delivered the opinion of the court.
In the Municipal Court of Chicago, in a case of the fourth class, the plaintiff, Pedersen, recovered a judgment by default for $100 and costs against the defendant Sorensen (the damages being assessed by the court after said default). The defendant thereafter sued out a writ of error in this court and here maintains that the judgment effects the taking of property without due process of law, in violation of the Constitution of the State of Illinois.
Passing over the question whether this assignment of error does not involve “a construction of the Constitution,” and can therefore only be entertained, according to the Municipal Court Act, on a writ of error sued out of the Supreme Court, we will say that the point is not well taken. The basis of it is simply that the statement of claim provided for by the statute was insufficient and ambiguous. It certainly was not in elegant or particularly clarified English, but we cannot agree with the plaintiff in error that it was without meaning. It ran thus:
“Plaintiff claim is For Money Loaned $100 to attorney Fees $20.00. By cash $20.00.”
We find ourselves compelled to believe that the defendant gathered from it, especially in connection with the affidavit of plaintiff’s claim, which followed, a passable idea of what the cause of action was. He chose to default, although properly served, and he has not afterward, without question by motion to vacate, or otherwise, the assessment of damages in the Municipal Court on evidence heard, any standing here to attack the judgment unless jurisdiction was entirely wanting. There can be no serious pretense of that in this case, and it is the opinion of the court that the writ of error must have been prosecuted for delay. Therefore the judgment is affirmed with damages, in addition to the costs, of ten dollars.
Affirmed with damages.