Shepard v. Ogden

3 Ill. 257
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 Ill. 257 (Shepard v. Ogden) 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
Shepard v. Ogden, 3 Ill. 257 (Ill. 1840).

Opinion

Lockwood, Justice,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action of assumpsit commenced by Ogden against Shepard, in the Municipal Court of the city of Chicago. The first process, which was a capias, was founded on the usual affidavit, that the plaintiff would be in danger of losing his debt in case the defendant was not held to bail; and that the indebtedness arose in the city of Chicago, and that the plaintiff was a resident of said city. The capias was directed to the sheriff of the county of Will, where the defendant was arrested and held to bail.

The declaration, as originally filed, contained the common money counts, with a count on an insimul computassent. The declaration states that “ the defendant heretofore, to wit, on the 19th of June, 1837, at the city of Chicago, was indebted,” &c., but contains no averment that the plaintiff was a resident of the city of Chicago, or that the cause of action arose there, except as above stated.

Appended to the declaration is the copy of a note on which it is said the action is brought, made by the plaintiff and the defendant, the defendant as principal, and the plaintiff as surety, payable to the State Bank of Illinois at their Branch at Chicago. Also an account in the following words:

“ Albert Shepard to William B. Ogden, Dr.
To amount paid for Shepard on the above note, $1000
“ money due and owing from Shepard, . . 1000”

At the return term of the capias ad respondendum, the defendant below appeared and moved the Court to quash the writ issued in said cause, for want of jurisdiction in the clerk to issue the same to Will county, which the plaintiff resisted; and after argument of the motion, which the Court took time to consider, the plaintiff moved the Court for leave to amend the declaration, which leave was granted without disposing of the motion to quash the writ. And thereupon the plaintiff amended the declaration by inserting the words, after the plaintiff’s name in the commencement of the declaration, “who is a resident of the said city of Chicago.” Whereupon the defendant moved the Court to continue the cause on the ground of a material amendment to the declaration; which motion was sustained, and the cause continued. At the next term the defendant filed a plea in abatement to the jurisdiction of the Court, averring that he was a resident of the county of Will, and that the Court had no jurisdiction over his person. To this plea was appended an affidavit of the defendant, of the truth of his plea. The plaintiff below demurred to this plea, and the defendent joined in demurrer.

The Court sustained the demurrer, and the defendant not further answering, a judgment by default was entered, and the damages assessed by a jury at $876,45. The Court gave judgment thereon. A variety of errors have been assigned; it is, however, only necessary to enquire whether the Municipal Court lawfully exercised jurisdiction in this case. Without deciding the question whether the late Municipal Court had, in any case, right to issue its original process into any other county than the county of Cook, it clearly had no jurisdiction in this case. This Court has heretofore decided that an affidavit could not give jurisdiction. The jurisdiction, if it exists, must appear in the declaration. In the case of Key v. Collins,

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Related

Holland v. Tjosevig
186 P. 317 (Washington Supreme Court, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ill. 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shepard-v-ogden-ill-1840.