delivered the opinion of the court:
Rose Marabia brought an action on the case in the circuit court of Cook county on June 23, 1919, against the Mary Thompson Hospital of Chicago for Women and Children. A summons was issued returnable to the September term and was returned served on June 24. A declaration was filed of two counts, in the second of which the plaintiff alleged that the defendant maintained and held out to the public a certain hospital in the city of Chicago for the care and treatment of persons needing medical and surgical attention and care; that the plaintiff, relying upon the defendant so holding itself out, went to the hospital to give birth to a child, paid the defendant a certain compensation, and while in the care of the servants, employees, physicians and nurses provided by the defendant to care for her, a hot-water bag was negligently placed against her leg and negligently suffered to remain there an improper length of time, whereby the leg was burned and injured; that thereafter the defendant, by its servants, physicians and nurses, treated the injured leg, but it grew worse and the plaintiff was seriously and permanently injured, suffered great pain and was prevented from attending to her affairs, to her'damage of $10,000. The defendant not appearing, was defaulted on October 11, 1919, and on April 9, 1920, a jury was empaneled, which assessed the plaintiff’s damages at $3550, for which amount judgment was rendered. On May 19, 1920, after the expiration of the term, the defendant entered a motion to set aside the judgment, and on June 18 the court allowed the motion, vacated the judgment and set aside the default. The plaintiff appealed from this order, the Appellate Court affirmed it, and a writ of certiorari was awarded on the petition of the plaintiff to review the record.
The motion to vacate the judgment shows that the person upon whom the summons was served was employed by the defendant as night supervisor of nurses; that her duties were only to supervise the work of the night nurses and she had nothing to do with the business of the hospital or its management; that she was not on duty at the time of service and informed the deputy sheriff that she had no authority to accept service, but the deputy left the summons with her but promised to return and serve it upon the superintendent; that she left the copy upon her desk and neglected to call the defendant’s attention to it; that all the officers of the defendant, including the president, vice-president, secretary and .treasurer, were in the city of Chicago on June 24, 1919, and accessible to service, but none of them was served and no officer or agent of the defendant ever saw the summons or had any notice that the suit was pending until after judgment was rendered and after the term had expired at which the judgment was rendered. It was further shown that the defendant is a corporation organized under the laws of this State not for profit but solely for the charitable purpose of establishing and maintaining a hospital as a charitable institution; that it has received large gifts for this purpose; that it charges needy patients nothing for board and treatment, and that the payments received from patients desiring to assist in its charitable work are insufficient to cover the per capita cost of maintenance; that such payments are added to those derived from various endowments, gifts, donations and foundations, and thereby it is made possible to carry on the work proposed in its charter; that no compensation is paid to any of the trustees who manage the affairs of the corporation, and no dividends are paid by reason of any income, interest or other payments that may be derived through the operation of the hospital or from the various endowments and gifts made to it; that the trustees are prohibited from diverting funds to purposes other than those for which they were donated to the hospital and have no power to use any funds of the corporation for any other purpose than the maintenance of the hospital, and it has no other property except that which comes through gifts, donations, legacies or the proceeds of investments made of the funds derived from gifts. It is further shown that none of these facts have appeared in the record but they were all unknown to the court; that the cause of action shown by the declaration is based upon negligence of the defendant’s servants, agents, employees, nurses and physicians and upon the rule of respondeat superior; that under the law of this State the plaintiff has no cause of action, as alleged in the declaration, against the defendant by reason of the facts alleged in the motion and the court has no jurisdiction to enter any judgment against the defendant of the nature prayed for in the declaration. Attached to the motion were certificates of the organization of the defendant and its change of name from that under which it was originally incorporated to its present name.
The motion was made under section 89 of the Practice act, which abolishes the writ of error coram nobis and provides that all errors in fact committed in the proceedings of any court' of record which by the common law could have been corrected by that writ may be corrected by the court in which the error was committed, by motion made at any time within five years after the rendition of final judgment in the case, upon reasonable notice. This section has received consideration in several cases, among which is the very recent one of Chapman v. North American Life Ins. Co.
The practice upon the motion which has been substituted for the writ of error coram nobis has received consideration in a number of cases in this court, among them Mitchell v. King,
In Bronson v. Schulten,
The defendant in error, so far as this case is concerned, was served with summons on June 24,1919, it was not defaulted until October following, and the judgment was not rendered until April, 1920. No excuse can be recognized for its failure to plead if it was duly served, for the only excuse offered is the neglect of its agent to notify its managing officers of the service. The statute has declared such service sufficient notice, and the defendant was bound by it, and only some subsequently intervening cause could excuse its default. Having failed to present its defense to the court by plea or demurrer, the only question which could be presented upon the default was the sufficiency of the cause of action stated in the declaration. When the court entered judgment on the declaration no error of fact was possible. Lack of knowledge by the court of facts in the case which constitute a defense is not the error of fact which can be corrected by motion. It was the duty of the defendant to bring those facts into the record, and if it failed to do so the plaintiff was under no obligation to do it, and the court committed no error in disregarding such facts in rendering judgment. The facts alleged in the declaration were admitted. If they constituted a cause of action the court could do no more or less than render judgment against the defendant. If they did not constitute a cause of action, its error in rendering judgment against the defendant was an error of law, which can be reviewed only by a writ of error issuing from an appellate court. The trial court had no power, on motion, to correct its error of law after the expiration of the term. This case is one where a defendant having been served with process, with full knowledge of a defense permitted judgment to be rendered by default. If the judgment can be set aside in such case on motion, merely because the court did not know of the facts constituting the defense, a defendant is under no necessity to plead before judgment. He may let a default be taken and wait until an execution is served on him, and then come into court, have the judgment vacated and then present his defense with the same benefit as if he had made his defense at the first opportunity. If the return of the sheriff was false and the defendant had a defense to the plaintiff’s action which it was prevented from making because of the false return, it had a remedy against the sheriff by its action for the false return; (Owens v. Ranstead,
There is no basis in either reason or authority for the argument of counsel for the defendant in error that the judgment was void for the reason that the court exceeded its jurisdiction in rendering it. The case of Armstrong v. Obucino,
The defendant in error argues that this court is without jurisdiction to review the judgment of the Appellate Court, because, it says, the motion to vacate the judgment is an action ex contractu, in which no judgment was rendered except a judgment for costs, and therefore the statute did not authorize the issuance of a writ of certiorari. A motion to vacate a judgment cannot be said to be an action ex contractu or sounding in damages. Its effect is that of a writ of error, and the judgment sought to be reviewed is a judgment for $3550.
The circuit court erred in vacating the judgment and the Appellate Court erred in affirming the judgment of the circuit court. Both judgments will be reversed and the cause will be remanded to the circuit court, with directions to deny the motion of the defendant in error.
Reversed and remanded, with directions.
