Dodge v. People

113 Ill. 491
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 113 Ill. 491 (Dodge v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dodge v. People, 113 Ill. 491 (Ill. 1883).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Mulkey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

It appears from the record in this case that the acting trustees of the village of Fidelity certified to the county clerk of Jersey county the sum of $250, to be extended by him as a tax, upon the collector’s books, for the year 1882, upon the taxable property within the limits of said village, which is situated in the town of Fidelity, and that the same was so extended. Of this sum there was $47.35 in the hands of Edson A. Dodge, as town collector of said town, on the 23d day of March, 1883, being the day on which this suit was commenced. Demand having been made upon Dodge for this sum by Warren Christopher, as village treasurer, and payment refused, the acting village authorities commenced suit against Dodge and his sureties on his official bond, "before a justice of the peace, to recover the same. The village having recovered a judgment for the amount before the justice, Dodge, alone, took an appeal to the circuit court, where the cause was submitted to the court without a jury, and a final judgment entered therein, on the 21st day of November, 1883. '

It was shown, by way of defence, on the trial, that at and before the commencement of this suit an information in the nature of a quo warranto had been commenced, and was then pending, in the circuit court of Jersey county, against the village of Fidelity and its board of trustees, requiring them, respectively, to show by what warrant or authority they assumed to act as a corporate body, etc., and that such proceedings were had in said cause that said circuit court, on the 2d day of April, 1883, entered therein a judgment of ouster, whereby and wherein the said village of Fidelity and its board of trustees were, severally, adjudged and declared to be ousted of all their corporate privileges and franchises under the laws of the State of Illinois, and that said judgment of ouster was in full force and effect at the .time of the entry of the judgment in this case. The summons in the present case, as originally issued, ran simply in the name of the village, as plaintiff. After the evidence was all in, on both sides, the court permitted it to be so amended as to run in the name of the People of the State of Illinois, for the use of the village. Upon being thus amended, the court thereupon entered judgment, in the name of the People, for the use of the village, for the amount of the penalty of the bond, against Dodge and his sureties, to be discharged upon the payment of said sum of $47.35.

Whether the court, upon the facts stated, was warranted in rendering this judgment, of course depends upon the effect that is to be given to the judgment in the quo warranto proceeding, as that is the only defence relied on. Neither the regularity of the quo warranto proceeding, nor the validity of the judgment entered therein, is at all questioned. The only question made by defendant in error is as to the manner in which the judgment in that proceeding was used in this, the contention being that the evidence was inadmissible, unless in support of a plea in abatement, and that there was no plea of that kind. That such a plea was necessary before the justice, will hardly be seriously contended. It is the settled construction of our statute relating to proceedings before justices of the peace, that no written pleadings are required. The allegations and counter-allegations of the parties, or their attorneys, are all presumed to be oro tenus, and their rights depend upon what is proved, rather than upon what is said or pleaded. In these courts, therefore, no technicalities are permitted to avail. If one having a meritorious cause is properly defeated, it will be because he has failed to make the necessary proofs, and not because he has made some mistake in the statement of his case. There is, however, this limitation upon the rights of the parties in this respect, viz: that dilatory defences must be made in apt time,—that is, at the earliest opportunity,—as is required when made in a court of record by a formal plea. (Conley v. Good, Breese, 135; Byars v. City of Mt. Vernon, 77 Ill. 467; Huftalin v. Misner, 70 id. 205.) Hence it was held in Conley v. Good, supra, that a defence of a dilatory character could not for the first time be taken advantage of in the circuit court, upon an appeal from a justice of the peace. There is also the further limitation that “no party to any suit before a justice of the peace shall be permitted to deny the execution or any indorsement of any written instrument upon which suit shall be founded, or which shall be offered as a set-off or acquittance for the debt demanded in such suit, unless said denial be by affidavit of the party so denying the execution or indorsement thereof. ” This, however, is an express provision of the statute, (Rev. Stat. 1874, chap. 79, see. 56,) and even here no plea is contemplated or required, other than the affidavit itself. It is hardly necessary to add, that upon an appeal from a justice of the peace to the circuit court, the case is to be tried de novo, upon the proofs offered by the respective parties, without written pleadings, the circuit court having no other or more extensive power or jurisdiction in disposing of the case than the justice had who tried it below. The proofs are heard and given effect precisely as if offered under appropriate and properly framed pleadings.

It clearly follows from what we have said, and the authorities above cited, there is nothing in the objection that the judgment in the quo warranto proceeding was not pleaded in abatement. It is sufficient that the proof was made in apt time, and this is not questioned, as the record clearly shows it was so made, both before the justice and the circuit court.

The question then recurs, what was the legal effect of that judgment upon the right to further proceed in the action which was then pending against Dodge and Iris sureties on his official bond? Before directly answering this question, it is proper to inquire what effect the judgment had upon the village itself. There is no room for doubt on this point. The authorities are clear that its immediate effect was to dissolve the corporation, whether it existed de jure or de facto,— or, in other words, its effect was to completely extinguish and annihilate the artificial municipal body which had theretofore existed by the name of the village of Fidelity, together with its rights, liberties and franchises. Or, differently stated, its effect was the immediate death of the artificial being, followed by all the consequences which the law annexes to such a death. As in the case of'a natural person, its death operated as an absolute revocation of all power and authority on the part of others to act” in its name or in its behalf. By its death, therefore, the authority of the village treasurer to demand or receive money from the collector or any one else, on behalf of the village, was absolutely revoked, and it therefore follows, the sheriff could not, after such revocation of the treasurer’s authority, have properly paid the money in dispute to him. The money sought to be recovered was raised by a tax prima facie valid, and was received by Dodge in his official character as collector. It was legally and properly received by him, and he and his sureties became liable on his official bond for its safe keeping, and payment to those having a legal right to receive it. But until some one having such right demanded it of him, it was simply his duty to safely keep it.

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113 Ill. 491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dodge-v-people-ill-1883.