Carlson v. People ex rel. Charlson

118 Ill. App. 592, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 271
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 8, 1905
DocketGen. No. 4,460
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 118 Ill. App. 592 (Carlson v. People ex rel. Charlson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carlson v. People ex rel. Charlson, 118 Ill. App. 592, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 271 (Ill. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

On June 17, 1904, the state’s attorney of Henry county, on the relation of John A. Charlson, presented a petition to the court below for a writ of quo warranto against Frank Carlson, Charles Holtman and Oliver Anderson, to require them to show by what warrant they and each of them claimed to hold and execute the office of trustee of the village of Andover in said county, which office said petition averred they had usurped. The court ordered that summons issue, and it was issued and served, and the respondents filed a plea, to which the relator demurred and the demurrer was confessed. Respondents then by leave of court amended said plea, and the demurrer filed to the original plea was ordered to be considered as filed to the amended plea, and said demurrer was heard and overruled. Relator then filed its replication to respondents’ amended plea. Respondents filed a general and special demurrer to said replication, and that demurrer was heard and overruled. Respondents elected to stand by their demurrer to the replication, and judgment of ouster was entered against them. From that judgment respondents prosecute this appeal.

It is not seriously contended that the replication was good, but it is urged that the plea was bad and did not show that respondents were entitled to hold the office of trustees of said village, and that therefore the court, if it ought to have sustained the demurrer to the replication, should have carried it back and sustained it to the plea, in which case judgment of ouster would have followed. But the record recites that the demurrer to the original plea was ordered to stand to the amended plea and was overruled. The court will not carry a demurrer to a replication back to the plea when a demurrer to such plea has already been overruled. The rule is that the party pleading over in such case waives his demurrer to the plea and admits the sufficiency of the plea. American Express Co. v. Pinckney, 29 Ill. 392; Stearns v. Cope, 109 Ill. 340; Fish v. Farwell, 160 Ill. 236; City of Chicago v. The People, 210 Ill. 84. As the demurrer to the amended plea was waived and the legal sufficiency of the amended plea was admitted by pleading-over, and as the replication is clearly insufficient, the judgment of ouster cannot be sustained. But in view of the arguments here for and against the sufficiency of the plea, we deem it proper to consider the pleadings further.

The amended plea set up with full detail that the village of Andover is a municipal corporation organized under the laws of the state of Illinois; that respondents on and prior to April 15, 1902, possessed the legal qualifications fitting them to hold the office of trustee of said village; that on said date a legal election was held in said village for the election of three trustees of the village, and that they were each duly elected to that office on that date; that the president and board of trustees of the village on April 21, 1902, canvassed the votes cast at said election and declared respondents elected to said office, and that respondents then took and subscribed an official oath as required by law and filed the same in the office of the village clerk, and thereby and by virtue of the statute in such case provided became entitled to hold the office of village trustee of said village for two years and until their successors were elected and qualified; that on April 19,1904, at the annual election of village trustees of said village, Howard Pillsbury, Gust Wongstrom and August Wenstrom each received the majority of the votes cast at said election for village trustees of said village; that at no time since said election on April 19, 1904, have the votes cast for said Pillsbury, Wongstrom and Wenstrom been canvassed by ' the board of trustees of said village, nor had the board of said village declared said Pillsbury, Wongstrom and Wenstrom elected to the office of village trustees, nor did said board of trustees of said village cause a statement of the result of the election to be entered upon its journal, nor have said Pillsbury, Wongstrom and Wenstrom, or either of them, filed in the office of the village clerk of said village the oath of office of village trustee of said village, nor has either of them entered upon the discharge of the duties of village trustee; and the plea concluded that by the warrant aforesaid respondents held the office of village trustee of said village of Andover, as well they might, and it denied that they have usurped ordo now usurp the office of village trustee of the village of Andover as by said information supposed The replication said that the people ought not by reason of anything in that plea alleged to be barred from maintaining said action, because each of said trustees, Pillsbury, Wongstrom and Wenstrom, after being elected trustees of said village of Andover, appeared at the first regular meeting of the board of trustees after said election and made.known their intention to accept the office, and offered to file the oath of office required by the constitution and the statute and the ordinance of the village, in open meeting of said board of trustees then being held, and ever since that time have attended every regular meeting of said board and insisted upon their right to act.

This replication, it will be seen, assumes that Pillsbury, Wongstrom and Wenstrom had been elected trustees of the village, whereas the plea only averred in that respect that they had each received a majority of the votes cast at said election for village trustee. It did not deny or confess and avoid the allegations of the plea that the votes cast for Pillsbury, Wongstrom and Wenstrom had not been canvassed by the board of trustees, and that the board had not declared Pillsbury, Wongstrom and Wenstrom elected, and that the board did not cause a statement of the result of the election to be entered upon its journal, and that. Pillsbury, Wongstrom and Wenstrom had not filed in the office of the village clerk the oath of office required by law, and that they had not entered upon the discharge of their duties as village trustees. All of these averments of the plea were admitted by the silence of the replication. Section 10 of article 4, of chapter 24, of the Revised Statutes, being the general act for the incorporation of cities and villages, provides that the manner of conducting and voting at elections held under that act and the canvassing of the votes shall be the same as nearly as may be as in the case of the election of county officers under the general laws of the state, and that after the closing of the polls the ballots shall be counted and the returns made out and returned under seal to the city or village clerk within two days after the election; “ and thereupon the city council or board of trustees, as the case may be, shall examine and canvass the same and declare the result of the election, and cause a statement thereof to be entered upon its journals.” Section 11 of said article 4 provides that the person having the highest number of votes for any office shall be declared elected. Section 12 requires the village or city clerk within five days after the result of the election is declared to notify all persons elected of their election, and that unless such persons qualify within ten days after such notice the office shall become vacant. Section 4 of article 6 of said act requires all officers of any city or village before entering upon the duties of their respective offices to take and subscribe an official oath or affirmation there prescribed, and that such oath or affirmation so subscribed shall be tiled in the office of the clerk.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 Ill. App. 592, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlson-v-people-ex-rel-charlson-illappct-1905.