Fletcher v. Tuttle

25 L.R.A. 143, 151 Ill. 41
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 25 L.R.A. 143 (Fletcher v. Tuttle) 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
Fletcher v. Tuttle, 25 L.R.A. 143, 151 Ill. 41 (Ill. 1894).

Opinion

Opinion Per Curiam :

The first of these cases was a bill in chancery, exhibited by James P. Fletcher in the Circuit Court of Vermilion county, praying that an act of the General Assembly, entitled, “An act to apportion the State of Illinois into senatorial districts, and to repeal certain acts therein named,” approved June 15, 1893, be declared unconstitutional and void, and that a writ of injunction issue to Walter C. Tuttle, county clerk of Vermilion county, restraining him from issuing, or causing to be posted, notices of election, calling an election for members of the House of Representatives for the eighteenth senatorial district; that the injunction be made perpetual, and also a .general prayer for relief. Tuttle, the county clerk, was the only party named as defendant.

The complainant, by his bill, professed to prosecute his action for himself, as well as for all the people of the State of Illinois. The averments of his bill are, in substance, that he is, and for more than thirty-nine years has been, a citizen of the county of Vermilion, and is a tax-payer and legal voter in that county; that under the Constitution of the State he is entitled to equal representation in the General Assembly of the State with each and every other citizen- thereof, so far as such equality of representation can be secured by an apportionment of the senatorial districts of the State, for the election of senators and members of the House of Representatives in the General Assembly, among the several counties in the State; that, by reason of the matters thereinafter recited, the petitioner’s right of equal or proportionate representation in the General Assembly of the State, as well as the like rights of every other citizen of the State, as provided by the Constitution, has been infringed, violated, and in a large part destroyed, unless through the intervention of the court, as a court of equity, the wrongs complained of shall be prevented.

The bill then alleges that the population of the State, as ascertained by the Federal Census of 1890, was 3,826,351, and an exhibit is appended to the bill of the census bulletin, showing the population of the State by counties, and of the city of Chicago by wards, according to the census of 1890; that for the purpose of apportioning the State into senatorial districts, it became and was the duty of the General Assembly to divide the population of the State, as ascertained by the Federal Census, by the number iifty-one, the quotient thereby produced to be the ratio of representation in the State; that it was then and there the duty of the General Assembly to divide the State into fifty-one senatorial districts, such districts to be formed of contiguous and compact territory, bounded by county lines, such districts to contain, as nearly as practicable, an equal number of inhabitants; that when any county contained a population exceeding two full ratios, it was entitled to be divided into senatorial districts, equal in number to the number of full senatorial ratios of inhabitants contained in the county, as shown by the census; that the senatorial ratio thus formed was 75,026; that the population of the county of Cook was 1,191,922; that the General Assembly, in and by the above mentioned act, gave and apportioned to the county of Cook fifteen senatorial districts, and to the residue of the State thirty-six.

The bill then specifies and points out a large number of the senatorial districts created by the act, both in the county of Cook and elsewhere in the State, which, as it alleges, are not formed of contiguous and compact territory, as required by the Constitution, among them being the eighteenth senatorial district, composed of the counties of Vermilion and Ford. It also alleges that the act did not apportion the State into senatorial districts containing, as nearly as practicable, an equal number of inhabitants, but, on the contrary, that many of the districts contain numbers of inhabitants far in excess of the senatorial ratio, and greatly and unnecessarily unequal, when compared with other districts created by the act, and that many of the districts contain numbers of inhabitants greatly below the senatorial ratio, and grossly and unnecessarily unequal, when compared with other districts, and a large number of districts are specified and pointed out, in which it is alleged such gross and unnecessary inequality of population exists.

It is, therefore, alleged, that by reason of the unnecessary and gross inequalities of population among the several districts, and also by reason of the failure to form the several districts of contiguous and compact territory, the Apportionment act of 1893 is unconstitutional and void.

The complainant,^urther|alleges that he is a candidate for election as a member of the House of Representatives, ■which representatives are to be chosen at a general election, to be held on the Tuesday next after the first Monday in November, 1894; that he has already been chosen for such candidacy by the voters of his party in Vermilion county, at the primaries already held in that county; that as such candidate, he has a special personal interest in the question at issue in this case, and is entitled to prosecute this suit, to the end that he may be voted for in the district, and throughout the district, of which Vermilion county legally forms a part, and that the legal voters of all the district may have an opportunity to vote for him, and if chosen by a plurality of the votes cast at such election, that he may be duly declared elected as a member of the House of Representatives for such district; that the entire people of the State are "interested in the question, to the end that the next General Assembly of the State to be chosen may be chosen from districts legally formed, and that its acts may not be questioned, by reason of the invalidity of the act of apportionment, and that the people may enjoy the right of representation, as provided by the Constitution.

The petitioner further alleges, that under the present system of holding elections, as provided for by the laws of this State, the holding of an election throughout the county of Vermilion necessitates a large expenditure of public moneys, to be paid out of the treasury of the county-; that as the Apportionment act above referred to is invalid, it will entail upon the people and tax-payers of the county a large and unnecessary burden in holding elections for members of the General Assembly themselves, and that the amount of public funds thus unnecessarily paid out of the county treasury will exceed $50, and that the total cost of holding the election in the county will exceed the sum of $1,000.

It is further alleged, that Walter C.

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Bluebook (online)
25 L.R.A. 143, 151 Ill. 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fletcher-v-tuttle-ill-1894.