County Court v. Pogue

115 Ill. App. 391, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 333
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 24, 1904
DocketGen. No. 4,330
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 115 Ill. App. 391 (County Court v. Pogue) 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
County Court v. Pogue, 115 Ill. App. 391, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 333 (Ill. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

James B. Pogue and eight others, citizens and legal voters of DeKalb county, filed a petition ■ in the Circuit Court of that county for a common-law writ of certiorari to require the County Court of that county to send up its record relating to the calling of an election at which should be submitted to the qualified electors of said county the question of removing the county seat of said county from the city of Sycamore to the city of DeKalb, it being alleged with due fullness and particularity of averment of facts that the County Court was without jurisdiction to make the order for said election, and that its proceedings in that behalf were illegal and void. Upon a preliminary hearing the Circuit Court ordered the writ to issue, and it was served upon the clerk of the County Court and upon the county judge. The clerk of the County Court filed a return to the writ, setting out the record of the County Court upon the subject of calling said election. The cause was afterwards heard upon the return, and the proceedings and the order calling said election "were quashed. This is a writ of error sued out by said County Court, and by the clerk of the County Court, and by three other citizens of said county, claiming to be interested, to review, said judgment.

The first vital question is whether a common law writ of certiorari will lie to review the action of the County Court in calling an election to vote upon a proposition to remove a county seat. The proceeding in the County Court was under the act of March 15, 1872, entitled “An Act to provide for the removal of county seats.” That act requires public notice to be given of an intention to circulate a petition praying for an election for the removal of a county seat, at least ten days before the petition is circulated; and provides that when- such petition is signed by legal voters of said county, who are not residents of the city (or township, if the county seat is not. in a city,) in which the county seat is located, equal to two-fifths of all the legal votes cast in said count}’" at the last preceding presidential election, and is filed in the office of the clerk of the County Court not less than forty nor more than eighty days before the first day of the next September term of the County Court, such petition shall be deemed a proposal to remove the county seat. An affidavit by three legal voters of the county is required to be filed showing whether the point to which it is proposed to remove the county seat is nearer to or further from the center of the county than the county seat, which affidavit may be traversed within ten days by the affidavit of three other legal voters" of the county. Section 2 then provides: “ If so traversed, the county court shall, at the next September term of said court, after hearing the evidence in the case, decide whether or not the point to which it is proposed to remove the county seat is nearer to or further from the center of said county than the county seat.” The act authorizes any citizen and legal voter to contest the right of any person to sign such petition, whose name is subscribed thereto, and also to contest any signatures he believes fictitious, upon his filing a prescribed affidavit ten days before said September term of the County Court, with a list of the names he proposes to contest. The cleric is required to publish notice of the filing of the petition for an election for removal of the county seat, stating therein that on the first day of the September term the court will hear testimony for and against sai,d petition, as to the names on said petition, etc. Section 6 then provides as follows : “ It shall be the duty of said court, on the first day of and during the said September term, to hear all evidence for and against said petition or petitions, as to the list or lists of names, filed in said court under section 5 of this act, and to strike from such petition or petitions all such names proven by competent evidence to be fictitious, or the names of persons having no legal right to sign the same under this act; and in case there shall be but one petition and no contest as to the same, or if there shall be a contest as to the same, and said petition shall, after striking therefrom all fictitious and illegal names, still contain the number of names of legal voters required by the second section of this act, the court shall order said election, according to the prayer of said petition.”

Provision is made for the course to be pursued if there should be two petitions praying for removal of the county seat to different points. In case of a contest, it is made the duty of the clerk of the County Court to issue subpoenas for witnesses whenever requested by either side. Section 7 is as follows: “ All cases of contest arising upon said petitions or affidavit shall have precedence over all other cases at the September term of said court, and shall be heard and determined at said term, and the decision of the County Court shall be final. And in case of sickness or other inability of said county judge to preside, or in case of a vacancy in said office, then it shall be the duty of the circuit judge of the circuit in which said county is located, to attend, hear and determine said contest.” Section 8 requires the court, when it orders a county seat election, to appoint challengers for the county seat and for the town to which it is proposed to remove it. The rest of the act relates to conducting the election, canvassing the returns, contesting the election in a court of equity, and the effect of the vote—the number of votes required for a removal depending upon whether the point proposed is nearer the center of the county than the county seat, etc. An act adopted the next year provided that the words “ county court” and “court” in the act above cited, except in sections 12 and 13 thereof, shall be taken to rnean the County Court for the transaction of probate and other judicial business; and that the words “county court” in section 13 (relating to canvassing the returns) shall be held to mean the county court for the transaction of county business. The foregoing statement sufficiently shows the duties to be performed by the County Court in relation to a petition for an election to vote upon the removal of a county seat. Section 7 makes the decision of the County Court final, and the statute nowhere else provides for an appeal from its decision, or for any other method of reviewing it.

It was decided in People ex rel. v. Wilkinson, 13 Ill. 660, that the circuit courts are the highest courts of original jurisdiction in this state, and answer to the court of King’s Bench in England, and possess the same common-law power to issue writs of certiorari; and that the court of King’s Bench has always been in the practice of awarding the writ to inferior courts and special jurisdictions, commanding them to send up their records for inspection, whenever it is shown that they have exceeded their jurisdiction, and in cases where appeal or writ of error will not lie. And so it was there held that circuit courts in this state have power to award a common-law writ of certiorari to all inferior tribunals and jurisdictions -whenever it is shown either that they have exceeded the limits of their jurisdiction, or that they have proceeded illegally, and no appeal is allowed, and no other mode of directly reviewing their proceedings is provided. The same rule has been announced in similar language in many later cases, among the more recent of which are Comrs. of Drainage Dist. v. Griffin, 134 Ill. 330; Behrens v. Comrs. of Highways, 169 Ill. 558; White v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 Ill. App. 391, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-court-v-pogue-illappct-1904.