192 N.E. 229 | Ill. | 1934
The People of the State of Illinois, by the Attorney General, filed a bill in equity in the circuit court of Cook county against Fred E. Sterling, Len Small, Verne S. Curtis and others therein named, as defendants, seeking an accounting for interest on State funds alleged to be due from Sterling, a former State Treasurer, and for other relief hereinafter mentioned. The defendants filed special limited appearances for the purpose only of questioning the jurisdiction of the court, accompanied by a motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction. This motion was allowed, and upon decree dismissing the bill for want of jurisdiction the cause is brought to this court by direct appeal, the State being a party.
The bill of complaint herein alleges the places of residence of the various defendants, none of them being in Sangamon county. It sets out that in November, 1921, *356
the People, by Edward J. Brundage, who was then Attorney General of the State, filed a certain bill of complaint in the circuit court of Sangamon county against the identical defendants herein named and sets forth in hc verba the allegations and prayer of that bill. That bill alleged, in substance, that the defendant Fred E. Sterling was Treasrer of Illinois for two years from and after the second Monday in January, 1919, and that the defendants Len Small, Edward C. Curtis and others were his bondsmen, and that he duly qualified and served as such State Treasurer, receiving a salary of $10,000 per annum therefor and not entitled to any other profit or income from said office. That bill further alleged that Small was the immediate predecessor in office of Sterling, having served from the first Monday in January, 1917, to the time Sterling took office. It sets forth and describes an alleged conspiracy between Small, Sterling, Edward C. Curtis and Verne S. Curtis whereby State funds were to be used for the purpose of earning interest for the private profit and advantage of the conspirators. The bill was, in substance, identical with that in the case of People v. Small,
The bill in this case, after setting forth in full the bill in the previous case as above mentioned, proceeds to allege the issuance and service of summons in the prior suit, an order referring that case to a master in chancery, an order of January 7, 1929, in the circuit court of Sangamon county requiring the complainant to show cause why the suit should not be stricken from the docket, an order of February 2, 1929, discharging that rule, and a final order of that court on November 19, 1932, which was in the words following, omitting the heading and title, which are not material here:
"This day comes Oscar E. Carlstrom, Attorney General of the State of Illinois, and enters his motion to dismiss *357 this cause for want of equity. Also on this day comes Otto Kerner, Attorney General elect, and objects and protests to the dismissal of this cause. And the court having heard the motion to dismiss for want of equity, and being now fully advised, allows the said motion. And it is thereupon ordered by the court that this cause be and the same is hereby dismissed for want of equity, on motion of the Attorney General."
After recital of these proceedings and decree in the former suit in Sangamon county, the bill proceeds to allege that the allegations in the prior bill were true; that Oscar E. Carlstrom, who caused the entry of the order dismissing the former suit without equity, was the same Oscar E. Carlstrom who was elected Attorney General at the November, 1924, election, at which Sterling was elected Lieutenant-Governor and Small elected Governor of Illinois, and that he had made political promises to the effect that he would dismiss the above mentioned interest suit and others then pending against Small and other State treasurers, if elected. The bill then alleges and sets forth in full a decree of the circuit court of Sangamon county entered on December 31, 1924, finding, in substance, that Small, Sterling, Curtis and others had conspired to secure a private profit from the use of State funds and by the means therein set forth, which are also fully described in People v. Small, supra, to which reference is made. The opinion of this court in the Small case is set forth in full, and the bill then proceeds to allege the re-docketing of that case, the reference to the master for an accounting, that it was made to appear before the master that the situations under Small and Sterling were identical, and that Carlstrom had knowledge of all of these facts and that the dealings were a mere cloak or device to divert from the People of the State of Illinois interest and discount derived from the use of the people's funds; that Carlstrom participated, as Attorney General, in these proceedings, together *358 with three of his assistants, and had available at all times full information and knowledge of the sums, alleged to be as large as a million dollars, claimed to have accrued during the Sterling administration and to have been wrongfully diverted to Sterling, Small and Curtis. It then alleges the existence of a fiduciary relation between Carlstrom and the People of the State of Illinois, and his duty to make full and complete inquiry concerning the rights of the people to the funds involved in the proceedings against Sterling and others and to not make any disposition of said suit without fully informing himself in connection therewith. It is alleged that he failed to make such inquiries and that he disregarded such facts as were known to him, and fraudulently failed to protect the people in their rights in the suits against Sterling and others, in total disregard of his duty and in fraud of the People of the State of Illinois. The bill alleges that the present Attorney General, Otto Kerner, prior to his induction into office but after his election, appeared in court and protested against the dismissal of the above mentioned suit and the entry of the decree for want of equity, but that his protests were disregarded by Carlstrom and by the court. Other facts are alleged and the conclusion asserted that the order of the circuit court of Sangamon county entered on the 19th of November, 1932, dismissing the bill against Sterling for want of equity, was obtained by fraud and should be set aside, and that a full account should be taken and found by the court upon a full hearing as to the amount due to the people by reason of the wrongful diversion of interest and discount as set forth in the present and prior bills.
The prayer of the bill is that the defendants, and each of them, be required to answer but not under oath, the answer under oath being waived; that the order and decree of the circuit court of Sangamon county entered on the 19th day of November, 1932, in the cause of The People, etc. vs. Fred E. Sterling et al. dismissing said cause for *359 want of equity, be held "fraudulent and void, vacated and set aside in so far as same may be claimed by defendants to beres adjudicata or an estoppel or bar to the relief in this bill of complaint prayed;" that Fred E. Sterling, Verne S. Curtis, Etha G. Curtis, administratrix of the estate of Edward C. Curtis, deceased, may be required to account, etc., and with a prayer for further relief against the various bondsmen. The bill is signed by the People of the State of Illinois, by Otto Kerner, Attorney General.
The defendants came into court, and, after filing limited appearances for the purpose of questioning the jurisdiction, filed their motions to dismiss for want of jurisdiction.
Briefly summarized, the appellant contends that the bill in this case is neither a bill of review nor a bill in the nature of a bill of review; that it is merely a bill for an accounting, and that it does not seek to modify or set aside the decree of the circuit court of Sangamon county but merely prays that the defendants, who are alleged to be parties to the fraud, be prevented from obtaining any benefits thereunder, on the ground that fraud vitiates all things. The appellees contend, and the circuit court apparently held, that this is a bill in the nature of a bill of review and that it cannot be brought in any other county or any other court than that which entered the decree sought to be reviewed. This is the only issue before us.
A motion to dismiss a bill upon the ground that there is no equity apparent upon the face of the bill or that the court has no jurisdiction is treated as a general demurrer, admitting all the facts well pleaded. (Vieley v. Thompson,
In this bill, as compared with the original bill in Sangamon county, there is an identity of parties, of cause *360 of action, of subject matter and of relief prayed. We must therefore at the beginning of our inquiry determine whether or not it is true, as appellant contends, that fraud vitiates every transaction into which it enters, even to the extent of so far invalidating a decree of a court of competent jurisdiction that it can be held for naught by another court of equal, but no greater, jurisdiction when later called in question between the same parties, concerning the same subject matters and praying for the same relief. If such is the rule it must necessarily follow that the second litigation would be no more conclusive than the first had been, nor, for that matter, would the third or fourth, or any other number. The unqualified adoption of such a rule would be so disruptive of the orderly processes of our courts and so fatal to the well known principle that it is desirable that litigation should have an end, that we have examined the subject with some care. We find upon our examination that the rule is not as contended for by the People but quite the contrary.
It is true that there is much language in the reported cases which would support appellant's contention if considered only by itself and not in connection with the facts in the cases and other language in the same opinion. Thus, in Wing v. Little,
Appellant in this case also cites cases from other jurisdictions. Thus, in Sahlgard v. Kennedy, 2 Fed. 295, the court said: "And if the fraud is proved, can prevent all parties who are before it from enforcing the decree, and, of course, from obtaining any advantage by virtue of a sale made therein." An examination of the case discloses that it is similar to Wing v. Little, supra, wherein it was attempted by a fraudulent decree to affect the rights of a third person. The case of Dobson v. Pearce,
Upon the other hand, we find the rule to be firmly established in American jurisprudence that a judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction, having jurisdiction of the subject and the parties by legal process duly served, where no appeal, writ of error, certiorari, review or other legal process lies for revising, reversing or affirming such judgment, or where no such process is commenced by the party who would void the judgment in the mode and at the time prescribed by law, is conclusive upon the same parties in any other proceeding in law, in equity, or before any other judicial tribunal. (Greene v. Greene, 2 Gray, 361.) In the case just cited the wife sought a divorce from her husband, alleging five years' desertion. She set forth the existence of a decreea vinculo obtained by her husband at a former term and averred that the decree was obtained by fraud and false testimony. She requested that the court hear evidence as to the fraud, collusion and false testimony by which the decree was obtained against her and that the same might be set aside and held for naught. In the course of the opinion the court said: "But if a new and original libel may be brought upon the ground that a former decree was obtained by false evidence, we see nothing to prevent the husband from bringing a third suit to reverse the decree of reversal on a suggestion and offer of proof that the decree of reversal was obtained on perjury, subornation of perjury and other fraud, and thus reverse the second decree and re-instate the original *363 decree of divorce a vinculo." The court then proceeds to lay down the rule as stated at the beginning of this paragraph. That case is cited because of its age and because it has been so frequently cited and followed in this country.
As it would unnecessarily prolong this opinion to review the numerous authorities in various States we will confine ourselves to those in Illinois. In the early case ofSwiggart v. Harber, 4 Scam. 364, this court laid down the rule that where a court has jurisdiction of the person of the defendant and the subject matter of the suit, its judgment, until reversed, is binding upon the parties whether correct or not, and that it is only where there is a want of jurisdiction in the court that the proceedings are a nullity. The same rule was again announced in Buckmaster v. Ryder,
Notwithstanding these authorities and this well established principle, the appellant contends that because the decree in the Sangamon county circuit court was procured by fraud it must be treated as a nullity. In considering this point it must be borne in mind that there are two classes of frauds drawn in question in cases of this kind: First, there is that kind of fraud which prevents the court from acquiring jurisdiction or merely gives it colorable jurisdiction; and second, that kind of fraud which occurred in the proceedings of the court after jurisdiction had been obtained, such as perjury, concealment, and other chicanery. The first variety of fraud will invalidate the decree, rendering it an entire nullity. On the other hand, it is well established that the second class has no such legal effect. One of the earlier cases in this State on the point isCaswell v. Caswell,
It being entirely clear that the decree of the circuit court of Sangamon county is not subject to collateral attack, it becomes necessary to determine, first, whether this bill, regardless of what it may be called, is a direct attack — i.e., a bill of review or a bill in the nature of a bill of review; and second, if the bill in this case is a bill of review or a bill in the nature of a bill of review, whether any court other than the circuit court of Sangamon county has jurisdiction to entertain it.
It is not essential to this decision that we attempt any refined discussion as to the difference between bills of review and bills in the nature of bills of review. These terms have been loosely used to describe in general that form of equitable procedure whereby a bill is filed to procure the explanation, alteration or reversal of a final decree by the court which rendered it, after its enrollment or the equivalent thereof. The fundamental rule on this subject was first laid down by Lord Bacon, (4 Bacon's Works, (ed. 1824,) p. 509,) and the law on this point has always been clearly defined and well understood in Illinois. In Griggs v. Gear, 3 Gilm. 2, decided in this court at the December term, 1845, it was held that bills of review and bills in the nature of bills of review are divided into three classes: First, one brought for error of law apparent upon the face of the decree; second, a bill of review for newly *366
discovered evidence; and third, a bill for opening and reversing a decree in the same court for fraud. This definition of the attributes of a bill of review or a bill in the nature of a bill of review has been re-stated in this court and re-affirmed in the later cases of Harrigan v. County of Peoria,
It is insisted by the appellant, however, that the bill in this case is not a bill of review nor a bill in the nature of a bill of review but a new and independent suit. It is sufficient to point out in this connection that bills in the nature of bills of review based upon fraud or newly discovered evidence always partake more or less of the nature of independent bills. In the case of Knobloch v. Mueller,
The above authorities clearly indicate that no matter by what name it may be called, the bill in this case is in legal effect a bill in the nature of a bill of review. The relief sought cannot be had so long as the prior decree remains in full force, and it has been said to be one of the tests for determining whether a bill is a bill of review, to determine whether the former decree might be pleaded in bar of the later suit. Knight v. Atkisson, 2 Tenn. Ch. 384.
This leaves for our consideration only the final question of whether a bill in the nature of a bill of review may be brought in any court other than the one in which the original decree was entered. It is clearly established in this State that it cannot. In the case of Mathias v. Mathias,
What we have said disposes of all but two of the contentions raised by appellant. It is urged that "equity will not suffer a wrong to be without a remedy." Without questioning the soundness of this maxim, we can only suggest that no authority is cited to us, and we know of no case, wherein that maxim has been extended to confer jurisdiction upon a court which has none. There is also a suggestion of doubt, rather than an argument, as to whether the former Attorney General could dismiss the proceeding then pending in Sangamon county because of his not having done so in good faith. The holding of this court in *369 Fergus v. Russel,
In this opinion we have not reviewed every authority cited by the parties. There are about one hundred and twenty-five citations in the briefs, and we have endeavored to discuss such of them as we consider necessary to a determination of the principles governing this case. Upon a full consideration we are of the opinion that the bill in this case is in legal effect a bill in the nature of a bill of review and that the circuit court of Cook county was without jurisdiction to entertain it.
The decree of the circuit court is therefore affirmed.
Decree affirmed.