Court Opinion

ID: 6998496
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 03:37:44.556064+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:09:51.061210
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Glenn delivered the opinion oe the Court. This case is brought to this court by Charles H. Martin and John A. Gray by writ of error to the Circuit Court of Fulton County to reverse a decree entered in the case against them. The error complained of is, there is no evidence in the record or the findings by the court of facts from the evidence upon which the decree can be sustained, so far as it applies to the plaintiffs in error, Charles H. Martin and J ohn A. Gray. There is no certificate of evidence or depositions on file in the case. The only recitals in the record with reference to the hearing is that entered on the 18th day of December, 1895, which was, “ and now this day this cause comes on for hearing on the bill, answer and replication filed herein,” and the recital in the decree that “ this cause which had heretofore, to wit, at the December term, 1895, of said court been tried and submitted to the court, came on before the court for final decree. It does not appear from either of these recitals, that any evidence was heard or introduced, oral or documentary, upon the hearing. Hence, to sustain the decree, the decree must find specific facts that were proved on the hearing. Marvin v. Collins, 98 Ill. 510. It devolves upon the party in whose favor the decree is rendered to preserve evidence that will sustain the decree, or the decree itself must find that facts were proven which will sustain it. Axtell v. Pulsifer, 155 Ill. 141; Jackson et al. v. Sackett et al., 146 Ill. 655. It is not necessary that the evidence should be set out in the decree, the facts established by the evidence is all that is required. Allen v. LeMoyne et al., 102 Ill. 25. There is not a single fact in the findings in the decree that it appears was founded on the evidence introduced on the hearing. In fact it does not appear that any evidence was introduced or heard on the hearing. The recitals in the decree must show they are based on the evidence. This the decree in this case fails to do. The next error complained of is that by the decree, judgment was entered in favor of defendants in error and against the plaintiffs in error, John A. Gray and Charles H. Martin, for the sum of $554.05, in case Levi Donnelly failed to pay that sum to defendants in error. It nowhere in the record in this case appears how or for what these plaintiffs in error were or became indebted to defendants in error, or that they had any funds that belonged to them, or that they were in any way interested. There is no evidence to sustain the decree in this regard. It is suggested by defendants in error without assigning cross-errors, that the decree entered in this case is not a final decree, and that an appeal or writ of error will not lie. This position is not well taken. A decree is final which disposes of the whole merits of the cause. The mere fact that there are some things remaining to be done, does not make the decree interlocutory. It is yet to be enforced. It is only in this regard that it remains open. The decree entered in the court below is reversed and the cause remanded.