Ex parte Thatcher

7 Ill. 167
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 Ill. 167 (Ex parte Thatcher) 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
Ex parte Thatcher, 7 Ill. 167 (Ill. 1845).

Opinions

The Opinion of the Court was delivered by

Scates, J.

On petition of George W. Thatcher, a writ iff Habeas Corpus was issued out of this Court to William B. Warren, to bring before the Court said Thatcher, and ‘certify the day and cause of his caption and detention.

To the writ Warren returned, that at a County Commissioners’ Court for Hancock county, holden on the 6th day of January, inst., Hebe M. Baldwin presented a claim for $15-05 for corn and sheep furnished to J. B. Backenstos, sheriff of said county, for the usé of the posse, under his command; and asked to havé the claiifi audited and allowed out of the 'county treasury. The Court audited and allowed said claim, and ordered the clerk, George W. Thatcher, to enter the same. Thatcher refused to make the entry. On the next 'day, the Court ágáin Ordered Thatchel to make the entry, who again refused-.

They then called upon him to show cause why he should hot be removed from office as clerk, when, on his not showing 'cause to their satisfaction, an order of removal was directed to be entered, from which Thatcher appealed, and gave bond as directed by the Court. The Court thereupon appointed one George Edmonds clerk, who gave bond and was qualified. Thereupon, the Court ordered Thatcher to deliver up the books, papers, money-, &c., to Edmonds, which he refused to'do. Whereupon, the Court ordered Edmonds to make an order committing Thatcher to jail for fifteen days, for a contempt in not delivering the books,, papers, &c., pursuant to the order. Edmonds issued an attachment, and delivered it to Backenstos, the sheriff, who arrested Thatcher, and by order of the Court, Backenstos delivered Thatcher to Warren to be brought before this Court on Habeas Corpus to be applied for.

The paper returned as the attachment, under which this arrest has been made, does not agree in the cause, for which the order of commitment .was made, with the return of Warren. The former states it to be for refusing to enter the ordek* as directed; the latter for refusing to deliver the books, papers, &c. But as neither the Attorney General, nor the prisoner have traversed the return, we must take it to be true.

A short analysis of the organization and powers of that Court will readily determine this question. In the first place I would observe, that that Court is not the appointing power in filling the office of clerk, but it is filled by election» Rev. Stat. ch. 27, § 11.

They have power to fill vacancies occasioned by death, resignation, removal or otherwise. Ib. § 11.

They may, for misconduct in office, gross neglect of duty,, incompetency, or other good cause shown to be entered of record, remove their clerk, whose office -shall be considered vacant. Ib. § 10. But this section must be considered, and construed in connection with the forty second section of the same chapter, which provides that any party to a proceeding before them-, who may feel agrieved by the final decision, judgment or order, shall be allowed to appeal to the Circuit Court.

There can be no doubt of the right of the clerk to appeal in this case, and there is as little doubt, that the appeal operated as a supersedeas of the order of removal, until the determination of it in the Circuit Court, like appeals from the Circuit to the Supreme Court.

Again, in relation to their power to punish by fine and imprisonment for contempt, they have power to enforce their orders, decrees and judgments, by attachment or other process. Ib. § 28» ■ They have power to punish for contempt as other Courts may do, and have all the power necessary to the right exercise of the jurisdiction, with which said Court is, or may be vested according to law. Ib. § 29.

These are salutary and necessary powers to every Court for the preservation of order and decorum, and the enforcement of its judgments. Its supervision, when exercised in the punishment of contempts, is a most delicate jurisdiction, and seldom, if ever, ought to be exercised. It is, indeed, denied that any appeal, or writ of .error lies from its judgment for contempt by any Court. I will not undertake to decide the general question, but the power has its limits. The Court may not treat any and every act as a contempt, and I have no doubt that the appellate Court may revise and reverse its judgment when it exceeds its jurisdiction, by treating that as a contempt, which in law, is no contempt, and cannot be. The supervision will be to ascertain that fact. We are not without precedent for this; one article in the impeachment of Judge Smith, before the Senate was for an illegal power; and in the case of Stewart v. The People, 3 Scam. 395, this Court reversed a judgment of fine for a contempt imposed by the Cook Circuit Court.

Having settled satisfactorily, as I think, the question of a supervisory power in this Court under certain circumstances, and upon a reasonable distinction, without touching the general question as to all cases, I come now.to its application to this case. The return shows that the imprisonment was for refusing to deliver the books and papers, &c. For refusing to deliver them “after going out of office,” to his successor the statute has declared, that the clerk shall forfeit “any sum not over five hundred dollars, and be imprisoned any time not exceeding thirty days, at the discretion of the Court, before which he may be tried.” Rev. Stat. ch. 27, § 13.

Now it is to be observed, that he cannot be tried before the Commissioners’ Court, for by the twenty ninth section it is expressly declared, that “there shall be nothing contained or construed in this chapter to give said Court any original or appellate jurisdiction, in civil or criminal suits or actions, wherein the State is a party, or any individual or individuals, bodies politic or corporate, are parties.”

It is, therefore, very clear, that they had no jurisdiction in the matter, and consequently could not treat the refusal as a contempt. The order of commitment for that cause, and the imprisonment under it, are both illegal and void. In relation to the paper purporting to be an attachment, I would remark that it is proof of nothing, being illegal and void, not having been issued by any officer. The Court had no power to make an appointment of a clerk, after appeal perfected, which appears to have been done immediately, by delivering a sufficient bond to the Court.

The power of the Court, in my mind, to punish the clerk for a contempt, in refusing to enter up its orders, is unquestionable. It is not the province or duty of the clerk to determine what orders may, and what may not be entered; and and what claims may, and what may not be.allowed. I have no hesitation in believing, that if the Court should make an illegal and unjust allowance against the county without jurisdiction and authority of law, that any citizen, or number of them, being taxable inhabitants of the county, might have redress by appeal from the order of allowance, or at least by bill in equity; but it cannot be by refusal of the clerk to enter the order of allowance.

From the return of Warren, this appears to be an extraordinary case, surrounded by extraordinary circumstances. The prisoner for himself,, and the Attorney General who represents the people in this case, not having traversed the facts in the return, have admitted the return to present them truly.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Ill. 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-thatcher-ill-1845.