Wetten v. Horix

33 N.E.2d 615, 309 Ill. App. 535, 1941 Ill. App. LEXIS 1018
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 15, 1941
DocketGen. No. 40,770
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 33 N.E.2d 615 (Wetten v. Horix) 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
Wetten v. Horix, 33 N.E.2d 615, 309 Ill. App. 535, 1941 Ill. App. LEXIS 1018 (Ill. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Mr. Justice John J. Sullivan

delivered the opinion of the court.

Judgment for $4,724.50 was entered by confession in favor of plaintiff, Emil C. Wetten, and against the defendant Carl Horix. Execution was served upon defendant by the sheriff and returned “No property found and no part satisfied.” Plaintiff filed an affidavit in garnishment and caused a summons in garnishment and interrogatories to be served on the garnishee, Clicquot Club Company. The garnishee filed an amended answer to the interrogatories. Plaintiff filed a traverse of said answer. The garnishee filed a written motion to strike plaintiff’s traverse and to dismiss the garnishment proceeding and discharge the garnishee. Although the trial court denied the motion to strike plaintiff’s traverse, it entered an order allowing the motion to dismiss the garnishment proceeding and discharge the garnishee. This appeal is from that order.

Of the interrogatories filed by plaintiff it is only necessary to consider the “7th,” which is as follows: “ ‘Had you at the date of the service of the said writ any contract or agreement with said Carl Horix providing for the payment of any royalties by you to him? If so, describe the same fully, giving the amount of said royalties, the time or times when they shall become due and payable, and describe the same fully and particularly.’ ”

The amended answer of the garnishee to the foregoing interrogatory alleged substantially that a contract was entered into between the garnishee and Horix on December 4, 1936, which required the garnishee under certain conditions to pay royalties to the judgment debtor and that the garnishee did pay thereunder a total of approximately $3,000 in royalties; and that thereafter the garnishee discovered that it had been defrauded by Horix in that he had induced it to enter into the contract by making false representations of material facts, which he knew to be untrue. The alleged misrepresentations were then set forth fully and with particularity.

The answer further alleged that “a certain supposedly secret formula, to which defendant claimed to have the sole right and which by the agreement he purported to license to the garnishee, was worthless and that the defendant did not have the sole right to such formula”; that the garnishee, relying upon the said false representations, entered into the agreement and as a result of defendant’s said fraud suffered great losses; that when the garnishee discovered that “it had been imposed upon and defrauded by the said Carl Horix, as above set forth, it thereupon cancelled the said supposed contract and declared it to be void from the beginning.”

The answer then alleged the considerations which the garnishee was to receive from the defendant under the terms of said agreement; that “the defendant failed and refused to deliver any of the said considerations to the garnishee”; and that the garnishee “is not and never has been bound under or by reason of the said memorandum of agreement. ’ ’

Under the royalty contract, which was attached to and made a part of its amended answer, the garnishee was granted by defendant an exclusive license under certain letters patent and under a certain trade-mark to manufacture and sell a beverage covered by said patent and defendant agreed to furnish certain assistance in the equipment of the garnishee’s plant. The contract provided that the garnishee would pay defendant a royalty on the number of bottles of the beverage manufactured and sold by it, “the minimum royalty” to be $3,000 a year during the life of the patent.

Plaintiff’s traverse of the garnishee’s amended answer is as follows:

‘ ‘ The plaintiff denies that the defendant Carl Horix made any false or fraudulent representations to the garnishee for the purpose of inducing it to enter into the written contract set out in the Amended Answer, and denies that the garnishee relied upon any false or fraudulent statements of said defendant Carl Horix in entering into" said contract, and denies that the garnishee has ever for any reason cancelled said supposed contract or declared it to he void.
“Plaintiff denies that the defendant Carl Horix has in any manner "breached or failed or refused to perform the provisions of the agreement set out in the Amended Answer of the garnishee.
“Plaintiff says that the Clicquot Club Company, garnishee, has not truly discovered the money, choses in action, credits and effects in its possession, custody or charge, or from it due and owing to the defendant at the time of the service of the writ or at any time thereafter, or which shall or may thereafter become due. . . .”

Plaintiff’s theory is that “he was and is entitled to a trial on the merits as to the truth or falsity of the garnishee’s answer to the seventh interrogatory, the questions of fact to be tried being specifically those raised by the allegations in the amended answer of fraud and breach of contract”; and that “under the amended answer and the contract, the indebtedness of the garnishee to the defendant Carl Horix, if any exists, was both definite and liquidated, and that the question as to whether any such liability exists was one which the garnishment court had both the power and the duty to try.”

The theory of the garnishee, as stated in its brief, is “that the allegations contained in the Garnishee’s Amended Answer and in the Plaintiff’s Traverse raised issues of fact which could not lawfully be tried nor determined in a garnishment proceeding — that the court had no jurisdiction to try these issues in a garnishment case. That they could be tried only in a suit directly between the judgment debtor, Carl Horix, and the garnishee, Clicquot Club Company. The remedy of garnishment is statutory and hence can be used only in those cases which come within the statutory provisions. When the pleadings in a garnishment case raise only the question as to the amount owed by the garnishee to the defendant, that question can be determined in the garnishment proceeding; but when the garnishee’s answer denies the existence of the contract upon which the supposed indebtedness depends, and pleads facts which make any such indebtedness uncertain, unliquidated, and contingent, the issues thus raised cannot be tried in a garnishment proceeding.”

A judgment creditor may pursue his remedy in garnishment for any indebtedness of the garnishee to the judgment debtor which is a definite certain obligation. Plaintiff: insists that the judgment debtor and the garnishee entered into a valid contract under the terms of which the latter was bound to pay the former $3,000 a year minimum royalties and that this amount was neither contingent nor unliquidated. The garnishee admits the execution of the contract but claims in its answer that it was procured by fraud and that there was a total failure of consideration. It is idle for the garnishee to urge that merely because its answer alleged fraud and failure of consideration that the court was thereby deprived of jurisdiction to try the issues of fact raised by such answer and plaintiff’s traverse thereof, which specifically challenged the truth of said answer. The issues of fact both as to fraud and total failure of consideration are clear cut and well defined and must be determined not on the pleadings but by the evidence produced upon the hearing on the issues raised by such pleadings.

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Bluebook (online)
33 N.E.2d 615, 309 Ill. App. 535, 1941 Ill. App. LEXIS 1018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wetten-v-horix-illappct-1941.