Rice v. Bogart

272 Ill. App. 292, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 133
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 6, 1933
DocketGen. No. 36,712
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 272 Ill. App. 292 (Rice v. Bogart) 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
Rice v. Bogart, 272 Ill. App. 292, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 133 (Ill. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Matchett

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff filed an amended statement of claim demanding the return of $2,000 paid by him to the Absopure Oil Company under a contract hereinafter described, together with $250 attorneys’ fees. The action was based on section 37 of the Illinois Securities Act, sometimes called the Blue Sky Law (see Cahill’s Ill. Rev. St. ch. 32, ¶ 290) being “An Act relating to the sale or other disposition of securities and providing penalties for the violation thereof and to repeal Acts in conflict therewith,” in force June 10, 1919.

Defendants are officers and directors of the company alleged to be liable under the statute, and Noggle is the agent through whom the transactions were negotiated. The amended statement of claim was stricken on motion of defendants, and plaintiff electing to stand by his amended claim, judgment was entered against him, which he seeks to reverse by this appeal. The briefs present two questions for our decision.

The first concerns the question of jurisdiction. Defendants contend that the judgment was proper for the reason that the municipal court was wholly without jurisdiction to try an action of this kind. This question was not raised in the trial court but is urged here. The point requires a construction of section 2 of the Municipal Court Act, Cahill’s St. ch. 37, ¶ 390 (Smith-Hurd Ill. Rev. St. 1933, ch. 37, sec. 357, p. 959). Defendants point out that actions 'involving (as here) more than $1,000 are limited by that section to three classes: (1) contracts express or implied; (2) for the recovery of personal property; and (3) for damages for conversion of or injury to personal property. They say that this action does not come within any one of the three classes; that it is in fact a suit to recover a penalty, and, therefore, since the amount of the claim is for more than $1,000, the municipal court was wholly without jurisdiction to hear and determine the issues.

Defendants contend (rightly, as we think) that where the court is wholly without jurisdiction of the subject matter it cannot acquire jurisdiction, even by consent of the parties; that in such a case neither appeal nor writ of error will confer jurisdiction on the reviewing court, and that the question of whether the courts have jurisdiction of the cause may in such case be raised for the first time in the reviewing court. People v. Industrial Sav. Bank, 275 Ill. 139.

Defendants argue that an action based upon this Securities Act, Cahill’s St. ch. 32, ¶¶254 et seq., is substantially an action in debt rather than an action in assumpsit and cite People v. Dummer, 274 Ill. 637. The Dummer case does not, as we understand it, support this Contention. That case holds that taxes against property are enforced contributions independent of any agreement express or implied on the part of the owner of the property to pay same, and that there is no contract either express or implied that the taxpayer will make such payment; that the levy of the taxes does not create the relation of debtor and creditor as usually understood, but that by reason of statutory provisions an action either of debt or in assumpsit will lie for the collection for the same. The court there said that such a suit when brought was not an action on the contract express or implied, and that as the amount claimed exceeded $1,000, the municipal court was wholly without jurisdiction under the statute.

The opinion carefully distinguishes between a suit brought for the purpose of collecting taxes and one where a contract is implied by reason of a statutory provision and because of the acts of defendant with reference thereto. Harty Bros. v. Polakow, 237 Ill. 559 (on which plaintiff here relies) is cited. The opinion also points out that the term “implied contract” has been in our law applied to a class of obligations which are created by law without regard to the assent of the parties. Such contracts are described in the opinion as “constructive contracts,” and the supposed promises are said to be more or less fictitious, as they are said to be in Board of Highway Com’rs v. City of Bloomington, 253 Ill. 164, Ann. Cas. 1913 A 471. In Restatement of Law, vol. 1, sec. 5, these contracts are described as “quasi-contracts”; that is, obligations created by law for reasons of justice which were ordinarily enforced at common law in an action of assumpsit upon the theory that there was an implied promise that one would do what he ought to do. Such obligations at the time of the enactment of the Municipal Court Act, Cahill’s St. ch. 37, ¶389 et seq., were quite generally recognized in our law as contractual in nature, and we do not doubt that it was the intention of the legislature to confer jurisdiction upon the municipal court to try actions brought upon such quasi-contracts without limitation as to the amount claimed.

While this precise question has not been raised before in this court, so far as we are aware, we have hitherto taken jurisdiction to review judgments in similar cases. Jaffe v. Goldner, 251 Ill. App. 188, and Dobal v. Guardian Finance Corp., 251 Ill. App. 220. We now hold that the action is contractual in its nature and that the municipal court was not without jurisdiction by reason of the amount claimed.

In the second place it is argued by defendants that the statement does not state a cause of action for the reason that the instruments of writing described in the statement* are documents to which the provisions of the Securities Act, or Blue Sky Law as it is called, are not applicable.

The averments of the statement are in substance that Absopure Oil Co. is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Illinois; that September 20, 1929, it “sold to the plaintiff a certain profit sharing or investment contract or security,” for which plaintiff paid to the company $1,000; that September 30, it sold to plaintiff “a certain other profit sharing or investment contract” for another $1,000; that “said profit sharing or investment contracts so sold to the plaintiff by said Absopure Oil Company, as aforesaid, were not securities known as securities in Class A, Class B or Class C under the terms and provisions of the Securities law of the State of Illinois, but, on the contrary thereof, were securities in Class D under the terms and provisions of said law, being speculative securities based on prospective income”; that defendants had not prior to the sale of the same complied with the terms and provisions of the Securities Law regulating the sale of this class of securities; that at the times of these respective sales defendant Charles H. Brunner was the president and director of the Absopure Co., Bogart vice president and director, L. E. Brunner secretary and treasurer, Blanchard and Peterson directors; and that R. W. Noggle was employed by the Oil Co. as solicitor, agent or broker “for the sale of said investment or profit sharing contracts ’ ’; that September 20, 1929, defendants, through Noggle, made a sale of “a certain investment or profit sharing contract, wherein and whereby the defendants pretended to sell to plaintiff five certain oil pumps numbered 152, 153, 154, 155 and 156, together with 500 gallons of lubricating oils suitable for use in automobiles and automotive machinery by the execution of a certain bill of sale signed by the said Absopure Oil Company by Charles H.

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272 Ill. App. 292, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rice-v-bogart-illappct-1933.