Stringam v. Parker

159 Ill. 304
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 159 Ill. 304 (Stringam v. Parker) 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
Stringam v. Parker, 159 Ill. 304 (Ill. 1896).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

The opinion of the Appellate Court for the Third District, rendered in this cause upon the hearing in that court, by Pleasants, J., is as follows:

“Appellee brought this action in Scott county upon a dram-shop bond, against appellant, the principal, and W. C. Wright, J. E. Arundel and John R. Bagby, the sureties thereon, claiming injury to her means of support by the death of her husband, alleged to have been caused by intoxication from liquor sold to him by appellant. The ■venue was changed to Brown county, where it was tried. In the course of the. trial, plaintiff, over objection by -defendant Stringam, dismissed her suit as to the sureties .and filed an amended declaration in case, against him, for the same cause of action. She obtained a verdict for §2000 damages, which the court refused to set aside and rendered judgment thereon, and he prosecutes this appeal therefrom.

“The proof is, that appellee, with her husband, resided at the time of his death, and for many years previously, at G-riggsville, in Pike county. He had carried on the drug business until the last year, when he engaged in selling agricultural implements and dealing in real estate. He had accumulated some property, and .provided for his family—his wife and one child, a boy about eleven years of age—a good living. At half-past one o’clock in the afternoon of January 18, 1892, he left his home in a sleigh, with an old and gentle horse, for Naples, somewhat under the influence of liquor. A little after four o’clock he went into the saloon of appellant, which he carried on by his agents, at Naples, slightly but noticeably intoxicated, remained there from a half to three-quarters of an hour, during which he took three drinks at the bar and purchased a two-gallon jug of whisky. When he left, about five o’clock, he was plainly drunk. The weather was very cold, with snow and high wind. Some time in the night or following morning his horse, hitched to the sleigh, came to the house of a witness, who recognized it as Parker’s and cared for it. After breakfast he hitched it again to the sleigh and started to find him. Retracing the tracks, he found him lying beside a tree, some three miles south of Naples, frozen and dead. Appearance in the snow clearly indicated that, having gotten out of the traveled road into the ditch at its side, the sleigh there struck a stump, and Parker, with his jug and lap robe, had been pitched out; that having picked up the jug he wandered back and forth several hundred yards, deposited it on the stump of a tree and went on to where his body was found, laid down with his overcoat under his head and was frozen to death. That this was attributable to his intoxicated condition as the proximate cause is beyond any reasonable doubt, and that the liquor he purchased and drank aj; appellant’s saloon largely contributed to produce that condition is no less apparent from the evidence. Upon these questions there is no conflict in it.

“Appellant resided at Jacksonville, in Morgan county, and he and Wright were served with process in that county. Arundel and Bagby, the two other sureties, resided at Bluffs, in Scott county, and were there served. But all appeared and plead to the action brought. At the first term of the court in Scott county, appellant, with the concurrence of his co-defendants, filed a petition for a change of venue on the ground of prejudice of the presiding judge, who thereupon made an order sending the cause for trial to Brown county,—almost adjoining Scott, but out of the circuit,-—to which exception was taken. At the term in Brown county next following, the defendants, limiting their appearance to that purpose, entered their motion to remand it to Scott, which the court there denied, and to that ruling also exception was duly taken. A trial followed, resulting in a failure oE the jury to agree upon a verdict and a consequent continuance to the next term. At that term a motion of defendants for a further continuance, founded on affidavits of appellant and one of his attorneys, was overruled, and the cause was then again tried with the result now under review. Error is assigned upon the overruling of these motions and the action of the court in the matter of instructions.

“It is said that the circuit court of Brown county had no jurisdiction to try the cause, and should therefore have remanded it to Scott; that the order changing the venue was void for want of power in the court to send the case out of the circuit. That it had that power in some cases cannot be denied. Under the old judicial organization, by which only one judge was provided for each circuit, the statute required it to be exercised where the application for a change was based upon the allegation of his prejudice against the applicant; and now, when based upon that of all the judges of the circuit in which the cause is pending, it might for the same reason be so ordered. In other cases it is left to the judicial discretion of the presiding judge to whom the application is made, to be exercised chiefly with .reference to convenience. The provision of the statute is,' that ‘when a change of venue is granted it may be to some other court of record of competent jurisdiction in the same county, or to some other convenient county to which there is no valid objection,’ with a proviso that where the cause was pending in the circuit or Superior Court of Cook county, for each of which there was more than one judge, if the ground of the application was the prejudice of the one then presiding it might be sent to one of the other judges of the same court to whom the objection did not apply. But that is not mandatory, and we know of no limitation to the discretion of the judge except those above stated, viz., that it must be sent to some other court of record of competent jurisdiction, and of the same or some other and convenient county. (Lowry v. Coster, 91 Ill. 182.) Of necessity he must determine the question of convenience. Since the other circuits have been provided with three judges each, the proviso as to Cook county has been, in practice, treated as applicable to them also, but is no more mandatory. It is still a question of convenience, which is usually and properly, but not necessarily, determined in favor of the same county. It must still be determined by the presiding judge in the exercise of judicial discretion. Any abuse of it is error, of which the party thereby prejudiced may rightly complain and have a correction. In this case the record shows that most of the witnesses were residents of Naples, where the wrong, if any, was committed, and that the fact would be so was to be anticipated. This court has not the means of determining that it was not, on the whole, more convenient and less expensive, for that or other reason, to have the cause tried in Brown county rather than in Scott or any other in the same circuit. If the circuit court of Brown county—which was a court of record of competent jurisdiction to trjr such a cause against any party properly before it—was also reasonably convenient, the presiding judge of the circuit court of Scott county had power to send the cause to it for trial, and the refusal to remand it was not error. We see no abuse of discretion in sending it there.

“It is to be further observed that appellant, who was the real wrongdoer charged and principal defendant in the action as originally brought, appeared, plead and made defense to it, and to the amended declaration also, moved for a continuance and submitted to trial. His case is therefore quite unlike that of Herkimer v. Sharp, cited from 5 Bradw.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 Ill. 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stringam-v-parker-ill-1896.