This is an appeal from .the judgment of the circuit court quashing a statutory certiorari to justice’s court for insufficiency of petition. " We are inclined to the opinion that the petition sufficiently shows by the facts set forth that the judgment before the justice was not the result of negligence in the defendant Cole, the petitioner, and that its facts in this respect distinguish it from the case of Rational Bank v. Beresford, 78 Ill. 391. There the defendant was guilty of negligence in not appearing until an hour after the time when the court might lawfully and within the understanding of the parties have ren_ dered a judgment, at which time it was in fact rendered. But the justice being absent at the time the defendant came, the latter simply asked the justice’s clerk, who is not an officer, if judgment had been rendered, and being told that none had, he went away without looking at the docket. That man was negligent: (1st), in not appearing in time; (2d), in not looking at the docket, because a judgment could have been rendered legally by the justice, and in perfectly good faith, so far as the plaintiff was concerned. In the case in hand the circumstances . are materially different. Here the case was in condition for trial April 11, at 2 o’clock, p. n. Both parties were present, but the plaintiff was not ready. He wanted the case continued to April 17. Defendant agreed to it, and it was marked on the wrapper of the files, “ Continued to 2 o’clock p. at., April 17th.” Then the plaintiff objected to that time, saying he could not get his witnesses before 4 o’clock. To accommodate him, defendant agreed to that, but the time on the wrapper was marked 3 o’clock instead of 2, as before, in which case by the common law of justices’ court practice, the case would not he for trial until 4. On this day, to which the case was continued, the defendant appeared twenty minutes before 4 o’clock, and in this he was diligent, and unlike the defendant in the case referred to. How, this case having been continued to 3 o’clock, which meant for trial at 4, at the plaintiff’s request and by express agreement, the plaintiff could not take judgment against defendant before 4 o’clock without an act of bad faith on his part. But it appears that he did. The defendant coming there so long before the time at which the justice had a legal right to hear the case, or the plaintiff the legal or moral right to take judgment, found neither the plaintiff nor justice there. He waited patiently until after 4 o’clock, and was then told that the justice had gone to Springfield, so that the case could not be disposed of that day. He was told this by the justice’s clerk in his office.
This was not information as to official acts. It was information about a fact which it would have been difficult for the defendant to have investigated. Although the clerk was not a public officer, yet he was a man; and, from his position presumably as honest as the average of mankind, and being in the justice’s office he was presumed to know the fact he stated. How we think no negligence is to be imputed to the defendant in arriving at the conclusion, from these facts, that the absence of the justice would work a discontinuance of the case, as it would if the plaintiff had not fraudulently taken judgment a couple of hours before he was entitled to it. It does not lie with him, under the facts stated in the petition and admitted by the motion to quash to be true, to insist that defendant was guilty of negligence in not suspecting that he had been guilty of bad faith.
The facts and circumstances set out in the petition show that the judgment before the justice was not only not the result of negligence in the defendant, but was the result of overreaching and bad faith on the part of the plaintiff, and are sufficient to show how defendant was thereby misled and prevented from appealing in the ordinary way. Does it sufficiently show that the judgment was unjust and erroneous? It states that the plaintiff brought the suit to recover the sum of one hundred and forty-seven dollars and forty cents, claimed to be due from said petitioner to said Atkinson, for labor and materials and breach of contract. Then it avers that he, the petitioner, was not at the commencement of said suit, and is not now in any manner indebted to said Atkinson, and that said judgment is wholly unjust and erroneous. In this respect, the statute requires the petitioner to “ show that the judgment, in his opinion, is unjust and erroneous, setting forth wherein the injustice and error consist.” The allegations of the petition set forth the plaintiff’s claim, and then negative it m toto. We cannot conceive that any detail is necessary in such a case, any more than it is in setting up a total want of consideration, and the Supreme Court seems to have taken that view, in McNerney v. Newberry, 37 Ill. 91.
The judgment of the court below will be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.