Citation Numbers: 229 Ill. App. 45
Judges: Barry
Filed Date: 4/20/1923
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/26/2022
delivered the opinion of the court.
The motion to expunge the certificate of evidence from the record is based upon the suggestion that the ■court, at a subsequent term, was without jurisdiction to extend the time for filing the same even though the extension was granted within the original time allowed. The motion must be denied for the reasons stated in Railway Passenger & Freight Conductors’ Mut. Aid & Ben. Ass’n v. Leonard, 166 Ill. 154, and Spiehs v. Insull, 278 Ill. 184.
This is a proceeding by defendant under section 10 of the Dramshop Act [Cahill’s Ill. St. ch. 43; j[ 74(10)] to subject certain premises alleged to have been owned by plaintiffs to the payment of a judgment recovered by her against John Calvetti and others for injury to her means of support occasioned by the sale of intoxicating liquor to her husband by the defendants in said judgment. The' statute applies only to such owners as have a rentable interest in the property. Bell v. Cassem, 158 Ill. 45. The facts which the owner of the building is entitled to controvert are that he has knowingly permitted his building, in whole or in part, to be used for the sale of intoxicating liquor and that a judgment has been recovered against the occupant of the building for damages in consequence of the sale of intoxicating liquor on his premises (Garrity v. Eiger, 272 Ill. 127), or that the judgment was procured by fraud and collusion. Wing v. Little, 267 Ill. 20.
It is contended that there is no proof in the record that plaintiffs owned the property at the time the alleged sales of intoxicating liquor were made to defendant’s husband by the said Calvetti and others. Defendant’s reply to that contention is that the bill charges that plaintiffs were the owners of the premises from June 6, 1912, to June 6, 1917; that the answer denies they were the owners thereof on January 20, 1919, and states the fact to be that on August 20, 1919, they conveyed premises to other parties; that plaintiffs thereby admitted they were the owners of the property and had the power to convey the same and that they did not deny that they owned the property from June 6,1912, to June 6,1917,
It appears from the bill that defendant’s husband died on June 6,1917, and that defendant recovered the judgment against Calvetti and others on January 20, 1919. The bill avers that on January 20, 1919, plaintiffs were and ever since have been and now are the owners in fee and in control of the premises described and that, "so being the owners and in control thereof, they leased the same to said Calvetti and others from June 6, 1912, to June 6, 1917, etc. By their answer plaintiffs denied that they were the owners in fee and in control of the premises and denied that they have been the owners thereof since January 20, 1919, and aver the fact to be that on August 20, 1919, they conveyed the property to others. We are at a loss to understand how it can be seriously contended that the answer admitted that plaintiffs were the owners of the premises at any time during the life of defendant’s husband.
It is also contended that there is no proof that plaintiffs leased the premises to be used for the sale of intoxicating liquor or that they knowingly permitted the same to be so used. Counsel admit that there is no positive proof thereof. They argue, however, that where a person owns premises for a period of twelve or fifteen years and permits them to be used for such purpose no further proof is required. They say that if persons paying rent used the premises for the sale of Lemp products, being beer, and operated a saloon therein, the owner must be presumed to know that the premises were used for such purpose. There is no showing that plaintiffs were the owners of the property or that they were partners doing business as the Lemp Brewing Company, nor is it shown that the rent was paid to plaintiffs.
It is contended that there is no evidence tending to show that the judgment against Calvetti and others was recovered in consequence of the sale of intoxicating liquor on the premises in question. Counsel for defendant reply that the hill charges that such was the fact of which there is no denial in the answer. That plaintiffs set up in their answer that prior to the filing of this suit defendant received some money from others in settlement of her cause of action and that plaintiffs thereby admitted that the judgment against Calvetti and others was recovered upon the grounds stated in the bill. Nothing but the judgment was offered in evidence and so far as the record shows it may have been recovered upon an entirely different cause of action.
In common-law cases every material fact averred in the pleadings and not denied is taken as true. In equity, however, the material averments of the bill must be proven or admitted in order to support a decree awarding affirmative relief. In such cases averments without proof or admission and proof without averments are wholly unavailing. If a material averment in a bill in chancery is neither admitted nor denied, it must be proved. Howard v. Boyle, 248 Ill. 251-254. The failure to expressly deny it in the answer neither admits it nor relieves the complainant from the duty of proving it. Martin v. Collison, 266 Ill. 172. A complainant in chancery cannot avail himself of any claim established by the proof which has not been alleged in the bill, nor can defendant avail himself of any matter of defense not stated in his answer, even though, it appears in the evidence. Millard v. Millard, 221 Ill. 86.
As the decree is not supported by the evidence it must be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.