People ex rel. Holbrook v. Petit

266 Ill. 628
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 266 Ill. 628 (People ex rel. Holbrook v. Petit) 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. Holbrook v. Petit, 266 Ill. 628 (Ill. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

At the October term, 1914, the petition was filed in this case by leave of the court, praying for a writ of mandamus against the defendant, Adelor J. Petit, judge of the circuit court of Cook county, commanding him to expunge a certain order made by him on December 4, 1913, in a case in the said circuit court between Roy C.» Holbrook, the petitioner, and L. C. Lawton, who, was made a respondent to the petition because of his interest in the subject matter. The repondents having answered, the petitioner demurred to the answers, and the cause has been submitted for decision on the demurrer.

From the pleadings it appears that on June 14, 1913, the petitioner, Roy C. Holbrook, brought a suit in assumpsit in the circuit court of Cook county against the respondent L. C. Lawton and the Dutch Guiana Culture Company. A summons was issued and served on Lawton and a declaration consisting of the common counts was filed. No summons 'was issued for the Dutch Guiana Culture Company, and at the August term Lawton was defaulted. The petition avers that on October 17, 1913, the plaintiff in the suit before the respondent Adelor J. Petit moved to dismiss the Dutch Guiana Culture Company and an order of dismissal was entered; that thereupon a jury was called, evidence was heard, a verdict for $9500 damages was returned, and judgment was rendered on the verdict against the defendant, Lawton, for $9500, and costs. The following entries appear in connection with these proceedings:

(1) In the minute book of Judge Petit’s minute clerk:

“Jury verd. fg. iss. for pltf. & assess pltfs. das. at $9500.00 & costs.”

(2) In the docket kept by the clerk:

“Petit, Oct. 17, 1913. Jury verd. fdg. issue for pltf. das. at $9500.00 & costs. Jdg. on fdg.”

(3) In the judgment docket:

“October 17, 1913. Lawton, L. C.
ads.
Roy C. Holbrook. J
, ■ . Action Assumpsit
Record Law
Page 289
Amount $9500.”

(4) On the wrapper of the files of the case:

“Petit, Oct. 17, 1913. Jury verd. fdg. iss. for pits. ass. Pltiffs. das. at $9500.00 & costs. Judg. on verd.”

No record of the judgment had been written by the clerk in the court record prior to December 4, 1913. An execution issued November 18 was served on Lawton November 20, and on December 4 Lawton made a motion to expunge the entries of the clerk on the wrapper of the case, in the clerk’s minute book, in the judgment docket and in the docket kept by the clerk, or, in the alternative, if the court should hold the judgment to be valid, that the judgment of October 17, 1913, for certain alleged errors of fact occurring in the proceedings, be vacated and set aside. Upon the filing of the-motion Judge Petit entered an order that the execution in the case be stayed until further notice and that the clerk be ordered to spread of record no further orders in the case until further notice. It is this order which the petition prays to have expunged. Subsequent proceedings before Judge Petit are set out in the answer, but they are not material to the decision of the case.

The memoranda set out in the pleadings did not constitute the record of a judgment. They are no part of the record of the court. The rendition of a judgment is the act of the court and can ordinarily be proved only by the record. The judgment exists, however, from the time the court acts, even though the entry of the judgment may not have been formally written by the clerk,'and it is not necessary to the validity of an execution that the judgment shall have been formally written upon the record of the proceedings of the court before the execution is issued. (Weigley v. Matson, 125 Ill. 64.) The statute contemplates that the judgments, decrees and orders of the court may not be immediately entered of record, directs the clerk to enter them before the final adjournment of the term or as soon thereafter as practicable, and provides for the imposition of a fine, for a failure to enter of record any order by or before the next term after it is rendered. (Hurd’s Stat. 1913, chap. 25, secs. 14, 15.) We may take judicial notice that the record of the proceedings of the court is frequently not written up during the term, and it is neither customary nor necessary to await such writing before execution may issue.

There is no disagreement as to what occurred before Judge Petit on October 17, 1913. The petition and answer set forth the entries then made without substantial difference. If they constitute a sufficient memorandum from which the clerk could formally write out the judgment pronounced by the court, or even without such entries if the judgment was actually rendered, the clerk was then authorized to issue an execution. It was his duty to enter of record the judgment so rendered, but his failure to do so within any particular time did not make invalid the execution which was valid when issued. The judgment of the court did not cease to be a judgment because the clerk failed to enter it of record. He might be liable to a penalty for his neglect of duty, but the judgment of the court did not lose its binding effect and it was still his duty to enter it of record.

October 17, 1913, was in the September term of the circuit court of Cook county, whose terms begin on the third Monday of each month. Until the expiration of the term the judgment was still under the control of the court. After the lapse of the term, however, the power of the court over its judgment was gone. It could no longer change, increase, reduce, vacate, modify or interfere with any judgment rendered at a former term. Therefore, assuming that a judgment had been rendered on October 17, 1913, the court had no authority on December 4, 1913, at a subsequent term, to order that the judgment before rendered should not be entered of record. Whether the judgment so rendered was right or wrong, it was the judgment then rendered, and the court was without power to prevent its being entered of record.

Counsel for the respondents insist that on December 4 the time within which the clerk had authority to enter the judgment of record had expired, both the September term, at which the. judgment was entered, and the October term, the next succeeding regular term, having elapsed since the judgment. This conclusion is based upon the sections of the statute which have been heretofore referred to, which impose a penalty upon the clerk for a failure to enter any order of record by the next term after it was made. It is assumed that there must be some limitation within which the record must be made, - and that the legislature, while extending the time for such purpose to “as soon thereafter as practicable,” has limited the practicable time to the next succeeding term by imposing a penalty for a failure to enter any order of record by or before that time. The conclusion does not follow. The penalty for such failure was made to fall upon the clerk by way of a fine, and it was not intended that a heavier penalty should fall upon litigants by the loss of the results of their litigation.

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Bluebook (online)
266 Ill. 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-holbrook-v-petit-ill-1915.