Glennon v. Britton

40 N.E. 594, 155 Ill. 232
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 40 N.E. 594 (Glennon v. Britton) 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
Glennon v. Britton, 40 N.E. 594, 155 Ill. 232 (Ill. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Phillips

delivered the opinion of the . court:

In this case a common law writ of certiorari was directed to appellant, a justice of the peace in and for the town of South Chicago, commanding him to certify and bring into the circuit court of Cook county the record of the proceedings in and about a search warrant which was issued by him in respect of premises known as 2700 State street, in the city of Chicago, upon a complaint made under division 8 of the Criminal Code, and to do and receive what the court should order in connection therewith, etc.

The office of the common law writ of certiorari is to bring before the court the proceedings of inferior tribunals or officers acting judicially, in cases where they exceed their jurisdiction or where they proceed illegally, and there is no appeal or other mode provided for directly reviewing their proceedings, (Miller v. School Trustees, 88 Ill. 26; Lees v. Drainage Comrs. 125 id. 47, and cases cited;) and the case is tried and determined upon the record alone, no evidence outside of it being admissible. (Ibid.) It would seem that the justice of the peace, after complying with the mandate of the writ, by certifying and producing to the circuit court the proceedings had before him, would have no interest in the subject matter, and nothing more to do in connection therewith, except to obey and carry out the further order of the court. But whatever the effect of this may be in legal contemplation, in so far as it may affect the question of his being a competent party to take this appeal, it suffices that the proceedings in the circuit court were entitled and conducted in the name and style of “R. S. Britton, plaintiff, v. E. T. Glennon, Justice of the Peace, etc., defendant,” and the judgment is so entered. The rule appears to be well settled that an appeal .must be perfected or a writ of error sued out by and in the names in which the proceedings below were 'conducted, and in none other, (Robinson v. Magarity, 28 Ill. 423; Railroad Co. v. Surwald, 150 id. 394, and 147 id. 194;) and that an appeal by a person not a party to the record is unauthorized and void. (Rorke v. Goldstein, 86 Ill. 568; Hesing v. Attorney General, 104 id. 292; Railroad Co. v. Surwald, 147 id. 194.) The appeal to this court having been taken by the justice of the peace, a party to the record by name, the objection that he was not so far a party as to be entitled to prosecute the appeal is not well founded.

It is insisted by counsel that the common law writ of certiorari ought not to have been issued by the circuit court, for the reason that the petitioner had a remedy by appeal. When the petition was filed and the certiorari applied for, the twenty days allowed by law for taking an appeal from the judgment of a justice of the peace had not expired, and if the petitioner had a remedy by appeal, it is. manifest that he was not entitled to the common law writ. (Authorities supra.) This question was not raised, however, in the court below. It does not appear, from the record, that any motion was made to quash or dismiss the writ, as having been improvidently issued, nor, indeed, was the propriety of the proceedings in any way questioned in that court. Moreover, the parties, by counsel, appeared, and by stipulation, in writing, the cause was to be submitted upon printed briefs to be thereafter filed, and upon such stipulation and submission the case was taken under advisement by the trial court, and subsequently decided. The effect of the stipulation, which was practically a submission of the case upon the merits, was to withdraw from the attention of the trial court the question now insisted upon, and the rule is familiar that a party will not be permitted, in a court of review, to insist upon error committed at his own instance, contrary to his express stipulation, upon which the lower court was induced to act. (Chicago and Northwestern Railway Co. v. West Chicago Park Comrs. 151 Ill. 204.) If the adverse party has mistaken his remedy, advantage can only be taken of that fact in the usual mode, and by preserving and assigning the same for error upon the record. That the circuit court had jurisdiction to grant the writ is unquestionable. In People v. Wilkinson, 13 Ill. 660, it was said to be “unnecessary to multiply cases upon the authority of the court to issue this writ. It is a common law power, and is vested in our circuit courts,—which, in this State, are the highest courts of original jurisdiction, and answer to the court of King’s Bench in England,—-unless it is taken away by statute. There is certainly no express statute which deprives these courts of this jurisdiction, nor is there any which takes it away by implication.”

It is therefore manifest that in the certiorari proceedings the court had jurisdiction to issue the writ, of the parties and of the subject matter, and the opposite party can not be permitted to submit the cause upon the merits, thereby waiving all questions of regularity, formality or propriety of the proceedings, (Mitchell v. Jacobs, 17 Ill. 235,) and afterward be heard in this court upon those questions which he should in fairness have brought to the attention of the court below. (Railroad Co. v. Wrixon, 150 Ill. 532.) It may be that appellee originally had the right to an appeal from the judgment of the justice, and, had the question been properly raised, would have been remitted to that remedy; but that not having been done, the court below, by its judgment, necessarily found the contrary, and that certiorari would lie, and appellee, by his failure to object, and stipulation, having acquiesced in the action of that court, can not now be allowed to urge for reversal that which he should have insisted upon at the time,—and this upon the plainest principles of estoppel, too clear to require the citation of authority.

The important question presented upon this record is, whether the proceedings before the justice, prosecuted under division 8 of the Criminal Code, were authorized by law, and valid, and whether the finding and judgment of the circuit court, vacating and setting the same aside, were therefore erroneous. It is insisted that the statutes contained in said division of the Criminal Code relating to search warrants, and under which the justice of the peace proceeded, are in violation of the fourteenth amendment of the constitution of the United States, which provides, “nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty or property without due process of law,” etc., and of section 2, article 2, of the State constitution, which provides, “no person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law,” in that said statutes provide for the seizure and destruction of property without notice to the owner, a trial, or any opportunity on the part of one having an interest in the property to be heard, and we are cited to very many of the numerous cases in which these provisions of the organic law have found construction and application. They do not, however, afford a satisfactory solution of the question of the constitutionality of the statutes under consideration, which are similar, if not in all essential particulars identical, with those which have been passed and become the law in very many, if not quite all, of the States of the Union.

It is not true, as seems to be supposed by counsel, that the statutes in question do not provide for or contemplate the service of any notice upon the owner or party in possession preliminary to the condemnation and destruction of the property seized.

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Bluebook (online)
40 N.E. 594, 155 Ill. 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glennon-v-britton-ill-1895.