{
  "id": 3225129,
  "name": "McGrath & Swanson Construction Company, Appellant, v. Chicago Railways Company et al., trading as Chicago Surface Lines, Appellees",
  "name_abbreviation": "McGrath & Swanson Construction Co. v. Chicago Railways Co.",
  "decision_date": "1929-04-22",
  "docket_number": "Gen. No. 33,288",
  "first_page": "476",
  "last_page": "482",
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  "last_updated": "2023-07-14T19:52:06.540314+00:00",
  "provenance": {
    "date_added": "2019-08-29",
    "source": "Harvard",
    "batch": "2018"
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  "casebody": {
    "judges": [],
    "parties": [
      "McGrath & Swanson Construction Company, Appellant, v. Chicago Railways Company et al., trading as Chicago Surface Lines, Appellees."
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "Mr. Justice McSurely\ndelivered the opinion of the court.\nThis is a proceeding under section 89, chapter 110, Illinois Statutes, Cahill\u2019s St. ch. 110, if 89, whereby plaintiff sought to have vacated an order dismissing his suit for want of prosecution.\nSeptember 20,1928, this suit was dismissed. November 24, 1928, at a subsequent term, plaintiff\u2019s petition to vacate this order of dismissal was filed, to which defendants demurred. Plaintiff then filed a motion for change of venue from Judge Brothers, who was the judge who had ordered the suit dismissed. This motion was denied and subsequently upon hearing the court sustained the demurrer to plaintiff\u2019s petition, and it was ordered that the plaintiff take nothing. From this order it appeals.\nWas the motion for change of venue properly denied? Plaintiff asserts the negative, predicating its argument upon cases holding that the motion under section 89, Cahill\u2019s St. ch. 110, If 89, is in the nature of a writ of error coram nobis and is a new suit independent of and different from the original action. Harris v. Chicago House Wrecking Co., 314 Ill. 500; Reid v. Chicago Rys. Co., 231 Ill. App. 58. It is evident from an examination of the purposes and practice under the common-law writ of coram nobis that, while with respect to process, pleadings and judgment the writ may be considered as a new and independent action, yet it is not wholly so but is supplementary in its nature for the purpose of correcting errors committed in a preceding cause. It is impossible entirely to separate the writ of error coram nobis from an original proceeding, for its very nature and purpose relate to and affect such proceeding. The writ is to vacate a judgment in the court where it was rendered by bringing some fact to the knowledge of that court which was not previously known and which, if known, would have prevented the rendition of the judgment. Coram nobis means \u201cbefore us\u201d or quae coram nobis residant, which roughly translated is \u201cwhich before us remain,\u201d so called \u201cfrom its being founded on the record and process, which are stated in the writ to remain in the court of the king before the king himself.\u201d Bouvier\u2019s Law Dictionary, vol. 1, p. 681. And the writ was directed to the same court which entered the judgment. Vol. 4, Words and Phrases,\" 2nd series, p. 1350, and cases there cited. In Holdworth\u2019s History of English Law, vol. 1, p. 224, we find that:\n\u201cCertain errors in the process of the court, committed by the defaults of the clerks, or as to matters of fact, could be remedied by the court itself. The writ issued for this purpose was called a writ of error \u2018coram vobis\u2019 if the error was in the Common Pleas; \u2018coram nobis\u2019 if it was in the King\u2019s Bench.\u201d\nAnd in a footnote the author says that:\n\u201cThe difference in form results from the theory of the actual presence of the king in the King\u2019s Bench.\u201d In Black on Judgments, vol. 1, p. 377, referring to the writ of error coram nobis, the author says:\n\u201cThis writ was so called from the technical words, which recited that error was alleged to exist in a certain record remaining \u2018before us,\u2019 that is, before the court which had pronounced the judgment.\u201d\nAnd in 34 C. J., p. 398, the rule is stated:\n\u201cThe court which rendered the judgment and in which the record is has exclusive jurisdiction of a writ of-error coram nobis to vacate it.\u201d\nTo the same effect is Chapman v. North American Life Ins. Co. 292 Ill. 179, where the court said:\n\u201cAt common law the writ of error coram nobis could be sued out of the same court when a judgment at law\" was rendered to reverse the judgment, and before the same judge who rendered the judgment, for an error of fact that, might be brought to the knowledge of the court that would be sufficient, of itself, to defeat the judgment. \u2019 \u2019\nThat the errors to be corrected under the writ were errors of fact would seem to require that the writ should be brought before the same judge who rendered the original judgment, for he only would know whether or not he was ignorant of the fact which if known would have prevented the judgment.\nSection 89, chapter 110, Illinois Statutes, Cahill\u2019s St. ch. 110, \u00dc 89, does not change this rule. This provides in part that:\n\u201cThe writ of error coram nobis is hereby abolished, and all errors in fact, committed in the proceedings of any court of record, and which, by the common law, could have been corrected by said writ, may be corrected by the court in which the error was committed.\u201d\nThe same reasons which required the old writ to be presented to the same judge who rendered the original judgment also obtain under section 89 of the statute quoted, so that the provision of the statute that such errors of fact \u201cmay be corrected by the court in which the error was committed\u201d is consonant with and follows the practice at common law.\nIt follows, therefore, that the statutory provision for a change of venue is not applicable to the instant proceedings and was properly denied. A similar question was involved in Gilman v. Donovan, 59 Iowa 76, where it was held, for reasons like those above expressed, that the statute authorizing a change of venue is not applicable. To the same effect was the conclusion in Christ v. Jovanoff, 84 Ind. App. 676.\nThe petition alleges that the case was number 64 on the calendar of Judge Brothers, and was on September 17, 1928, called with other cases on what is called the \u201cfirst call\u201d of eases, being the first one hundred cases on the calendar; that a representative of plaintiff\u2019s attorneys had two or more other calls to attend to on that date, and before the instant case was called, upon the convening of court, asked Judge Brothers\u2019 clerk to set said cause for trial on November 12, 1928, and the clerk stated he would have the case set for that time, and it was so reported to one of the attorneys for the plaintiff; that instead of setting the cause for trial November 12, 1928, Judge Brothers\u2019 clerk, either through oversight or forgetfulness, made the ministerial error of marking the figures \u201c20\u201d on his calendar after said case; that thereafter said cause came on for trial on September 20, 1928, before Judge Brothers without notice to or knowledge of plaintiff or its attorneys, and that thereupon, when called for trial it was dismissed for want of prosecution; that on or about November 7th or 8th plaintiff\u2019s attorneys called upon defendants\u2019 attorneys and requested that the case be continued thirty days from November 12, 1928,'to which the latter consented; that November 12, 1928, was a holiday, being the Monday after Armistice Day, and there was no call of cases on the morning of November 12th, and that the case did not appear on the call of Judge Brothers for November 13th, the following day, whereupon plaintiff through\u2019 its attorneys made an investigation as to why the case was not on the call for November 12th and then learned for the first time that the cause had been dismissed for want of prosecution on September 20th.\nThere is also in the record a rule of the circuit court providing that \u201cfirst calls\u201d will not exceed 200 cases and are \u201cfor the purpose of ascertaining what causes will be marked for trial, passed or continued. \u2019 \u2019 It also appears from the record that September 17th, the day on which the cause appeared on Judge Brothers \u2019 first call, was the opening day of court after the vacation period, and that there were several other branches of this court which had announced first calls for the same hour and the same day as the first call of Judge Brothers\u2019 court. Defendants\u2019 demurrer in effect admitted that the mistake of the clerk in placing the cause for trial on September 20th instead of November 12th, as requested, caused the entry of the order of dismissal.\nMadden v. City of Chicago, 283 Ill. 165, is precisely in point. There it was said of a similar mistake:\n\u201cAs disclosed by the affidavit in support of the motion to reinstate, the court, upon the calling of the calendar on July 18,1914, performed no judicial act based upon a consideration of facts presented. Under the rule of court the call of the calendar was had merely for the purpose of enabling the attorneys in the cases to express their wishes as to whether the cases in which they were respectively employed should be set for trial, continued or stricken from the docket. It was the duty of .the minute clerk, under this rule of court, to indicate merely the desire of each attorney as expressed, and the court, in making the order, merely followed the minute made by the clerk. This was not a judicial determination, and if by error the clerk did not correctly note the request of an attorney the mistake was one of fact and not of law, even though the court acted upon the error made by the clerk.\u201d\nHelpful also is the recent decision of Toth v. Samuel Phillipson & Co. 250 Ill. App. 247, where it was held that a similar mistake of the minute clerk was an error of fact which could be corrected under section 89 of the Practice Act, Cahill\u2019s St. ch. 110, H 89. The opinion comments upon the well known conditions in the numerous trial courts of this county and the impossibility of attorneys to appear in person in response to all of the court calls. It is necessary to rely upon the instructions given to and the statements made by the clerks of the court with reference to setting cases for trial; especially is this true in the instant case, where all of the courts of Cook county opened on September 17th with many \u201cfirst calls\u201d in the various courts. In the instant case the mistake of the clerk of the court in noting the case for trial upon the wrong date was a mistake of fact which misled both the parties to the suit and the court.\u00bb\nDefendants\u2019 demurrer should have been overruled. The order appealed from is reversed with directions to overrule defendants\u2019 demurrer and to allow the prayer of plaintiff\u2019s petition to vacate the order of dismissal of September 20, 1928.\nReversed and remanded with directions.\nO\u2019Connor, P. J., and Hatchett, J., concur.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "Mr. Justice McSurely"
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "Nelson, Wilson & McFall, for appellant.",
      "George W. Miller, Arthur J. Donovan and W. I. Deffenbaugh, for appellees; Frank L. Kriete and Warner H. Robinson, of counsel."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "McGrath & Swanson Construction Company, Appellant, v. Chicago Railways Company et al., trading as Chicago Surface Lines, Appellees.\nGen. No. 33,288.\nOpinion filed April 22, 1929.\nNelson, Wilson & McFall, for appellant.\nGeorge W. Miller, Arthur J. Donovan and W. I. Deffenbaugh, for appellees; Frank L. Kriete and Warner H. Robinson, of counsel."
  },
  "file_name": "0476-01",
  "first_page_order": 502,
  "last_page_order": 508
}
