delivered the opinion of the court:
American Toxic Disposal, Inc. (A.T.D.), defendant, appeals from three orders of the circuit court of Cook County in a case involving a settlement agreement and an installment note. Mostardi-Platt Associates, Inc. (M-P), plaintiff, was the recipient of the installment note and party to the settlement agreement. The matter still pends in the trial court on A.TD.’s counterclaim against M-P. The three orders appealed from are (1) a January 16, 1987, order granting M-P’s motion for summary judgment; (2) an April 8, 1987, order denying A.TD.’s motion to reconsider the order of January 16, 1987, granting M-P’s motion for summary judgment; and (3) an October 19, 1987, order denying A.TD.’s motion to stay enforcement of the January 16, 1987, order granting M-P’s summary judgment.
A.T.D.’s notice of appeal was not filed until October 26, 1987, more than six months after the April 8, 1987, order denying A.T.D.’s motion to reconsider the January 16, 1987, order granting M-P’s summary judgment, but eight days after the trial court’s order of October 19, 1987, denying A.TJX’s motion to stay enforcement of the summary judgment M-P obtained on January 16,1987.
We are, initially, met with M-P’s .charge that the court has no jurisdiction of the cause because of the lateness of A.T.D.’s notice of appeal.
Previously, we denied M-P’s motion to dismiss A.T.D.’s appeal based on the modification of the supreme court’s opinion in Elg v. Whittington (1988),
In this case the January 16, 1987, order granting M-P’s motion for summary judgment did contain the language “there is no just reason to delay the enforcement or appeal” of the order. If the rule announced in the supreme court’s original opinion in Elg v. Whittington (1987),
To adopt A.TD.’s novel argument would be contrary to the reasoning in Elg v. Whittington (1987),
“A motion not filed within 30 days after the judgment (or any extension allowed) is not ‘timely’ within the meaning of that word as used in Rule 303(a); and an untimely motion, or one not directed against the judgment, neither stays the judgment nor extends the time for appeal.” Sears v. Sears (1981),85 Ill. 2d 253 , 259,422 N.E.2d 610 .
The motion seeking to stay the enforcement of the January 16, 1987, judgment was neither a timely motion nor did it attack either the January 16, 1987, summary judgment or the April 8, 1987, order denying A.T.D.’s motion to reconsider. Thus, even under the Elg case, the motion to stay enforcement of the January 16, 1987, motion filed in October 1987, did not have the effect of tolling the time requirements of the supreme court rule relating to appeals from trial court orders. 107 Ill. 2d R. 303(a).
Accordingly, A.TD.’s appeal from the orders of January 16, 1987, and April 8, 1987, are dismissed as untimely, no notice of appeal having been filed from those orders within the 30 days required by Supreme Court Rules 303 and 304. 107 Ill. 2d Rules 303, 304.
The order of October 19, 1987, denying A.TJD.’s motion to stay enforcement of the January 16, 1987, order until the counterclaim is disposed of is properly before this court since the notice of appeal from that order was filed on October 26, 1987, within 30 days of its entry.
The Illinois Code of Civil Procedure authorizes a trial court to set off judgments between the same parties, one against the other. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1987, ch. 110, par. 12 — 176.) These set-off provisions are derived, not only from the State, but the inherent powers of a court over the enforcement of its judgments. (Adam Martin Construction Co. v. Brandon Partnership (1985),
For the above reasons, the appeals from the order granting M-P’s summary judgment (the January 16, 1987, order and the order denying reconsideration, April 8, 1987) are dismissed as untimely, no notice of appeal having been filed within 30 days as required by the rules of the supreme court. The order of October 19, 1987, denying a stay of enforcement is affirmed.
Dismissed in part, and affirmed in part.
PINCHAM and COCCIA, JJ., concur.
