Fosselman v. City of Springfield

38 Ill. App. 296, 1890 Ill. App. LEXIS 333
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 21, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 38 Ill. App. 296 (Fosselman v. City of Springfield) 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
Fosselman v. City of Springfield, 38 Ill. App. 296, 1890 Ill. App. LEXIS 333 (Ill. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

Wall, J.

Joseph B. Fosselman was a justice of the peace in the city of Springfield, duly elected and qualified for eight years, his first term beginning April, 1881. In May, 1882, the city of Springfield became incorporated under the general incorporation law, since which time it has exercised its corporate powers thereunder. The city instituted and prosecuted to judgment, before Justice Fosselman, within the five years prior to the bringing of this suit, 283 suits—misdemeanors, all of them, for violations of the city’s ordinances. In each of the cases a fine was imposed, and a judgment rendered in favor of the city and against the respective defendants for the amount thereof and for costs, on which an execution was at once issued by Justice Fosselman. These executions were, by the justice, placed in the hands of policemen'—administrative agents of the city—to execute. The executions were directed to the sheriff, etc., “ or any police of the city,” and recited that, whereas the city had obtained before Justice Fosselman, a judgment against (the defendant), for violation of an ordinance of the city, for $—, with costs, the officer was commanded to levy said debt and costs on the goods and chattels of the defendant within the city, and for want of sufficient property, etc., the command was, that the body of the defendant be taken into custody and conveyed to the city prison keeper, to be safely kept by the latter until he pay the debt and costs, or serve the same out in such manner and time as prescribed by the ordinances of the city, and to make return thereof, stating how the same had been executed. The ordinances of the city, then in force, provided that upon the commitment of any person by order of any justice of the peace, etc., for non-payment of any tine, etc., adjudged against him, and such person not having goods and chattels out of which the judgment and execution could be collected, the police officer having the execution should deliver the defendant (along with the execution showing fine, etc., and costs adjudged against him) to the city prison keeper, which latter officer was required to make entry of the date and amount of the fine and costs, and the number of days the defendant would have to be confined to discharge the same, at fifty cents a day. The city prison keeper was, by the ordinances^ authorized to require the person so committed to his custody to perform manual labor, within or without the prison, for not more than ten hours each working day, as the prison keeper might direct; and he was further authorized to deliver the defendant (with the execution showing the fine and costs) to the city superintendent of streets, and this officer was required to compel the defendant to labor on the streets, etc., of the city for ten hours each working day, and for each day’s labor to credit the defendant at the rate of not less than fifty cents and not more than $1.50, and when the defendant had labored out his fine and costs, to discharge him. In each of the 283 cases shown in this record, the defendants were taken under the executions aforesaid, and committed to the custody of the city prison keeper, as provided in the city’s ordinances; and in each of the cases the executions were returned into the justice’s court of the plaintiff) with a written return thereon, signed by the officer of the city holding the same for execution, showing the manner in which it had been executed. In two of the cases, name!}7, Mos. 937 and 978, the return on the execution was, “Ex’n ret’d unsatisfied; by order of Chief of Police Maloney;” in six of the cases, namely, Mos. 1062, 13-32, 1487, 1719 and 2147, the returns on the executions show the discharge of the defendant, and the execution unsatisfied, “ by order of the mayor; ” while in the 275 remaining cases, the return shows that the same were “ satisfied by labor and imprisonment.” Aside from the returns upon the executions as aforesaid, which are not disputed, the uncontradicted testimony of the plaintiff is, that the defendants in 275 cases referred to, satisfied the executions against them under the provisions of the city's ordinances, by labor bestowed upon the streets and alleys of the city, under the supervision and control of the agents of the city. „

Included in each of the judgments rendered by the plaintiff in each of the 283 cases, were the legal fees of the plaintiff as justice of the peace, allowed by the statutes of the State, the amount of such fees in each particular case being shown in the plaintiff’s bill of particulars, and aggregating $539.15, the legality and amount of which is not questioned; and it is also not questioned or denied that no part of these fees has been paid to the plaintiff. In June, 1889, and after the plaintiff’s term of office had expired, he presented his account against the city, and demanded of the city payment of his fees in the 283 cases, which was by the city refused. Thereupon the appellant sued the city in assumpsit, declaring upon the common counts, as for money had and received; and by his bill of particulars and at the trial, claimed that the city, by its action, in virtue of its ordinances, in receiving and entering satisfaction of the several judgments, in which judgments were included the statutory fees of appellant as justice of the peace, in the manner shown by the testimony, became and was liable to the appellant for the amount of his said fees. The ordinances introduced by appellant were adopted by the city after its organization under the general law; while those introduced by appellee were adopted while the city was acting under its old special charter. IT pon the trial, which was by the court and without a jury, appellant asked the court to make special findings of fact, contending, that as the judge sat as a trier of facts in the place, and performing the functions of a jury, the statute in relation to verdicts of juries in civil cases applied. But the court refused. Appellant also submitted to the court a number of propositions, to be held as law, all of which the court refused, and found the issues, generally, for the appellee.

A motion for a new trial was interposed by appellant, which was denied and judgment entered for appellee.

The question is whether the city is liable to pay the fees of the justice of the peace in cases where the defendants discharged their fines and cost by imprisonment and street labor and in those cases where, by order of the city, the execution was returned unsatisfied or the defendant by like order was released from imprisonment. There would seem to be no room for discussion as to the two latter classes, as it does not appear that the city recovered anything actually or constructively in either of such cases or that there was any breach of duty or misfeasance upon which to predicate liability. The chief claim is as to the cases where the defendants, having been convicted, were found to possess no property out of which the fine and cost could be made, and in pursuance of the ordinance enacted under the authority of the statute were committed to the city prison and required to perform street labor at the fixed rate per diem until the fines and costs were thereby discharged. The city is an agency of the State for the purpose of administering local government and the enforcement of its ordinances partakes of the nature of criminal prosecutions. The proceeding may be in the form of an ordinary action of debt or it may begin by a warrant for arrest issued upon the affidavit of any person that an ordinance has been violated and that the affiant has reasonable grounds to believe the party charged is guilty.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 Ill. App. 296, 1890 Ill. App. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fosselman-v-city-of-springfield-illappct-1890.