Wood v. Tucker

Mr. Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action of forcible detainer, commenced by appellee, before a justice of the peace of Peoria county, against appellant, to recover a tract of land. On a trial before the justice, appellee recovered judgment for the possession, but appellant removed the case to the circuit court, by appeal. At the next term the court, on the motion of appellee, ruled appellant to file an additional bond for rent, in the penal sum of one thousand dollars, on or before a day named. On the day fixed therefor appellant filed a bond to cover damages and costs of suit that might be recovered by appellee. Six days afterwards, he filed another bond in the required sum, conditioned to pay rents, costs, and damages sustained by a wrongful detention of the premises. Seven days afterwards, the court, on the application of appellee, dismissed the appeal for a non-compliance with the rule, and defendant below brings the case, by appeal, to this court.

It is first urged that appellant, having filed an affidavit of himself and a freeholder of the precinct, as required by the statute, and the justice of the peace having fixed the penalty of the bond, the circuit court had no power to revise the action of the justice, and could not require an additional bond in a larger sum, unless the cause should be -continued, and that the court erred in making the order for an additional bond; that the action of the justice of the peace or circuit clerk in fixing the penalty, under the statute, is final and conclusive.

It has always been the practice in the circuit courts of this State to- require additional security on appeal bonds and to dismiss the appeal on failure to file an additional bond when required. Yet the law authorized the justice of the peace or circuit clerk to approve the security. No one imagines that because the justice or clerk has approved insufficient security, the circuit court is concluded from requiring additional security. The sixty-fifth section of the justice of the peace act, B. S. 325, provides that in any case of appeal from a justice of the peace, if the bond shall be adjudged informal or otherwise insufficient, the appeal shall not be dismissed if the party shall, in a reasonable time, execute and file a sufficient bond. This section confers ample power upon the circuit court to dismiss appeals where the bond is defective, unless it shall be amended. Otherwise the action of the justice of the peace or clerk might work great prejudice to the appellee. If they should approve security wholly insolvent, it would be unjust in the extreme, in many cases, to hold the circuit court has no power to rule appellant to give good security ; and yet the law has vested those officers with power to approve the security, and has not, in terms, authorized the circuit court to review their action in that respect. And yet the courts have held that they have such power, by implication, and its exercise has not been questioned. We are, therefore, clearly of the opinion that, under this provision, the court had power to determine whether the bond was sufficient, and if not, to require a good and proper bond.

A bond defective in substance or form, in all cases of appeal, maybe objected to, and, if not amended, the_ appeal may be dismissed. And the same rule applies to appeals in cases of forcible entry and detainer. McCoy v. Allen, 36 Ill. 429. And even if the question of leave to amend, in such cases, were only discretionary, still the rule would be the same.

The first appeal bond filed with the clerk of the circuit court was wholly insufficient. The statute requires that the bond shall containa clause conditioned for the payment of all rents becoming due, if any, from the commencement of the suit until the determination thereof. The bond is only conditioned to prosecute the appeal with effect, and pay and comply with whatever judgment may be rendered by the court on a final hearing, and all rents that “may have accrued from said premises.” It fails to provide for the rents to become due after the appeal was taken. It only covered rents that had accrued, and not rents that should subsequently accrue, whilst the law requires the bond to cover both those that had, as well as those that might accrue. There can be no pretense that this bond was a compliance with the statute.

The condition of the first bond given under the rule of court is still more defective, as it contains no reference to rents of any kind. It has a condition for the payment of all damages for the wrongful detention of the premises. But this is a total departure from the requirements of the statute, and is wholly insufficient. The second bond filed in the circuit court is conditioned for the payment of all rents, costs, and damages for the wrongful detention of the premises. This is in no sense a compliance with the statute, either in substance or in form; an appellee has a right to insist upon a bond that complies with the statute. He should not be driven to litigate and settle doubtful legal questions before he can recover on an appeal bond; and on a failure of the appellant to execute such a bond, it becomes the duty of the court, when asked, to dismiss the appeal. When we see that none of these bonds comply with the requirements of the statute, we can only hold that the court acted properly in dismissing the appeal.

Again, on the dismissal of the appeal, up exception, so far as we can discover, was taken to the ruling of the court, and 'in the absence of such an exception this court could not reverse, even if the bond had been in compliance with the statute.

Perceiving no error in this record, the judgment of the court below must be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.