delivered the opinion of the court:
In thеse proceedings Patrick J. Gorman, Martin D. Gorman, Helix, Inc., Washington Information Services, Inc., and Patrick J. Gorman Consultants, Inc. (respondents), appeal from various ordеrs entered in a citation proceeding for discovery of assets, including an order finding the individual respondents in contempt of court and sentencing them to imprisonment fоr 90 days.
In this court respondents urge reversal of the various orders appealed from because the underlying judgment was stayed prior to commencement of the supplementary proceedings; no money judgment upon which a citation to discover assets or an execution could issue was ever entered; the courts of Illinois lack jurisdiction over respondents; the trial court improperly denied petitions of respondents for change of venue so that all subsequent orders, including the order holding the individual respondents in contempt, are void and the underlying judgment upon which the citation was brought no longer exists.
For an understanding of the background of this appeаl, it is essential to consult People ex rel. Scott v. Police Hall of Fame (1978),
“That part of the order requiring the aforementionеd defendants [respondents] to pay the State compensatory damages also is affirmed; however the cause is remanded for further proceedings consistеnt with the holdings of this opinion to determine the amount of compensatory damages to be awarded.”
On November 12, 1976, respondents filed a post-trial motion to vacаte or modify the judgment of October 19, 1976. On November 15, 1976, the respondents were served in Maryland with a citation to discover assets. Respondents filed special and limited aрpearances and a motion to quash service of the citation. They raised the issues that the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction; no money judgment was ever entered upon which a citation to discover assets could have issued; and the judgment had been stayed by the filing of the post-trial motion. Respondents also filed a рetition for change of venue. In due course all of these various motions were denied by the trial court.
In addition, a motion by respondents for leave to proсeed with an interlocutory appeal (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1977, ch. 110A, pars. 308(a) and 308(e)), was filed and denied. A second petition for change of venue was denied. The trial court entered an order directing the individual respondents to appear in court for the citation hearing on January 10, 1977. Upon their failure to appear, a motion of the Attorney General for entry of a rule to show cause against them was allowed. The citation hearing was continued to March 11, 1977, and respondents again failed to appear. The hearing was again continued to March 14, 1977, and again the individual respondents did not appear. The trial court found them in contempt and sentenсed each to a jail term of 90 days.
In our opinion, the decisive issue in this case is a determination of whether supplementary proceedings in the form of a citаtion to discover assets remain viable where the judgment upon which they are based has been reversed by this court and the cause remanded for further consideratiоn of the amount for which the respondents are liable.
As a general proposition, when a judgment or order is reversed, the effect is to abrogate the judgment or order and leave the case as it stood prior to the entry thereof. (People ex rel. Doss v. Doss (1975),
The question now remains as to whether the contempt orders may stand against the individual respondents Patrick J. Gorman and Martin D. Gorman. In our opinion, the determinаtion of this issue depends upon whether the respondents were found guilty of criminal or civil contempt. The order of contempt merely states that the court found the respondents in contempt of court, but does not indicate which type of contempt. Consequently, we must look to the circumstances surrounding the case and the purpose of the contempt citations to categorize the type of contempt here involved.
Briefly stated, criminal contempt consists of conduct direсted against the dignity and authority of the court. Civil contempt consists of violation of an order of the court in a civil action for the benefit of an opposing pаrty. The proceedings in a criminal contempt are instituted to vindicate the authority of the court. The punishment inflicted is punitive in nature. The proceedings in a civil cоntempt are instituted to compel or coerce obedience to an order or decree of the court previously given for the benefit of the oрposing litigant. (See People v. Marcisz (1975),
Whatever the сourt does in cases of civil contempt, whether by way of fine or imprisonment, “it acts for the purpose of advancing the civil remedy of the other party to the suit.” (Eastman v. Dole (1919),
In the instant case, the individual respondents failed to appear in response to the citation to discover assets apparently due to their belief that the trial court had no personal jurisdiсtion over them. To advance the citation proceedings, the trial court ordered that the respondents appear on March 14, 1977. This order was for the benefit of the plaintiffs. The character of the contempt was, therefore, in our opinion, civil. An order finding respondents in civil contempt of court would ordinarily provide that the respondents could purge themselves of contempt and be discharged from custody upon obedience to the original order directing their appеarance. Sullivan,
Since the supplementary proceedings must be dismissed, it is impossible for respondents now to obey the original order entered therein. The findings of cоntempt, being civil only, must therefore fall with the supplementary proceedings. See Eastman,
In view of our disposition of this question, we need not consider the remaining issues рresented by the parties. The orders appealed from pertaining to the supplementary proceedings are accordingly reversed and the citation proceedings are quashed.
Orders reversed; citation proceedings quashed.
McGLOON and O’CONNOR, JJ., concur.
