Dal Pino v. Board of Commissioners

151 Ill. App. 245, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 710
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 29, 1909
DocketGen. No. 15,390
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 151 Ill. App. 245 (Dal Pino v. Board of Commissioners) 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
Dal Pino v. Board of Commissioners, 151 Ill. App. 245, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 710 (Ill. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Smith

delivered the opinion of the court.

On December 21,1908, appellant filed his bill of complaint in the Superior Court of Cook county in behalf of himself and of other taxpayers of said county against the Board of Commissioners of Cook county, Joseph F. Haas, Comptroller of said county, John R. Thompson, Treasurer of said county, and Frank J. Loesch, defendants.

The hill alleged that the defendant Frank J. Loesch was pretending to act as special state’s attorney of Cook county; that the other defendants above named had paid out certain sums of money as the salary and expenses of said defendant Loesch as such alleged special state’s attorney, and that the said defendants were about to cause to be paid to said defendant Loesch various other sums of money on account of the salary and expenses of said Loesch as such alleged special state’s attorney of Cook county.

The hill further averred that on August 8, 1908, an alleged primary for the nomination of officers to be elected on the first Tuesday of November, 1908, was held in the city of Chicago, and that one John J. Healy and John E. W. Wayman were upon the primary ballot as candidates for the Republican nomination for the office of state’s attorney for Cook county, and that said Healy was defeated for said nomination; that in the month of September, 1908, said Healy contested the return made by the canvassing board at said primary, and in said contest charged that certain alleged frauds and irregularities-were committed at said primary; that while the said contest was pending in the County Court of Cook county, said Healy, who was at that time the state’s attorney for Cook county, filed a petition in the Criminal Court of said county, which petition prayed that some person be appointed by said Criminal Court to act as special state’s attorney for Cook county instead of said Healy, for the purpose of investigating the alleged frauds claimed to have been committed at said primary held on August 8,1908.

Said petition is set forth in haec verba in said bill of complaint, the material allegations in said petition being that many fraudulent and illegal ballots were cast at said primary, and that many qualified voters were prevented from voting by unlawful means, and that said conduct constituted criminal offenses under the laws of the State of Illinois.

The petition further averred that said Healy had instituted a contest in respect to said primary election against said Wayman in the County Court of Cook county, which contest was then pending and undetermined, and that by means of said contest said Healy was interested in the subject-matter of the crimes alleged to have been committed at said primary.

The petition prayed that the court appoint some competent attorney to investigate all violations of said primary law and prosecute those considered guilty.

The bill further averred that on September 30,1908, the Criminal Court entered an order upon said petition finding that John J. Healy, the state’s attorney, was interested in the suhject-matter of the alleged crimes against said primary law, and appointed Frank J. Loesch special state’s attorney to investigate and prosecute any and all persons against .whom there should appear to be just and reasonable grounds to establish guilt of criminal offenses committed in violation of the primary election law at said August primary.

The bill further averred that at the time the said alleged appointment was made there was no cause or proceeding of any kind or description pending in the Criminal Court of Cook county, or before any court in Cook county with respect to said alleged primary frauds; that said alleged frauds had not then been investigated by any grand jury of said Cook county; that on the 3d day of October, 1908, said contest between said Healy and said "Wayman was decided in favor of said Wayman; that said Healy did then elect to abide by the decision in favor of said Wayman, and that if said.Healy was ever interested in the subject-matter of said alleged primary frauds, said interest ceased on the said 3d day of October, 1908.

The bill further alleged that on October 9, 1908, said Loesch took a pretended oath of office as such pretended special state’s attorney; that on October 28-th the grand jury was called by one of the judges of the Criminal Court upon the motion of said Loesch; that from November 4,1908, to the latter part of the same month said special grand jury, so convened on the motion of said Loesch, was continuously in session investigating the said alleged primary frauds, and returned numerous indictments for crimes alleged to have been committed at said primary; that on December 7,1908, said Wayman appeared before the Criminal Court of Cook county and contested the right of said Loesch to act as special state’s attorney, and then informed the presiding judge of said court that he, said Wayman, was the state’s attorney for Cook county and that he was charged with the responsibility of prosecuting all violations of the criminal law, and said Wayman then and there offered to appoint said Loesch as assistant state’s attorney at a salary of $5,'50'0:, and offered to furnish said Loesch with a suite of rooms and with stenographers and investigators, but that said Loesch declined to accept such appointment; that said Loesch thereafter pretended to act as special state’s attorney and occupied a suite of rooms in the Criminal Court building of said county separate from the one occupied by the state’s attorney; that said Loesch had a separate corps of stenographers, investigators, assistants and employes, and claimed to be conducting a special state’s attorney’s office independent of and separate and distinct from the office conducted by said Wayman; that the Board of Commissioners of Cook county, at the request of said Loesch, had ordered an appropriation of $19,500 in payment of the salary and expenses of said Loesch and his said alleged assistants and employes, and that out of said appropriation and upon the warrants of said comptroller said treasurer had already paid over $9,000; that on-December 14, 1908, said Loesch sent a communication to the comptroller of Cook county asking that there be appropriated for the running of the office of said Loesch, as special state’s attorney, the sum of $54,620; that in addition to the foregoing appropriation said Loesch was claiming compensation for himself as said special state’s attorney at the rate of $100 a day.

The bill further charged that said state’s attorney Wayman had, ever since he assumed the duties of his office, been ready, able and willing to prosecute all of the said alleged primary frauds; that said Wayman had a corps of assistants, investigators, stenographers and other employes amply sufficient to take charge of and handle all of the business connected with the investigation and prosecution of said alleged primary frauds; that the appropriation and payment from the treasury of Cook county of the above expenses of said Loesch as said alleged special state’s attorney was unnecessary and constituted an illegal diversion of public money.

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Bluebook (online)
151 Ill. App. 245, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dal-pino-v-board-of-commissioners-illappct-1909.