Court Opinion

ID: 6971534
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 02:03:23.321808+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:08:49.124885
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Wilkin delivered the opinion of the court: The principal question raised in this court is as to the ■ power of the justice of the peace to issue the transcript upon which the execution was issued to the sheriff of Cook county. Chapter 79 of our statutes, entitled “Justices and Constables,” under which John Spurgin was fined, was passed in 1895, and is divided into two parts, the first relating to the jurisdiction of justices of the peace in civil cases, and the second to their jurisdiction in criminal cases. Section 124, relative to civil cases, provides, in substance, that the personal property of every defendant in a judgment before a justice of the peace, not exempt from execution, shall be bound for the payment of such judgment from the delivery of the execution issued thereon to the constable, and the real estate shall be bound from the date of the filing of the transcript of the judgment in the clerk’s office. Section 135, also relative to civil jurisdiction, provides that when, by the return of the execution first issued, it shall appear that the defendant has no personal property sufficient to satisfy the judgment and costs within the county in which the judgment was rendered and it is desired by the plaintiff to have the same levied on real property in that or any other county, it shall be lawful for the justice to certify to the clerk of the circuit court of the county in which said judgment was rendered, a transcript, which shall be filed by the said clerk, and the judgment shall thenceforward have all the effect of a judgment of the said court, and execution shall issue thereon out of that court as in other cases. Section 170, relating to the criminal jurisdiction of justices of the peace, provides, among other things, that upon the rendition of a judgment imposing a fine, the justice shall, except as otherwise provided, issue execution against the goods and chattels of the defendant for the fine and costs, which may be levied upon any personal property of the defendant not exempt from execution, and proceedings may be had thereon as upon other executions. It is insisted by appellant that the last words of this paragraph, “and proceedings may be had thereon as upon other executions,” mean that the proceedings shall be the same as authorized by section 135,—that is, that the justice has the power to file a transcript in the office of the clerk of the circuit court, and that upon the issuing of an execution the same may be levied upon tire real estate of the defendant. Justices of the peace in this State have only limited jurisdiction. They have and can exercise no powers other than those conferred by statute, and if they assume jurisdiction in cases not so authorized, their acts are null and void. (White v. Wagar, 185 Ill. 195, and cases cited.) All acts creating courts of limited jurisdiction are to be strictly construed, and the powers of such courts will not be extended, by implication, further than is necessary for the exercise of the jurisdiction expressly conferred upon them. (26 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law,— 2d ed.—p. 270.) Under this rule, the words “and proceed-' ings may be had' thereon as upon other executions,” do not empower justices of the peace to file transcripts in criminal cases, but simply mean that the proceedings upon execution issued in criminal cases shall be the same as upon the first execution issued in civil cases,—■ in other words, that the return, levy, sale, etc., shall be the same as upon other executions. This construction is fortified by section 171 of the act, which provides: “If the constable shall return upon such execution that the defendant has no goods and chattels whereof to make the money, the justice shall issue a capias against the body of the defendant, and the constable arrest such person and commit him to the jail of the county, there to remain forty-eight hours, and if the fine exceed $10, then to remain in said jail twenty-four hours for every $5 over and above the said $10, and so on in proportion to the amount of said fine.” This provision for the arrest and imprisonment of the defendant on the return of the execution nulla bona shows that it was not intended by the statute that a transcript should issue as in civil cases. Conceding all that is said by counsel for the appellant as to this construction enabling a person having no personal property, but ample real estate, to escape the payment of a fine, the remedy must be with the legislature, and not in the courts, to enlarge the language conferring the limited jurisdiction upon justices of the peace. It can hardly be presumed, however, that a prisoner with available real property out of which to pay a fine would suffer imprisonment rather than to pay the same. It is again insisted that appellee should have been required, under his cross-bill, to tender the amount paid at the sheriff s sale to satisfy the judgment against John Spurgin, and that the cross-bill, as filed, was a collateral attack upon a valid judgment. As we have before said, the transcript, execution, sale and deed were each null and void, issued without power or authority, and therefore the appellee was under no duty to tender the amount of said judgment. The cross-bill in no sense was an attack upon the judgment of the justice of the peace, but simply sought to remove a cloud upon the-title' of complainant therein under the void proceedings upon the transcript. The amount of the judgment paid to the sheriff at the time of the sale was not paid by the appellant, but by the purchaser, and for that reason, as well as because the proceedings were void, no tender of the purchase price was necessary. Langlois v. Cameron, 201 Ill. 301. It is finally contended that the cross-bill was improperly filed, the court having jurisdiction over the subject matter and the parties under the original bill and answer. ■It is sufficient to say in reply to this position, that appellee by his cross-bill sought affirmative relief, praying that the deeds from the sheriff to Hanna and from him to appellant be set aside. It is a general rule of equity pleading that when the defendant seeks affirmative relief he must do so by cross-bill, and we see no reason for holding this is an exception to the general rule. Irwin v. Dyke, 109 Ill. 528; Anderson v. Henderson, 124 id. 164. We are of the opinion that the decree of the superior court is in conformity with the law of the case, and it will accordingly be affirmed. Decree affirmed.