150 N.E. 270 | Ill. | 1925
Defendant in error, Albert R. Leland, filed in the superior court of Cook county his bill for divorce, charging that his wife, Charlotte C. Leland, had committed adultery with one Carl. A default on personal service was entered in the cause and a hearing was had before the judge of the superior court to whom the case had been assigned. On that hearing it was developed that the person named as Carl in the bill of complaint was plaintiff in error, Carl D. Case. After the hearing, and before a decree was entered, Case filed in the cause a sworn petition for permission to appear as amicuscuri, in which petition he denied that he had ever at any time been guilty of adultery with Mrs. Leland. The court refused to appoint Case as amicus curi but did appoint Frederick A. Brown as such and reopened the case. Mrs. Leland, being subpoenaed as a witness by amicus curi, *428 appeared in person and by an attorney. A full hearing was then had before the court, at which hearing Case testified, and denied that he had ever had any improper relations with Mrs. Leland, while she testified to her own guilt and called five witnesses in her effort to substantiate the claim made by her husband. It was the contention of Case and amicus curi that Mrs. Leland was suffering from delusions and hallucinations, and many witnesses were offered, both expert and lay, upon this question. The trial court, after hearing the evidence and seeing the witnesses, found that defendant in error was not entitled to a divorce and dismissed the bill for want of equity. From the decree dismissing the bill for want of equity defendant in error appealed to the Appellate Court for the First District, where the decree of the superior court was reversed and the cause remanded to that court, with directions to enter a decree as prayed for in the bill of complaint. Case thereupon sued out of this court a writ of error, making Mrs. Leland co-plaintiff in error. In this court, upon motion, a severance was had, Case remaining as sole plaintiff in error, while Mrs. Leland filed a brief in support of the finding of the Appellate Court.
The first question which naturally presents itself in this case is whether or not plaintiff in error has a right, under the laws of the State of Illinois, to prosecute this writ of error. There is no statute in this State giving him such right. It has been held by this court that to entitle a person to sue out a writ of error he must be a party or a privy to the record, or be one who is injured by the judgment or who will be benefited by its reversal, or is competent to release errors. (People v. Harrigan,
It is contended by plaintiff in error that he has the right to prosecute this writ of error for the reason that he is named as co-respondent in the divorce proceedings. While in England and in some of the States in this country a co-respondent is given such right by statute, such is not the case in this State. A writ of error was a writ of right at common law, and that right having been extended to chancery causes by our statute without restrictions, it is to be *430
regarded the same as at common law and should be given the same scope as at common law. (Anderson v. Steger,
It is contended by plaintiff in error that to deny a co-respondent a right to intervene is to open the door for blackmail and collusion and that innocent persons may be greatly damaged in their reputation without any adequate redress. While there is some potency in this argument it is an argument to be directed to the legislature and not the judicial department of the State. This court is not a legislative body and cannot enact laws, but can only administer justice in accordance with existing law.
Plaintiff in error having no right under the laws of this State to prosecute this writ of error, it must be dismissed.
Writ of error dismissed. *433