Stoike v. Bonasera

243 Ill. App. 281, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 79
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 7, 1927
DocketGen. No. 31,138
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 243 Ill. App. 281 (Stoike v. Bonasera) 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
Stoike v. Bonasera, 243 Ill. App. 281, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 79 (Ill. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Johnston

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error prosecuted by Bichard Stoike, the respondent, from an order in a proceeding in the county court of Cook county under the Insolvent Debt- or’s Act, discharging George Bonasera, the petitioner. The respondent obtained a judgment in the circuit court of Cook county against the petitioner in the sum of $5,000 in an action for damages in which the respondent alleged that while he was crossing Clybourn Avenue, a public thoroughfare in Chicago, he was struck and injured by an automobile driven by the petitioner. The petitioner failed to pay the judgment and was arrested under a writ of capias ad satisfaciendum, which was issued at the instance of the respondent. Thereupon the petitioner filed a petition in the county court asking to be discharged under section 2 of the' Insolvent Debtor’s Act [Cahill’s St. ch. 72, [[ 5] on the ground that, malice was not the gist of the action in which the judgment for damages was obtained in the circuit court.

On the hearing of the petition in the county court the petitioner introduced in evidence the praecipe, summons, appearance, declaration, pleas, instructions, verdict and judgment in the action in the circuit court. The respondent offered no evidence. The county court found that malice was not the gist of the action in the circuit court and discharged the petitioner.

The only question to be decided on this writ of error is whether malice was the gist of the action in the circuit court in the sense that the word malice is used in section 2 of the Insolvent Debtor’s Act.

Section 2 of the Insolvent Debtor’s Act [Cahill’s St. ch. 72, [i 5] provides as follows:

“When any person is arrested or imprisoned upon any process issued for the purpose of holding such person to bail upon any indebtedness, or in any civil action when malice is not the gist of the action, or when any debtor is surrendered or committed to custody by Ms bail in any such action, or is arrested or imprisoned upon execution in any such action, such person may be released from such arrest or imprisonment upon complying with the provisions of this Act.”

The phrase “gist of the action” means the essential ground or object of the action without which the action could not be maintained. If the action can be maintained without alleging or proving malice, then malice is not the gist of the action. Greener v. Brown, 323 Ill. 221, 225; Jernberg v. Mix, 199 Ill. 254, 256; First Nat. Bank of Flora v. Burkett, 101 Ill. 391, 394, 395.

On the trial of the action in the circuit court the case went to the jury only on the third and fourth counts of the declaration.

It is the contention of counsel for the respondent that the third and fourth counts charge malice. If this contention is correct, and if the evidence in the case at bar shows that in the action in the circuit court the issue of malice was actually submitted to the jury on those counts, then malice was the gist of the action in the circuit court, and the county court should not have discharged the petitioner under section 2 of the Insolvent Debtor’s Act. We shall consider the third and fourth counts separately.

The pertinent part of the third count is as follows: “That while the plaintiff was then and there wallring across the said Clybourn Avenue as aforesaid the defendant then and there, with gross disregard for the safety of the life and limb of the plaintiff, moved and operated the said motor vehicle at a high rate of speed, to-wit, twenty-five miles per hour, toward and to and against the plaintiff, and by reason thereof the said motor vehicle then and there ran and struck with great force and violence against the plaintiff. ’ ’

The term “malice,” as used in section 2 of the Insolvent Debtor’s Act, applies to that class of wrongs, which are inflicted with an evil intent, design or purpose. It implies that the guilty party was actuated by improper or dishonest motives, and intended to perpetrate an injury or a wrong on another. Seney v. Knight, 292 Ill. 206, 208; Jernberg v. Mix, supra, p. 256; In re Murphy, 109 Ill. 31, 33; First Nat. Bank of Flora v. Burkett, supra, pp. 391, 394.

The precise question, therefore, to be decided is whether the allegations in the third count show that the petitioner intentionally injured the respondent. Intention in a legal sense may be actual or presumptive. Chicago City R. Co. v. Jordan, 215 Ill. 390, 391. If the allegations of the third count are sufficient to charge the petitioner with having inflicted.an intentional injury on the respondent, the third count charges the petitioner 'with malice, and in legal effect alleges that the petitioner was guilty of an assault to commit bodily Ibarm. If, however, the allegations merely charge the petitioner with having inflicted the injury on the respondent unintentionally, the third count does not charge the petitioner with malice, but alleges that the petitioner was guilty of negligence. Brodsky v. Rieser, 195 App. Div. 557, 186 N. Y. S. 841, 842. In other words, the third count either charges a tort of greater culpability than negligence, namely, a tort amounting to an assault to commit bodily harm, or else it charges a tort amounting only to negligence. In the case of Aiken v. Holyoke St. R. Co., 184 Mass. 269, 271, the court said that one who wilfully and wantonly, in reckless disregard of the rights of others, by a positive act or careless omission, exposes another to death or to grave bodily injury is guilty of a wilful intentional wrong amounting to a criminal or g«asi-criminal wrong.

In mere negligence there is no intention to do a wrongful act or to omit the performance of a duty. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co. v. Hamler, 215 Ill. 525, 533; Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. Johnson, 103 Ill. 512. As briefly defined in the case of Stratton v. The Central City Horse Ry. Co., 95 Ill. 25, 33, 34, “Negligence is a failure to exercise the care required by law.” In the case of Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. Johnson, supra, p. 521, the court said the generally approved definition of negligence is that it “is the omission to do something which a reasonable man, guided upon those ordinary considerations which ordinarily regulate the conduct of , human affairs, would do, or doing something which a prudent and reasonable man would not do.’’ The court further said (p. 522): “When there is a particular intention to injure, or a degree of willful and wanton recklessness which authorizes the presumption of an intention to injure generally, the act ceases to be merely negligent, and becomes one of violence or fraud.” To the same effect is the case of Chicago City R. Co. v. Jordan, 215 Ill. 390, 397. In the case of Kelly v. Malott, 135 Fed. 74, the court said (p. 76): “Negligence and wfilfulness are as unmixable as oil and water. ‘Willful negligence’ is as self-contradictory as ‘guilty innocence.’ ” Salmond says, “No result which is due to carelessness can have been also intended. Nothing which was intended can have been due to carelessness.” Salmond on Jurisprudence, p. 409 (7th Ed.).

In the case of Lockwood v. Bella City St. Ry. Co., 92 Wis. 97, the court said (p. 113): “Some law writers, some judges, and some courts habitually use the terms ‘intentional negligence,’ ‘wilful negligence,’ ‘malicious negligence’; but most of them very properly repudiate such expressions as contradictory and absurd."

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Bluebook (online)
243 Ill. App. 281, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoike-v-bonasera-illappct-1927.