Wilson v. Weber

3 Ill. App. 125
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 3 Ill. App. 125 (Wilson v. Weber) 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
Wilson v. Weber, 3 Ill. App. 125 (Ill. Ct. App. 1878).

Opinion

Tanner, P. J.

This was a suit in equity, instituted in the Circuit Court of St. Clair county. A temporary injunction was granted, by which the collectors of revenue in the several counties named in the bill were restrained from distraining and selling the personal property belonging to the St. Louis and Southeastern Bailway company (consolidated) for certain taxes assessed and levied against its real and personal jrroperty for the years 1873 and 1874. On the 24th day of October last an answer was filed to the bill and a motion was entered to dis- ¡ solve the injunction. The motion was set down for hearing on' the 31st day of the same month, by order of court. When the day arrived for hearing, and the motion was called up, the solicitor for the company moved to continue the motion to dissolve the injunction, and proposed to prepare and immediately present an affidavit showing that certain material parts of the defendant’s answer were untrue, and also that he had testimony which would disprove all the material parts of the answer speeified, which he could produce at the next term of the court, or at an earlier day; and that he had no opportunity to procure such testimony since the coming in of the answer. And further, that the senior counsel of the railway company, and who had drawn the bill for the injunction, was unable to be in court by reason of sickness in his family. On this statement the court refused to continue the motion to dissolve the injunction, but a hearing was then had on the motion, the injunction was dissolved, and the bill dismissed. A suggestion of damages was then filed, and the court, after hearing evidence touching the 'same, decreed that the defendant in the suit have and recover $800 for attorneys’ fees.

The railway company brings the case to this court, and assigns the following errors: First, the court erred in overruling the motion for a continuance, and urges with much earnestness that in offering to present the affidavit, in support of his motion for a continuance, the company brought itself within the provisions of section 18, chapter 69, R. S. 1874. This section provides: “ If, after a motion is made to dissolve an injunction the complainant in the bill will satisfy the court by his own affidavit, or that of any disinterested person, that the answer or any material part thereof (to be specified in such affidavit) is untrue, and that he has testimony which will disprove the answer, or such material part thereof, which he can produce at the next term of the court, or at an earlier day, and that he has had no opportunity to procure such testimony since the coming in of the answer, the court may grant a continuance of such motion until the next term, or until such testimony can be produced.”

It is insisted on behalf of the appellant that under the rulings of the Supreme Court in Cole v. Choteau, 18 Ill. 441; Shirwin v. People, 69 Ill. 58, and The St. Louis and Southern Railway Company v. Teters, 68 Id. 146, a continuance of the motion to dissolve the injunction was imperative upon the Circuit Court. These authorities hold that in applications for continuances, where parties bring themselves clearly within the provisions of the statute, a denial of the right would be error. The soundness of this view cannot be questioned, but the inquiry is, did the appellant bring itself within the rule laid down by these authorities; or, rather, did it bring itself within the provisions of the aforementioned statute? The answer to this inquiry must be drawn from the facts presented by the record.

It appears the appellant was actually present in court when the motion was ¡entered, and the time for its hearing fixed by order of the court; and therefore could not have been surprised at its call for hearing. The answer of the appellees had been on file, and the motion to dissolve known to the appellant one week before its hearing and the dissolution of the injunction. When the solicitor for the appellant asked for time to prepare and file an affidavit in support of his motion, he did not give or attempt to give any cause for not having his affidavit ready. But he insisted that he had a right to claim the indulgence of the court for this purpose for the space of one-half of an hour, under a rule of the court, which is as follows: “ After a case is called for trial, thirty minutes shall be allowed to prepare and file an affidavit for a continuance unless under special circumstances, to be judged of by the court. Whenever time is asked and given to prepare an affidavit for continuance, the case shall not lose its place for trial.” This rule, even if it should be thought applicable to motions of this nature, does not necessarily suspend the power of the court to require litigants to proceed to trial at once upon the call of the docket. Under special circumstances the court may refuse to allow the time ordinarily given by the rule. This right is reserved in the rule, and nothing short of an unwise and oppressive administration of it can give cause for complaint. The appellant, however, insists that this was done in this case. That “ by offering to immediately prepare and file an affidavit,- showing that all the material parts of the defendants’ answer were untrue,” it was simply exercising a right conferred by the 18 Sec. Ohap. 69, It. S.

This assumption must rest upon two grounds: first, that the appellant had not by laohes forfeited the right to delay the motion; and, second, that the proposition embodied all that the statute required in such an affidavit. We think the first gro und was wholly swept away by the facts already noticed, but nevertheless, we will briefly notice the second. The affidavit required by the statute before cited must “ satisfy” the court, first, that the whole or some material part of the answer is untrue; second, that the complainant has testimony by which he can prove it to be untrue; and third, that since the coining in of the answer he has had no opportunity to procure such testimony.

These exactions of the statute are not answered by simply negativing the truth of the allegations of the answer, and affirming the existence of testimony by which they can be disproved, and a want of opportunity since the coming in of the answer to procure such testimony. The court must be satisfied of the existence of these several facts before a continuance of the motion can be allowed. How can conviction be wrought in the mind of the court without a presentation of facts? The solicitors of appellant did not state to the court by what character of evidence he expected to disprove the answer, or where it existed—whether any and what portions were matter of record; what part, if any, was to be established by witnesses, their names and residence. Heither did he state any facts by which the court could become satisfied that no opportunity was given after the coming in of the answer to procure such testimony. The rule in regard to an application for the continuance of a motion to dissolve an injunction is not less rigid than the rule at law. Smith v. Powell, 50 Ill. is in point.

The statement of the appellant was not sufficient if it had been offered in the form of an affidavit, as it did not present any facts to satisfy the court, as the statute requires.

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Kerz v. Wolf
131 Ill. App. 387 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1907)
Martin v. Jamison
39 Ill. App. 248 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1891)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ill. App. 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-weber-illappct-1878.