Cohen v. Smith

Gaby, J.

This was an original attachment commenced February 2, 1885, in the Superior Court by the defendants in error against the plaintiff in error. There was no personal service. The affidavit for the attachment stated the indebtedness to be $923, with interest at six per cent per annum from September 25, 1877, for money received. The writ and published notice stated only the $923, omitting any allusion to the interest. April 24, 1885, judgment by default was entered against the plaintiff in error for $1,398.35.

The Hew York Life Insurance Company was summoned as garnishee, and judgment rendered against it in favor of Cohen for the use of Smith et al., for $1,691. That the judgment against the plaintiff in error is erroneous, is settled by Forsyth v. Warren, 62 Ill. 68, and cases there cited; and if the error could be cured by a remittitior in this court, remitting, as has been done, $55.87, is only an attempt to bring the amount down to correspond with the original affidavit, while the excess above the amount stated in the publication notice, is the error. The .intimation in Steamship Clarion v. Moran, 18 Ill. 501, is, that the error could not be cured by a remittitur. The practice is now more liberal, but it would seem, as amendments are allowed only in furtherance of justice, that to make a remittitur effectual, it should affirmatively appear by the record that the real merits as to the residue, after the remittitur, are with the party who has the judgment. On default, after publication only, this can not be apparent.

After errors were assigned here, another attorney than those of record for the plaintiff in error put in a motion, supported by affidavits of his authority ¡from the plaintiff in error to do so, to dismiss the writ. That mode of proceeding is not regular. While a party to a suit has the right to change his attorney, yet, if such change is not in fact made by voluntary arrangement, it must be done under the order of the court. 1 Tidd’s Pr., 94.

The authority of the attorney of record is presumed. Ruckman v. Allwood, 40 Ill. 128; Williams v. Butler, 35 Ill. 544; Reed v. Curry, 35 Ill. 536; and no other attorney can interfere while that authority is unrevoked. Ginders v. Moor, I. B. & C. 654, S. C., 8 E. C. L. 276.

If, as is probably the fact, the defendants in error had ploughed with the plaintiff in error, thejr might have obtained his release of errors, and pleaded it, and put the case in a troublesome shape. Kern v. Zink, 55 Ill. 449; Ruckman v. Allwood, 40 Ill. 128.

It appears, however, that by arrangement with the plaintiff in error, this writ was sued out in his name, and has been prosecuted by, and at the expense of, the Hew York Life Insurance Company. He has, therefore, no right to control the case. All that he can claim is indemnity against the costs. The principle which protects the assignee of a non-negotiable chose in action, after notice to the party liable, against the subsequent acts of the assignor, applies here for the protection of the company. See Creighton v. Hyde Park, 6 Ill. App. 274, and cases cited there.

There is no showing that for any consideration, the parties to this writ have dealt with other, with or without notice to the defendants in error, of the interests of the company in the suit. The transaction between the plaintiff in error and. the company amounts to an equitable assignment to the company of the cause of action, namely, the right to reverse the judgment in this case for error to the company. Bispham’s Eq., Sec. 164.

That cause of action was a proper subject of assignment, being of value to both parties. Everett v. Central Iowa, 35 N. W. 609; Davis v. St. L. & S. F., 25 Fed. 786; Greenhood’s Pub. Pol. 420 et seq.

And specially is it of value to the company, presumably solvent, as a means of getting rid of a large judgment against them. For if the judgment against the plaintiff in error be reversed, the judgment against the company dependent upon the former, falls with it. 3 Bac. Abr. 384-5; Error M. 2 Saund. B. 101 aa; McJilton v. Love, 13 Ill. 486.

The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.

It will be in order after the cause is reinstated in the Superior Court, for the company to move to set aside the judgment against them.

/Reversed a/nd remanded.