City of Chicago v. O'Hare

124 Ill. App. 290, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 30
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 30, 1906
DocketGen. No. 12,859
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 124 Ill. App. 290 (City of Chicago v. O'Hare) 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
City of Chicago v. O'Hare, 124 Ill. App. 290, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 30 (Ill. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Freeman

delivered the opinion of the court.

There is in this case a preliminary motion to dismiss the appeal because, it is said, appellants did not file an appeal bond in accordance in that respect with the provision of the statute relating to “Appeals from Interlocutory Orders.” (R. S. Chap. 22, Sec. 52.) It is there provided that “the party taking such appeal shall give bond to be approved by the clerk of the court below, to secure costs in the Appellate Court.” Appellee’s contention is that this statute is “to be strictly and literally construed,” and that the only effective method in which appellants could take an appeal under that statute “is the filing of an appeal bond with the clerk of the court below.” We cannot concur in this view, in a case where appellants are the city, a municipal corporation, its mayor and chief of police, the two latter public officers “defending in their official capacities,” each and all of whom are allowed by section 72 of the Practice Act (R. S.) “in all cases of appeal or writ of error by them from any inferior court to any higher court to prosecute the same without giving bond.” We are of opinion that by said section 72 “any writ of error or appeal” then 'or thereafter provided for maybe granted, so long as the section continues in force, “without requiring any bond to be given as required by law, as in other cases.” It is true as said in Harding v. Harding Incandescent Co., 98 Ill. App., 141-142, cited by appellee’s counsel that “the right of appeal is a matter of statutory creation, not a common law right. Hence conformity to the statute is essential and a lack of it jurisdictional.” The procedure in the present case is in precise, conformity to the section of the Practice Act referred to, and the provision relating to appeals from interlocutory orders is we think one of those “other cases” referred to in section 72 of the Practice Act in the phrase above quoted therefrom. There is nothing repugnant nor inconsistent in either of the acts with the other and neither is to be deemed repealed by implication. People v. Harrison, 185 Ill., 307—313.

While the act allowing appeals from interlocutory orders is later than the section of the Practice Act referred to, the later act does not repeal the former either in words or effect. It contains no provision to the effect that all laws and parts off laws in conflict with it are thereby repealed, and so far as the Practice Act is or may seem to be in conflict, it must be regarded as an exception in the matter of giving bond on appeal in favor of the municipal corporations and other parties therein named.

Under the annexation proceedings by which Hyde Park became a part of the city of Chicago the ordinances of the village of Hyde Park here in controversy were continued in force and operative in the territory in question. People v. Cregier, 138 Ill., 401. It is urged in behalf of appellee that the protest or objection against the renewal of appellee’s license was insufScient in that it contained only the signatures of one-quarter of the property owners on 51st street between Prairie and Indiana avenues and not the signatures of one-quarter of the property owners on all the streets bounding the block in which appellee’s dram-shop on 51st street is located. . Hence it is said that the protest did not comply with the terms of the ordinance relating to such ohjection. In Harrison v. The People, 195 Ill., 466-469, the ordinance now in controversy set forth in the preceding statement was construed, and it was held that the first of its provisions requiring an application for a license under said ordinance to “he signed by a majority of the property owners according to frontage on both sides of the street in the block in which such dram-shop is to be kept,” required the signatures of a majority of such property owners on both sides of the four streets bounding said block in which the dram-shop is to be kept; whereas the second provision requiring that such application “shall also be signed by a majority of the bona fide householders and persons or firms living in or doing business on each side of the street in the block upon which such dram-shop shall have its main entrance” was conceded to have been satisfied by the bona fide signatures of the persons named, living in or doing business upon each side of that one of the four streets bounding the block, upon which the dram-shop shall have its main entrance. This last mentioned provision is substantially repeated in the proviso of the ordinance, the meaning of which proviso is now questioned. Therein it is “provided” that the applicant for a renewal of a license shall not be required to present a new application in order to obtain such renewal, unless when, as in the present instance, objection to the renewal is filed within the time specified, which shall be signed by “one-quarter of the property owners or bona fide householders, persons and firms doing business upon both sides of the street in the block upon which the said dram-shop has its main entrance.” The requirement as to signers to such objection was we think satisfied when the objection was, as the bill seems to concede, signed by a quarter of the property owners or bona fide householders, persons and firms doing business upon both sides of 51st Street between Prairie and Indiana avenues, upon which street the complainant’s dram-shop has its main entrance. In Patterson v. Johnson, 214 Ill., 481-492, it is said that the word “block” may mean a “square” or it may mean “the part of a street which lies between two cross streets,” and the latter is the meaning which must be given to it in the proviso in controversy and which appears to have been given to the similar language employed in the prior part of the ordinance in the case of Harrison v. The People, supra. (See bottom of page 469, also Idem 97th Ill. App., 421—429, where the facts as to the signatures in that case are stated.)

We deem it unnecessary to consider at length the other points presented in the briefs of counsel, since we are of opinion that the bill in equity cannot be maintained and that upon the face of the bill the injunction prayed for and issued by the Superior Court is unwarranted and erroneous. It is evident from what has been said that in our opinion the objection or protest which according to the bill was filed with the proper authorities against the renewal of complainant’s license, was valid under the provision of the ordinance applicable. It became necessary therefore that complainant present a new application in order to obtain a renewal of license, to be accompanied by signatures as required by the construction given to the phraseology of the ordinance by the Supreme Court in People v. Harrison, supra. Hntil this was done the complainant was not entitled to any license after the expiration of the time in which his former license had been operative. It appears upon the face of his bill that without a license to keep a dram-shop, he is seeking by bill in equity to compel the proper authorities of the city to permit him to conduct a dram-shop in violation of laws and ordinances the validity and force of which are not questioned. The prayer of the bill is that “defendants may be enjoined and restrained from in any way interfering with the conduct of complainant’s business” in keeping said dram-shop. Appellants by their answer deny that a court of equity has jurisdiction in the case and allege that complainant has an adequate remedy at law for the alleged injurious action charged against appellants and of which he complains.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 Ill. App. 290, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-chicago-v-ohare-illappct-1906.