delivered the opinion of the Court:
This is assumpsit, by appellee, against appellant. The return upon the summons is as follows:
“Served this writ on .the within named defendant, Chicago Sectional Electric Underground Company, by delivering a copy thereof to E. N. Koch, director and treasurer of said company, the president of said company not found in my county, the 23d day of November, 1883.
Seth F. Hanchett, Sheriff.
By D. W. Nickerson, Deputy.”
Appellant, on the 3d of December, 1883, filed a plea in abatement, which, omitting the caption, is as follows:
“And the said Chicago Sectional Electric Underground Company, by its attorneys, Tripp, Hawley & McMaster, comes and defends, etc., and says, at the time of issuing said writ, and at the time of service thereon on said defendant, and at all and every of said times aforesaid, said defendant was a corporation of the State of Illinois, legally and fully organized by the laws of the State of Illinois, and doing business under the same, with its principal office in said county of Cook, in the State aforesaid, and that it was fully represented, at all and every of said times aforesaid, by its president, Louis Wahl, who was, at the time of issuing and serving said writ against said defendant, a resident of said county of Cook and State of Illinois, and not absent from the same at said times aforesaid, but all and every of said times was present in said county, and that nevertheless the service of said writ of summons against said defendant, and of all process in said cause herein, was not made and had upon said Louis Wahl, president of said defendant, but upon another and different person, to-wit, a director of said corporation defendant, and that no service of any process or writ in said cause has been made on said president of said defendant, and this said defendant is ready to verify. Wherefore defendant prays judgment, if the court here will take cognizance of the action aforesaid. ”
Annexed to' the plea is the affidavit of the president that it “is true in substance and in fact. ”
On motion of appellee’s attorney, the court ordered the plea stricken from the files, on the ground that the appellant was properly served, and the return of the sheriff is in substantial compliance with the statute. The court then refused to enter judgment by default against appellee, but gave him until the next morning to plead or demur to.the declaration. Appellant, by its attorney, then moved to strike plaintiff’s affidavit of amount due, from the files, but the court overruled .the motion. On the day next following, appellant’s attorney not having demurred or plead to the declaration, appellee, .by its attorney, .moved ,the court to enter judgment by default against appellant, but the court overruled the motion, and gave appellant until the 10th of December, 1883, to plead or demur to the declaration, and on that day, appellant not having plead or demurred to the declaration, the court entered judgment by default against appellant, and assessed appellee’s damages at $2018. Exception was taken by appellant to the several rulings of the court adverse to it, and these rulings are now urged as error.
The plea in abatement, very clearly, ought not to have been stricken from the files. It was competent to raise an issue of fact upon the sheriff’s return, (Sibert v. Thorp, 77 Ill. 43, Mineral Point R. R. Co. v. Keep, 22 id. 9,) and the plea was properly verified. But we are of opinion the plea tendered an immaterial issue, and was therefore obnoxious to demurrer. The statute provides: “An incorporated company may be served with process by leaving a copy thereof with its president, if he can be found in the county in which the suit is brought; if he shall not be found in the county, then by leaving a copy of the process with any clerk, secretary, superintendent, general agent, cashier, principal director, engineer, conductor, station agent, or any agent of said company found in the county.” (Rev. Stat. 1874, p. 775, sec. 5.) The service here, in form, followed this requirement of the statute, and was, therefore, prima facie sufficient. Chicago and Pacific R. R. Co. v. Koehler, 79 Ill. 354. The language of this section is quite different from that under which St. Louis, Alton and Terre Haute R. R. Co. v. Dorsey, 47 Ill. 289, was decided. That was: “In all cases where suit has been or may hereafter be brought against any incorporated company, process shall be served upon the president of such company, if he reside in the county in which suit is brought; and if such president be absent from the county, or does not reside in the county, then the summons shall be served,” etc., (Gross’ Stat. 1869, p. 509, sec. 6,) and hence, to justify service on any one other than the president, it was essential to show either that he did not reside in the county, or that he was, at the time, absent from the county, while here, it will be observed, it is only necessary to show that he “can not be found in the county.” The change in phraseology is marked, and was evidently designed to authorize service on the other officers and agents named, whenever the president could not be found in the county, without regard to where he might actually be. The allegation in the plea does not put in issue the return that the sheriff was unable to find the president in the county, but is simply that he then resided and was in the county, — non constat, he may have been hid away where he could not be found by any reasonable effort, and that, too, for the express purpose of avoiding service.
The issue tendered, then, being immaterial, and the return, upon its face, sufficient, it is impossible that appellant can have been injured by the ruling in striking the plea from the files; and it is familiar doctrine in this court that a party can not have a cause reversed for an error which works him no injury.
No reason is assigned why the affidavit annexed to the declaration should have been stricken from the files, and we are unable to discover any error in that regard.
The only remaining error alleged is, that the court did not call a jury to assess damages; but it is only when one of the parties requires it, that, in case of default, damages are to be assessed by a jury. It does not here appear that either party asked to have damages assessed by a jury. Rev. Stat. 1874, p. 780, sec. 40.
We perceive no cause to disturb the judgment below. It is therefore affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.