Pfeiffer v. McCullough

115 Ill. App. 251, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 303
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 24, 1904
DocketGen. No. 4,405
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 115 Ill. App. 251 (Pfeiffer v. McCullough) 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
Pfeiffer v. McCullough, 115 Ill. App. 251, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 303 (Ill. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court.

W. S. McCullough, as executor, had in his hands moneys belonging to James F. Richardson to the amount of $73.32. Richardson resided in Modock county, California, and appears to have been indebted to appellant, George Pfeiffer. Qn the 8th day of March, 1902, Pfeiffer brought an attachment suit against Richardson before a justice of the peace in Peoria and summoned McCullough as garnishee. Thereafter such proceedings were had before the justice of the peace, that a final judgment purports to have been entered against the garnishee in favor of Richardson, for use of Pfeiffer, on the 14th day of April. On the 24th day of April, McCullough was served as garnishee with process issued in a suit of Jacob Linck against Richardson in the County Court of Peoria county. Litick’s counsel notified McCullough not to pay the money in his bands belonging to Richardson on the Pfeiffer judgment, and demanded it for his client, while Pfeiffer’s attorney claimed his client had a right to the money and threatened to have execution issued if it was not paid. Thereupon McCullough filed a bill of interpleader setting up the proceedings and garnishment by appellant, George Pfeiffer, and the reasons why said judgment was "of doubtful validity, and that he had been informed it was wholl\r void and forbidden to pay it; also, that on the 24th of April he was served with garnishment process issued in the attachment suit of Linck in the County Court, which he had been informed would be prosecuted to judgment and the money in his hands claimed by Linck. The bill alleged that complainant was ready and willing to pay the money to any person lawfully entitled to it and to whom he could safely pay it, and alleged that he was not in collusion with either of the defendants to the bill nor interested in the success of either of them, but tiled the bill of his own free will to avoid molestation and vexation touching the matters therein contained, and offered to bring the money into court. The bill prayed that appellant, his attorney, and the justice of the peace before whom the alleged judgment was rendered, be restrained from proceeding against complainant for the collection of said purported judgment, and that the defendants be required to set forth the respective rights by which they each claimed to be entitled to the money, and that the controversy be adjusted between them, and that upon payment of the money into court the complainant be discharged. Upon 'the filing of the bill the court ordered the writ of injunction without notice. The bill was filed to the May term, 1902, on the 3rd day of said month of May. At the September term, and on the 22nd day of the month, Linck and Richardson answered the bill of interpleader setting-up the suit begun by Linck in the County Court and his intention to prosecute it when the bill of interpleader was filed. The answer further avers that at the time the suit was brought negotiations were pending between Linck and Richardson for an order from. Richard son to McCullough for the money McCullough held belonging to Richardson; that the negotiations had been actually concluded at the time Linck brought this suit by the order having been given, but on account of poor mail facilities in the mountains of California, where Richardson resided, the order was not received by Linck until after he was served with process in the interpleader by McCullough. The order is set out in the answer and bears date, Modoclc county, California, April 29, 1902, and has an acknowledgment attached of the same date. The answer further avers that upon receiving this order Linck presented it to McCullough who indorsed it as follows : “ Accepted subject to pending litigation, this 7th day of May, 1902. W. S. McCullough.” The answer also charges that the Pfeiffer judgment is invalid, that McCullough has no right to pay the money in his hands thereon, and claims that Linck himself is entitled to the money.

At the same term, and on the 23rd day of the month, Pfeiffer moved to dissolve the injunction, which motion the court overruled, and six days later, Pfeiffer and his attorney, Keithley, answered the bill denying that the Pfeiffer judgment is invalid and charged that the complainant in the interpleader was in collusion with Linck for the purpose of defeating appellant’s claim and his rights by virtue of his judgment, and that the suit was brought for Linck’s benefit. Replication was filed to the answers and the cause referred to the master to take proof and report conclusions. After taking the testimony the master reported that the Pfeiffer judgment against McCullough as garnishee is irregular and void, that the injunction restraining its collection should be made perpetual, and that Linck was entitled to the money upon the written order of Richardson, accepted by McCullough, subject to the pending litigation, after paying «costs. Appellant filed objections before the master which were by him overruled, and upon the filing of his report presented exceptions thereto. These exceptions were overruled and the report of the master sustained, and a decree entered in accordance therewith from which this appeal is prosecuted.

It is insisted by appellant that the bill was not properly verified and that the injunction having been issued without notice the motion to dissolve it should have been sustained. The bill was verified in accordance with the recognized practice and precedents in .cases of interpleader, which differs from the practice and requirements in other cases where injunction is sought. Under the showing made by complainant it is very doubtful whether the court was authorized to order the writ of injunction without notice; still, in view of the fact that complainant would have been entitled to the writ upon notice, and the further fact that appellant was not prejudiced by it, we are not disposed to hold that this was such an error as would warrant a reversal. Appellant, upon the overruling of his motion, answered the bill and had his rights adjudicated, which was obliged to be done anyway before he could be permitted to seek to enforce payment of the judgment he claimed to have against McCullough as garnishee. We are of opinion the bill was in proper form and contained the necessary allegations to authorize it to be filed and retained. Morrill v. Manhattan Life Ins. Co., 183 Ill. 260. The most vital question, however, in this case is whether the Pfeiffer judgment against McCullough is valid or not. A transcript of that judgment is copied in the record and as abstracted shows that the writ in the original attachment suit against Richardson was issued March 8, 1902, returnable March 13, 1902, at 9 a. m., and given to a constable to serve. On the same day it was issued it was returned, served on McCullough as garnishee, “ defendant not found.” On March 13, i£ case called and continued to April 28, 1902, at 1 p. m., for notices to the defendant and notice issued and given "constable, C. Frabe, to post.” March 14, 1902,£l notice returned indorsed, three copies thereof posted in three places,” and under date of April 28, a judgment was rendered against the defendant in attachment, Richardson, and a conditional judgment against the garnishee." Under date of April 14, a final judgment was rendered against the garnishee for $79.32. It will be seen that this judgment against the garnishee was fourteen days prior to the conditional judgment against him, and to the judgment against the original defendant, Richardsgn.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 Ill. App. 251, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pfeiffer-v-mccullough-illappct-1904.