57 N.E.2d 888 | Ill. | 1944
Plaintiff in error, Compass Sales Corporation, filed suit in the Cook county circuit court seeking to recover for the breach of an alleged oral contract under the terms of which it was to receive a stipulated fee of $5000. At *282 the close of all the evidence, defendant in error, National Mineral Company, defendant below, presented a written motion for a directed verdict, on which the court reserved ruling. The jury then returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in error, plaintiff below, for the sum of $1895.82. Neither party made a motion for a new trial nor in arrest of judgment. Plaintiff in error filed a motion for judgment for $5000 notwithstanding the verdict. That motion, filed October 18, 1940, was on December 9, 1940, overruled. On the latter date the court sustained defendant's motion for a directed verdict made at the close of all the evidence and entered judgment for defendant. From that judgment plaintiff in error appealed to the Appellate Court which affirmed the judgment of the circuit court. Plaintiff in error then sued out a writ of error from this court to review the judgment of the Appellate Court, alleging that a constitutional question as to the validity of section 68(3)a of the Civil Practice Act, (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1941, chap. 110, par. 192,) arose and became involved for the first time in the Appellate Court. Defendant in error has filed a motion to dismiss the writ on the ground that no constitutional question is involved, as the matter presented is merely a construction and not the validity of the act in controversy, and that the question presented did not arise for the first time in the Appellate Court. The motion was taken with the case.
If a constitutional question did arise in the Appellate Court for the first time, a writ of error lies as a matter of right under the constitution. (Corcoran v. City of Chicago,
The briefs filed by the respective parties in the Appellate Court are filed in this court. From them it appears that the main contention argued by appellant in that court, who is plaintiff in error here, was that the trial court was not authorized to direct the jury to find for the defendant because a written instruction was not presented to the court by the defendant with its motion for a directed verdict, and numerous cases were cited in support of that proposition. Appellee in the Appellate Court, defendant in error here, answered that argument, contending that appellant misconceived the nature, form and scope of a motion for a directed verdict under section 68(3)a of the Civil Practice Act. The arguments indulged in by both sides fully disclose that the question argued not only arose in the trial court but also that it involved a construction rather than the validity of said section of the Practice Act. The Appellate Court thoroughly considered the argument and decided in favor of appellee. On petition for rehearing, which the Appellate Court denied, appellant insisted that the court had overlooked or misapprehended that said section 68(3)a is unconstitutional insofar as it attempts or purports to establish a new rule ofpractice, in giving one litigant an advantage denied to the other. It is, therefore, obvious that (a) the question arose for the first time *284 in the trial court when the trial court entered judgment; (b) it was a question of practice; and (c) it depended upon the general rules of practice, previously announced by decided cases, and the construction to be given to section 68 of the Civil Practice Act.
We must assume that appellant on appeal to the Appellate Court did not depart from the theory of the case as tried in the trial court. If any constitutional question was involved it does not appear to have been decided by the trial court, and if it was argued and decided there it was waived by an appeal to the Appellate Court, which had complete jurisdiction to hear and determine the other questions presented on the merits.
In Haines v. Cearlock,
Questions of practice may or may not be ground for the reversal of a judgment, but they do not raise any constitutional question of due process of law. The fact that the Appellate Court may have misconstrued the law and thereby committed an error for which the judgment should be reversed does not raise any question of due process of law or denial of equal protection of the laws, but merely involves a question whether the court erred in construing and applying the law. People v. Jiras,
Where it is contended, as in this case, that if the court construes a statute in a certain manner it would render it unconstitutional, the question is one of the proper construction of the statute and not the question of its validity. (Sauter v.Anderson,
For the reasons above given, the motion to dismiss the writ of error is allowed and the writ is dismissed.
Writ of error dismissed.