Svela v. Bloch

14 N.E.2d 299, 294 Ill. App. 515, 1938 Ill. App. LEXIS 614
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 31, 1938
DocketGen. No. 9,288
StatusPublished

This text of 14 N.E.2d 299 (Svela v. Bloch) 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
Svela v. Bloch, 14 N.E.2d 299, 294 Ill. App. 515, 1938 Ill. App. LEXIS 614 (Ill. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Dove

delivered the opinion of the court.

On September 14, 1926, a bill to foreclose a mechanic’s lien was filed in the circuit court of DuPage county by Ole Svela. The bill made Isadore M. Bloch, DuPage Trust Company and Herman Weiss, defendants, and alleged among other things that the complainant was a contractor and on November 15, 1927, entered into a verbal contract with the defendant Bloch, the owner of the premises described in the complaint, by the terms of which the complainant furnished certain labor and material in making certain described improvements upon said premises for which there was due the complainant at the time the bill was filed the sum of $2,699.80, together with interest thereon from September 15, 1927. The bill prayed for an accounting and that the defendants be decreed to pay the complainant the amount so found due and that in default thereof the premises be sold under the order and direction of the court.

Personal service was had upon the DuPage Trust Company, a corporation, on May 23, 1930, upon the defendant Herman Weiss, May 29, 19.30, and upon defendant Isadore M. Bloch, May 15, 1931. None of the defendants filed an answer or entered any appearance in the proceeding and on November 27, 1931, a decree was entered defaulting the defendants and ordering that the bill of complaint be taken for confessed against them. On the same day the following order was entered: “Proofs heard. Decree as per draft (to be filed).”

No further action was taken in the proceeding until May 20, 1937, at which time Fannie P. Newton served notice upon the complainant and upon his attorneys advising them that she was the present owner of the property involved in the proceeding and that on May 26,1937, she would move the court for leave to be made a party to the proceeding and to have set aside the portion of the record showing that on November 27, 1931, proofs had been heard and that a decree as per draft was to be filed and to have said cause dismissed for want of prosecution. This petition was duly filed on May 26,1937, and subsequently an amended petition filed on June 10,1937. This amended petition described the premises involved herein and alleged that petitioner was the present title holder and sole owner thereof subject to the incumbrances thereon of record, that she derived title and ownership thereof from the said DuPage Trust Company by deed dated April 4, 1934, that the complainant Ole Svela instituted this proceeding to foreclose a mechanic’s lien on September 14, 1929, that he prosecuted said suit without any appreciable delay or interruption until November 27, 1931, on which date an order of default was entered by the court, defaulting all defendants in said suit, that thereupon proofs were heard and the court found that the mechanic’s lien of Ole Svela, the complainant, was an inferior lien to the mortgage lien theretofore existing on the property in favor of the defendant Herman Weiss and that on that day an order was entered showing that the proofs were heard and a decree awarded “as per draft to be filed,” that since November 27, 1931, there has been no affirmative action taken in said suit and that the decree contemplated and considered by the court in the entry of the above order has not been filed. Her petition further alleged that she had no knowledge of the pendency of this proceeding until immediately previous to the time she filed herein her original petition, that she had paid interest upon the first mortgage dated November 17, 1925, and that due to the delay in prosecuting this proceeding she had sustained irreparable injury through no fault of her own or lack of diligence on her part. The prayer of her amended petition was that the order entered on November 27, 1931, “Decree as per draft (to be filed),” be stricken or set aside and that said proceeding be dismissed for want of prosecution. To this amended petition the complainant, Ole Svela, filed his motion to strike. Upon a hearing this motion was, on September 10, 1937, denied and Svela ruled to answer the amended petition within 7 days. Before the expiration of said 7 days and on September 15, 1937, Svela gave opposite counsel notice that he had elected to abide by his motion to strike and that he refused to answer the petition as amended and the chancellor, accordingly, on September 16,1937, entered an order so finding and further finding that the intervener, Fannie P. Newton, had sufficient interest in the subject matter of this cause to entitle her to intervene and to have her petition adjudicated, that the allegations of her amended petition were admitted by the motion of Svela to strike the same and that she was entitled to the relief sought. This order struck from the record the order of November 7, 1931, reading as follows: “Decree as per draft (to be filed) ’ ’ and dismissed the bill for want of prosecution. From this order, the original complainant, Ole Svela, has prosecuted this appeal.

Counsel for appellant state that in a proper case a court may, before a hearing, dismiss a cause for a failure upon the part of the plaintiff to prosecute his suit with due diligence but insist that in the instant cause there was no want of prosecution, that the cause had been heard and decided and that after a hearing a suit cannot be dismissed for want of prosecution. In support of this contention the cases of Cleaver v. Smith, 114 Ill. 114 and Maffenbier v. Gearhart, 257 Ill. 315, and Yott v. Yott, 257 Ill. 419, are called to our attention.

In Cleaver v. Smith, supra, it appeared that some of the defendants had answered and that a replication had been filed and the cause set for hearing. At that time the complainant did not appear and the court entered a decree dismissing the bill for want of equity and the Supreme Court held that the proper order to have entered was to dismiss the suit for want of prosecution. In Maffenbier v. Gearhart, supra, it appeared that the defendants had answered the bill, that a replication had been filed and the cause referred to the master to take the evidence. At the hearing before the master, the evidence offered on behalf of the defendants was taken by the master and reported to the court. The decree recited that the cause was heard upon the bill, answer, replication and master’s report, that the court heard the evidence and arguments of counsel and dismissed the bill for want of equity, and the Supreme Court held that the chancellor was not required, under those circumstances, to dismiss the bill for want of prosecution but affirmed the decree dismissing the bill for want of equity.

In Yott v. Yott, supra, it appeared that the bill to contest the will of Francis Yott was filed on June 1, 1911. On February 20, 1912, the cause was called for trial and the solicitor for the complainants and the solicitor for three of the defendants who had been served with process and who had answered appeared. The solicitor for the complainants requested a continuance and an alias summons, as two of the heirs at law of the testator, who had been made defendants, had not been served with process. It further appeared that there were two nonresident infant defendants who had been served by publication and one insane defendant who had been personally served but no guardian ad litem had been appointed for the infant defendants or for the insane one at the time the cause was called for trial. No motion to dismiss the cause was made by counsel representing the defendants who had answered but the court of its own motion dismissed the bill for want of prosecution.

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Related

Cleaver v. Smith
29 N.E. 682 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1885)
Rodman v. Wurzburg
55 N.E. 688 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1899)
Sanitary District of Chicago v. Chapin
80 N.E. 1017 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1907)
Bonney v. McClelland
85 N.E. 242 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1908)
Leonard v. Garland
96 N.E. 819 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1911)
Maffenbier v. Gearhart
100 N.E. 923 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1913)
Yott v. Yott
100 N.E. 902 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1913)
Schaeffer v. Potzel
238 Ill. App. 335 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
14 N.E.2d 299, 294 Ill. App. 515, 1938 Ill. App. LEXIS 614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/svela-v-bloch-illappct-1938.