Sbertoli v. Clark

263 Ill. App. 65, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 868
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 19, 1931
DocketGen. No. 35,241
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 263 Ill. App. 65 (Sbertoli v. Clark) 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
Sbertoli v. Clark, 263 Ill. App. 65, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 868 (Ill. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinions

Mr. Presiding Justice O’Connor

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff brought an action in the circuit court of Cook county to recover damages claimed to have been sustained by him on account of a malicious prosecution' instigated by the defendant. Defendant, after being served with process, entered his special and limited appearance for the sole and only purpose of contesting the jurisdiction of the court. He filed a plea in abatement in which he alleged that he was a resident of 'Franklin county, Illinois, and that he was in Cook county at the time service was sought to be made upon him by the sheriff of Cook county for the sole and only purpose of testifying in a civil suit then pending in the municipal court of Chicago, in which ease he was plaintiff. Plaintiff filed a replication to this plea in which it was averred that the defendant was properly served and plaintiff tendered issue. The question raised by the plea and replication was submitted to the court for trial, and after hearing the evidence the court quashed the service and in effect dismissed the suit, and plaintiff appeals.

Plaintiff contends that such plea is not available to the defendant because under the law, a plea in abatement must be filed at the earliest opportunity and the defendant did not file his plea in apt time because when he filed his special appearance, he demanded a trial by jury and later made another special demand for a jury trial; that he filed a motion to quash the service and writ which was stricken from the record, and he was then given leave to file his plea in abatement which he then filed. We think it clear that plaintiff is in no position to urge this contention because, after defendant filed his plea in abatement, plaintiff replied tendering issue, which raised questions of fact and a trial was had on this issue by the court without objection.

The question, therefore, for determination is: Under the undisputed facts disclosed, was the service of the summons sufficient for the court to obtain jurisdiction of the defendant? In most of the states of the union, and in the federal courts, where the question of service of process has arisen, where the facts were in substance similar to the facts in the case before us, it is held such service is bad and insufficient but the rule in Illinois is contrary to such holding. McNab v. Bennett, 66 Ill. 157; Greer v. Young, 120 Ill. 184; Cassem v. Galvin, 158 Ill. 30; Willard v. Zehr, 215 Ill. 148; Lewis v. Schwinn, 71 Ill. App. 265; Brya v. Thomas, 186 Ill. App. 281. There are, however, three cases decided in the Appellate Courts of this State which hold contrary to the cases just cited. They are: Greer v. Young, 17 Ill. App. 106; Gregg v. Sumner, 21 Ill. App. 110; and Beatty v. Monahan, 240 Ill. App. 240. The opinion in the case of Greer v. Young, was filed by the Appellate Court of the first district, October 22, 1885, and in Gregg v. Sumner, the opinion was filed by the Appellate Court of the third district, August 26,1886, and one of the authorities relied upon in the Gregg case was the opinion rendered in the Greer - case. After these two opinions were handed down, the Supreme Court on March 22, 1887, reversed the Appellate Court of the first district in the Greer case (Greer v. Young, 120 Ill. 184). The opinion in Beatty'v. Monahan, supra, rendered by the Appellate Court of the second district, seeks to distinguish the McNab, Gassem, Greer and Willard cases, supra, on the facts, but we think the distinction there sought to be made is not of controlling importance.

Paragraph 6, ch. 110, Cahill’s 1931 Statutes, so far as it is pertinent here, in regard to the service of process provides: “It shall not be lawful for any plaintiff to sue any defendant out of the county where the latter resides or may be found. ’ ’ And in McNab v. Bennett (66 Ill. 157, supra), it was held that if a defendant voluntarily leaves his residence in one county and goes to another county, or if he is seized when properly chargeable with a crime and taken to another county, he may be said to be found there within the meaning of the statute which we have above quoted, but that it would be a perversion of the object of the law to permit the arrest of a person upon false and fraudulent pretenses and taking him from the county in which he resides to another for the sole purpose of having him served with process in a civil' suit.

In Greer v. Young, 120 Ill. 184, suit was brought in. the superior court of Cook county. The summons was served on the defendant by the sheriff of Cook county. The defendant filed a special appearance and a motion to quash the summons alleging that he was a nonresident of Illinois, and at the time he was served he was in Cook county for the purpose of attending legal proceedings and for no other purpose. The motion was supported by defendant’s affidavit in which he set up that both plaintiff and defendant were residents of Missouri and that plaintiff had brought suit against the defendant in that State for the identical cause of action and that the same was still pending and that in defending the suit pending in the Missouri court, it was necessary to take depositions in Chicago and that defendant came to Chicago for that purpose only, and while engaged in that work, he was served with process by the sheriff of Cook county. The court quashed the service, dismissed the suit, and its judgment was affirmed in the Appellate Court. (Greer v. Young, 17 Ill. App. 106, supra.) The Supreme Court reversed the judgment of both courts. The court there said: (p. 187-188) “The most important question in the case, is whether the circumstances shown, even if properly pleaded in due time, warranted the court in setting aside the service of the process and dismissing the suit.' There is clearly no ground for the claim that the plaintiff or his counsel had any agency in inducing the defendant to leave Missouri and go to Chicago, for the purpose of having process served on him in the latter place, — in other words, it is not claimed, nor is there any ground for the claim, that service of process upon the defendant was obtained by any artifice, trick or fraud, on the part of the plaintiff, his counsel, or any one else acting in'his interest. The question then arises, can one who voluntarily leaves his own State, and comes to this, for the purpose of taking depositions before a notary, be lawfully served, by reading, with civil process, while here on such business'? . . . The right of the plaintiff, then, to sue the defendant here, was the same as that of any one else having a claim against him. The ruling of the court, therefore, must be rested entirely upon the privilege or immunity which the common law has, from a very early period, extended to parties and witnesses in a lawsuit while attending court, including going and coming. This rule is found in all the text books, and, in most of the cases we have examined, is expressly limited to cases of arrest on civil process. 1 Tidd, (1st Am. ed.) 174; 3 Blackstone, side page 289; 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, secs. 316, 317; 2 Bouvier’s Law Die. 284.

“The rule as laid down in the above works, is fully sustained by an almost unbroken current of authority, . . .

“While, as we have just seen, the exemption, by the general current of authority, applies only to arrests, yet in some of the States, notably New York, it has been extended to cases of service by summons, ...

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Bluebook (online)
263 Ill. App. 65, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 868, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sbertoli-v-clark-illappct-1931.