Foltz v. People ex rel. Mings

118 Ill. App. 557, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 263
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 8, 1905
DocketGen. No. 4,430
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 118 Ill. App. 557 (Foltz v. People ex rel. Mings) 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
Foltz v. People ex rel. Mings, 118 Ill. App. 557, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 263 (Ill. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

The attorney-general on the relation of William. EL Mings, filed in the Circuit Court of Edgar county an information in the nature of a quo wari'anto, to test the right of Andrew J. Foltz to hold and execute the office of supervisor of the town of Stratton in said county, which office the information charged said Foltz was usurping. Certain pleas were filed and afterwards withdrawn by agreement, and thereafter certain amended special pleas and general and special replications were filed, of which it is sufficient to say that they raised the issues which were tried. On application of the respondent, the venue was changed to the Circuit Court of Iroquois county. A jury was waived. Eespondent assumed the burden of proof. The proofs were heard. Eespondent presented certain propositions of law, some of which were given, some refused, and some modified and given. The court found respondent had usurped the office of supervisor of the town of Stratton, and entered judgment of ouster, from which judgment respondent prosecutes this appeal.

This suit is the outgrowth of a controversy between the judges of election in said town, on the morning of the annual election for township officers in April, 1903, which resulted in two sets of election officers holding an election in said town on the afternoon of that day at different polling places, at one of which 180 votes were cast, of which 172 were for Mings for supervisor, and six were for Foltz, and two were rejected; and at -the other forty-nine votes were cast, of which forty-seven were for Foltz, one for Mings and one was rejected. Each presented a bond and an oath of office. Foltz was seated. Mings was then holding the office of supervisor, and was the republican nominee for re-election. Foltz was the democratic nominee for that office. Each had been regularly nominated and certified, and the name of each was properly upon the official ballot, and each had qualifications entitling him to hold the office, if elected thereto. Dinkins was town clerk, and was the republican candidate for that office, and Burchit was the democratic candidate. Mason was the democratic candidate for assessor. Sanders was the republican candidate for poundmaster. Crawford was a justice of the peace. Mines, Blackman and Burchit had previously been lawfully authorized to act as judges of that' election. Blackman and Burchit were democrats; Mings was a republican. Black-man and Burchit selected Ford and Mason, democrats, and Owen Myers, a republican, to act as clerks. The evening before the election Dinkins, the town clerk, delivered' the official ballots to Mings, the supervisor, and the next morning, at the polling place, Dinkins delivered the ballot box to Mings. The three judges and the persons selected as clerks meb at a room on the first floor of the Masonic building in the village of Vermilion, which had long been occupied by the town clerk and other town officers, being the place xvhere the notice for the election provided it should be held, and the room which had been the regular polling place in that toxvn for many years. The judges and clerks xvere sworn. Mings, the only republican judge, objected to the selection of Oxven Myers as the representative of the republican party among the clerks, declaring that he xvas not a representative of the republican party, and that he was an enemy of Mings. It is a disputed question of fact whether Mings made this objection before or after Myers had been sworn. Mings produced 278 ballots (being about half the number he bad received), and laid them upon the table. He opened the ballot box, shoxved the other judges that it was empty, and then closed and locked it, and retained it in his possession. Blackman and Burchit demanded the rest of the ballots. Mings refused. The other judges said they had to receipt for them. Mings replied that he had already counted and receipted for the ballots, and that he would furnish them with more ballots when they were needed. He also refused to surrender the ballot box to the other judges, but declared that he would hold the ballot box and put in the ballots himself. Blackman took possession of the 278 ballots. Blackman and Burchit refused to proceed with the election under these circumstances, but demanded that the ballot box and the remaining ballots be first delivered to them. Mings refused to proceed xvith Myers as clerk, and insisted on retaining possession of the box and of the rest of the ballots. The room filled with citizens and there xvas a great uproar, xvhich continued for an hour or more. Then some citizen moved the selection of certain other persons as judges and clerks of that election. This motion was put to a vote by Crawford, who had theretofore been elected moderator of the meeting, and this nexv election board was sworn in. It, however, did no act toward holding an election. Mings went out and was gone awhile, leaving the ballot box in possession of one of his adherents, who retained it in spite of a request by the democratic judges for its possession. Mings returned and a compromise was arranged between.Blackman, Burchit and Mings. It was agreed that Dinkins, who was a republican, should be sworn as one of the clerks. According to testimony offered by relator, Dinkins was to take the place of Owen Myers. According to testimony introduced by respondent, Dinkins was to take the place of Mason, one of the democratic clerks. It was agreed that Mings should put the ballots into the box. This third board was sworn in. If Owen Myers was to be a clerk on this compromise board, he declined, saying that he would not act as democratic clerk, and^ another was sworn in his place. After the third board had been sworn in, Blackman left the room and had an interview with Simon Myers, the father of Owen Myers, and upon returning to the election room, Blackman declared that he would not stand by the compromise agreement, that the boys would not stand for it, and that Owen Myers must serve as clerk. To this Mings refused to consent, and there was great noise and confusion. The controversy continued till noon, a period of five hours. The room was filled with citizens who had come for the purpose of voting, and many of whom demanded the right to cast their ballots and return to their homes or business. About twelve o’clock, one of. the citizens present proceeded to nominate judges and clerks, nominating one at a time, whose name was put before the citizens by the moderator and declared elected upon a vote of the citizens present. According to respondent’s proofs Sanders, an adherent of Mings, made all the motions and nominations voted upon by the' citizens that forenoon. According to relator’s proofs, the motions came from all parts of the room. Either three or four democrats were separately nominated as one of the three judges, but each declined to serve, and the board then elected by the citizens present was therefore composed entirely of republicans; the board so elected being Mings, Stauts and Cassle, judges, and White, Baines and Dinkins,-clerks. This board was sworn in by’Crawford, and opened the election in that room, and began receiving ballots. They had the ballot box and all the ballots except the 278 taken by Blackman and they had the polling books and tally sheets. They organized as a board on the north side of the room. The other two original judges and the three original clerks gathered together on the south side of the room as an election board but received no ballots there. The election board on thé north side of the room placed a guard in charge, who caused the crowd to leave the room, in order that balloting might proceed. Citizens then came in from the outside and voted.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

City of Earlville v. Radley
141 Ill. App. 359 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 Ill. App. 557, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foltz-v-people-ex-rel-mings-illappct-1905.