thomas Burke, Joseph A. Kurrus and Albert M. Meints, the bondsmen, on his official bond as clerk of the Circuit Court, by appellee, to recover damages for the failure of duty by the clerk in approving the bond. That suit was dismissed February 7, 1903. On February 12, 1904, this suit was begun between the same parties as the one last referred to and for the same purpose, in the City Court of East St. Louis. A demurrer was filed to the declaration and sustained. An amended declaration was then filed to which a demurrer was also sustained. Appellee elected to abide "the declaration and judgment was entered against him for costs. On appeal to this court it was held that the declaration stated a cause of action and the judgment of the trial court was reversed and the cause remanded. People for use of Gobin v. May, 133 Ill. App. 139. The declaration to which the demurrer had been sustained contained three counts, which are recited at some length in the opinion. This court there held that the demurrer was properly sustained as to the first count but should have been overruled as to the second and third. The second count above referred to had alleged that the clerk took Mackey, who was a nonresident of the State and wholly insolvent, as sole surety without requiring him to qualify as surety and in utter disregard of his duties as clerk, and the third count was substantially the same, but alleged that, the clerk well knowing that Mackey was insolvent and a nonresident of the State of Illinois and not a suitable or sufficient surety took him as sole surety on said appeal bond. After the case was redocketed in the City Court, appellee withdrew the second and third counts and filed an amended declaration containing only one count. A demurrer was again sustained to this declaration, appellee abided by the declaration and judgment was entered against him for costs and in bar of his action. Appellee again appealed his ease to this court which affirmed the judgment of the court below, holding the one count to be identical with the first count of the former declaration, which had not been approved. People for use of Gobin v. May, 158 Ill. App. 596. Thereafter, the Supreme Court on petition of appellee granted a writ of certiorari, reviewed the case, reversed the judgment of the Appellate and City Courts and remanded the case. People v. May, 251 Ill. 54. That court in its opinion states: “The single count of the amended declaration did not aver that the surety, at the time he was accepted, was insolvent or had not property of such value that he could be compelled to respond to the amount of the bond, but the averment is that the clerk did not make due inquiry and use proper means to ascertain the qualification and financial standing of the surety and to ascertain the amount of his property, and that without properly informing himself he ‘ carelessly and negligently accepted the said D. J. Mackey, a nonresident of the State of Illinois, as aforesaid, and wholly insufficient as surety upon said appeal bond, as sole surety thereon.’ The insufficiency of the surety therefore seems to be based, not upon his want of property, but upon his nonresidence.” It was there also held that: “So far as the courts of this State are concerned, a bond signed only by a nonresident surety is not a bond with security. The order of the court to the clerk to approve the security offered on the bond was equivalent to an order authorizing the clerk to approve a surety resident in this State or authorized by statute to be a surety upon such bond. The order conferred no authority upon the clerk to approve a nonresident surety, and his act in doing so was a breach of his official duty. * * * The question committed to the judgment of the clerk was the sufficiency of the security. The law, as we have held, required the surety to be a resident of the State. As to this requirement there was no discretion. The duty of the clerk was fixed and certain, and was therefore ministerial. * * * The fact that the clerk may be required to ascertain whether the proposed surety is a resident of the State does not affect the ministerial nature of his duty.”

After the case was redocketed in the City Court it came to trial on the amended declaration filed October 19, 1914. In this declaration the breach of duty relied on is the same as in the first count of the first declaration demurred to and the only count reviewed by the Supreme Court, that is to say, that the clerk unlawfully and in disregard of his duty approved said appeal bond with D. J. Mackey, a nonresident, as the sole surety. During the course of the litigation and prior to the last trial, Thomas Burke, one of the bondsmen, died and Albert Meints, another bondsman, became bankrupt and received his discharge. The jury found the issues for appellee and that the amount of the bond and debt was $10,000. They further found the amount of damages sustained by appellee against the appellants Thomas May, Jr. and Joseph A. Kurrus to be $6,269.58.

Appellants complain that a petition for a change of venue filed by them was not granted. The petition asked for a change of venue pursuant to the statute, on account of the prejudice of William M. Vandeventer and Robert H. Flannigan, judges of the City Court. The petition was signed by appellants, Thomas May, Jr. and Joseph A. Kurrus, also the bondsman Albert M. Meints, by Fred B. Merrills, their attorney, shortly prior to the discharge of the last-named bondsman in bankruptcy. It purports to have been made by Thomas May, Jr. on behalf of himself and his codefendants Kurrus and Meints and is sworn to by May alone. It does not state that it is made at the request of Kurrus and Meints or with their knowledge or consent. Section 3 of the Venue Act (J. & A. 11,489) provides: “Every application for a change of venue shall be by petition, setting forth the cause of the application and praying a change of venue, which petition shall be verified by the affidavit of the applicant.”

In Eddleman v. Union County Traction Co., 217 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
198 Ill. App. 625, 1916 Ill. App. LEXIS 505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-gobin-v-may-illappct-1916.