Eisen v. Zimmer

254 Ill. 43 | Ill. | 1912

Mr. Justice Hand

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was an original petition filed in this court by Max Eisen against' Michael Zimmer, sheriff of Cook county, praying for a writ of mandamus to compel said Michael Zimmer, as sheriff, to apprehend Jacob Rubenfeld and confine him in the county jail of Cook county in accordance with the command of a certain execution against the body of said Jacob Rubenfeld issued by the clerk of the circuit court of Cook county and directed to said Michael Zimmer, as sheriff, in a certain, action on the case commenced in said court wherein Max Eisen was plaintiff and Jacob Rubenfeld and Max Kornreich were defendants, and wherein a judgment for $500 and costs was rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against said defendants.

The petition averred that on March 9, 1906, there was commenced in the circuit court of Cook county by Max Eisen, against Jacob Rubenfeld and Max Kornreich, a certain action on the case in which a declaration was filed, wherein it was averred, among other things, that said Jacob Rubenfeld and Max Kornreich had theretofore falsely, willfully and maliciously, and without reasonable or probable cause, caused a warrant R> be issued by a justice of the peace of Cook county and the said Max Eisen to be arrested upon said warrant and to be imprisoned upon the charge of perjury in the county jail of said county, and that upon a trial before said justice of the peace said Max Eisen was discharged; that the defendants, Jacob Rubenfeld and Max Kornreich, filed a plea of the general issue to said declaration, and upon said cause being tried in the circuit court of Cook county before a jury, a verdict was returned and a judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, Max Eisen, and against the defendants, Jacob Rubenfeld and Max Kornreich, for the sum of $500 and costs; that thereupon an execution against the body of said defendants was ordered by the court to issue, which was done accordingly and delivered to Michael Zimmer, as sheriff, to execute; that Michael Zimmer, as sheriff, arrested Jacob Rubenfeld by virtue of said writ of execution and incarcerated him in the county jail of Cook county; that there-, upon said Jacob Rubenfeld presented a petition for a writ of habeas corpus to Judge Gibbons, one of the circuit judges of Cook county, which writ was issued, and that said Jacob Rubenfeld was brought before Judge Gibbons and was admitted to bail and was afterwards remanded into custody of said Michael Zimmer, as sheriff; that thereafter said Jacob Rubenfeld presented a second petition for a writ of habeas corpus to Judge Windes, another one of the circuit judges of Cook county, to be discharged from imprisonment under and by virtue of the writ of execution against his body, by which he was being held by said Michael Zimmer, as sheriff, to satisfy the judgment rendered against him and Max Kornreich in favor of Max Eisen, and that upon a hearing the said Jacob Rubenfeld was discharged and released from imprisonment under said writ by virtue of an order entered in said habeas corpus proceeding by Judge Windes. It is also averred in the said petition that Judge Windes in said habeas corpus proceeding was without jurisdiction to discharge said Jacob Rubenfeld from imprisonment under said writ, and that said order of discharge was void and that the release and discharge of said Jacob Rubenfeld was unlawful, and that Jacob Rubenfeld should be re-arrested by said Michael Zimmer, as sheriff, and confined in the county jail of Cook county by virtue of said writ of execution against his body, held by said sheriff, until said execution was satisfied.

The answer filéd to said petition, among. other things, averred that the writ of execution in the hands of the said Michael Zimmer, as sheriff, issued against the body of Jacob Rubenfeld, appeared upon its face to be void for want of jurisdiction in the circuit court to render a judgment against Jacob Rubenfeld which authorized an execution to issue against his body, and it was further averred that the petition in the habeas corpus proceeding before Judge Windes averred the judgment upon which said execution was issued was a joint judgment against Jacob Rubenfeld and Max Kornreich, and that said Max Kornreich, who was a joint judgment debtor with said Jacob Rubenfeld, had paid and satisfied said judgment, and that in consequence of the payment and satisfaction of said judgment the said Jacob Rubenfeld was entitled to be discharged from imprisonment under and by virtue of the execution against his body, held by said Michael Zimmer, as sheriff. To said answer Max Bisen has filed a general demurrer, and the question here presented for decision is, should a writ of mandamus issue in this cause commanding Michael Zimmer, as sheriff, to re-arrest the said Jacob Rubenfeld and confine him in the county jail of Cook county by virtue of said writ of execution against his body, theretofore issued to Michael Zimmer, as sheriff, notwithstanding the order of discharge entered by Judge Windes in said habeas corpus proceeding.

. The answer filed to the petition for a writ of 'mandamus in this cause avers that the petition presented to Judge Windes for a writ of habeas corpus averred that the judgment upon which the writ of execution against the body of Jacob Rubenfeld issued and by virtue of which he was being held by Michael Zimmer, as sheriff, was a joint judgment against said Jacob Rubenfeld and Max Komreich and that said judgment had been paid and satisfied by Max Komreich, and the demurrer filed to the answer in this court by Max Bisen admitted those averments to be true. In view of the admissions of record thus made in this court, it would seem to be too clear for argument that Judge Windes had jurisdiction to determine whether Jacob Rubenfeld was entitled to be discharged from imprisonment under and by virtue of the writ of execution against his body, held by Michael Zimmer, as sheriff, as section 22 of chapter 65, entitled “Habeas Corpus,” provides that if it appears that a prisoner is in custody by virtue of process from a court and that the original imprisonment was lawful, the prisoner shall not be discharged unless it appears that some act has subsequently taken place by virtue of which the prisoner has become entitled to his discharge, in which event he may be discharged by writ of habeas corpus,—and such was the common law. The rule of the common law upon the subject is thus announced in volume 15, page 171, of the American and English Encyclopedia of Law: “A person in custody under a judgment is entitled to be discharged on habeas corpus if the judgment has ceased to be operative because of any matter ex post facto, as where the prisoner has been pardoned, or the period of imprisonment to which he was sentenced has expired, or where the judgment by virtue of which he was confined has been reversed or otherwise superseded.”

The circuit court had jurisdiction of the subject matter of the suit between Max Eisen and Jacob Rubenfeld and Max Kornreich, and the judgment entered in that case, which culminated in the writ upon which Jacob Rubenfeld was arrested and incarcerated in the county jail of Cook county, could not be impeached or the subject matter of the suit re-tried in the habeas corpus proceeding before Judge Windes, (People v. Zimmer, 252 Ill. 9,) and that was not sought to be done, but Judge Windes in that habeas corpus proceeding had the undoubted right to hear and determine the question whether the judgment upon which the writ by virtue of which Jacob Rubenfeld was being held had been, subsequent to its rendition, paid and satisfied, and if he found it had been paid and satisfied, to discharge Jacob Rubenfeld, as the execution against his body could have no life after the judgment upon which it was issued had been paid and satisfied. It would be a great hardship, and unlawful, to keep Jacob Rubenfeld in jail to compel him to satisfy a judgment which had been paid and satisfied, and such wrong, if shown to be inflicted upon him, could be relieved against by the writ of habeas corpus.

It is urged that the judgment against' Jacob Rubenfeld and Max Kornreich, as a matter of fact, has not been paid. This fact is one which does not affect the question here. This record shows that Judge Windes had jurisdiction to determine that question in the habeas corpus case, and he determined it against the relator by discharging the prisoner.

It is also said that the proper practice would have been for Jacob Rubenfeld to have appeared in the circuit court where the judgment was rendered and asked that court to enter an order recalling the execution on the ground that the judgment upon which it' was based had been satisfied, and then moving that Jacob Rubenfeld be discharged. It may be that such would have been the better practice and one way of obtaining the discharge of Jacob Rubenfeld. Judge Windes, however, had jurisdiction in the habeas corpus proceeding to determine the question whether the judgment upon which the execution against the body of Jacob Rubenfeld was issued had been paid and satisfied, and he having determined that question, this court is without jurisdiction to review his holding in that regard.

Great reliance is placed by Max Risen upon the case of People v. Zimmer, supra, as sustaining his position that Michael Zimmer, as sheriff, should be required to re-arrest Jacob Rubenfeld under the execution in his hands against his body. That case holds that no court in this State, upon habeas corpus, has the right to review or overturn the judgment of another court which had jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject matter of a cause, and if Judge Windes had undertaken to review the judgment entered in the case of Max Risen against Jacob Rubenfeld and Max Kornreich, and had released Jacob Rubenfeld from imprisonment upon an execution issued in that case on the ground that the court that tried that case and entered judgment in that case and ordered an execution to issue against the body of Jacob Rubenfeld had erred, then the case of People v. Zimmer, supra, would have been in point and the order issued by Judge Windes in the habeas corpus case discharging Jacob Rubenfeld would have been void for want of jurisdiction in Judge Windes to enter such order. The order entered by Judge Windes proceeds upon the theory that the execution against the body of Jacob Rubenfeld was originally a valid execution, but that by virtue of the payment and satisfaction of the judgment upon which it rests it became functus officio and that Jacob Rubenfeld was entitled to be discharged.

The prayer of the petitioner for a writ of mandamus, for the reasons stated, will be denied.

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