Hoyne v. Danisch

264 Ill. 467
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by79 cases

This text of 264 Ill. 467 (Hoyne v. Danisch) 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
Hoyne v. Danisch, 264 Ill. 467 (Ill. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

The State’s attorney of Cook county filed an information in chancery in the circuit court of that county against appellant, the cleric of the municipal court of Chicago, praying for an order directing said clerk to pay and turn over to the State’s attorney any and all fees, fines, forfeitures and penalties, received by him as clerk of said court since July 6, 1913, and that he be enjoined and restrained from interfering with or preventing appellee from collecting such fees, fines, forfeitures and penalties in all cases arising in Cook county that are or may be pending in said municipal court in which the State of Illinois is a party. A demurrer to the bill was overruled, after which an answer was filed. The trial court entered a decree as prayed for in said bill, except as to fines and forfeitures collected under certain enumerated acts, to which we shall refer later. An appeal was prayed from that decree. Appellee has assigned cross-errors as to that portion of the decree affecting said excepted acts of the legislature.

The information is based upon the provisions of the act of the legislature approved June n, 1912, (Laws of 1912, —Special Sess.—p. 88,) as amended by an act approved June 27, 1913, (Laws of 1913, p. 360,) fixing the salaries of the State’s attorneys of Illinois and their assistants.- Section 1 of that act as amended provides for the pay of the State’s attorneys of the various counties, section 2 as to the assistant State’s attorneys, and sections 3 and 4 (the part of the act here under consideration) read as follows:

“Sec. 3. The salaries of the State’s attorneys, excepting that part which is to be paid out of the State treasury as now provided for by law, shall be paid out of the county treasury of the county in which the State’s attorney shall reside, in quarterly annual installments on the order of the county board on the treasurer of said county: Provided, that the fees which are now, or may hereafter, be provided by law to be paid by the defendant or defendants, as State’s attorney’s fees, shall be taxed as costs and all fees, fines, forfeitures and penalties shall be collected by the State’s attorney, and shall be paid by him direct into the county treasury. Which said fund shall be held as a special fund to be paid out and distributed as follows: Out of said fund the salaries of the State’s attorney and all assistant- State’s attorneys shall be paid, or so much thereof as said fund will meet, the balance of said salaries, if any, to be paid by said county as herein otherwise provided: And further provided, that on July first of each year,- the county treasurer shall, if there remain in said fund after paying said salaries then due and lawful employees of said State’s attorney’s office and other legal expenses, of said State’s attorney’s office, and retaining a sum sufficient to pay one quarterly payment of said salaries, and balance, pay over said balance to the county superintendent of schools of said county to be by him turned into and to become a part of the distributable school fund of said county, to be by said county superintendent distributed as. now provided by law in relation to said distributable school fund. The county treasurer shall receipt therefor.

“Sec. 4. It is hereby made the duty of all State’s attorneys to report at each term of-the circuit court, the payment and collection of all fees, fines, forfeitures and penalties and to satisfy the court by voucher or otherwise, that all fees, fines, forfeitures and penalties by them collected, have been duly paid over to the county treasurer, as re: quired by section 3 of this act, and the State’s attorney shall have no further interest in conviction fees, fines, forfeitures and penalties or moneys collected by- virtue of such office.”

Section 5 in general terms repeals all laws and parts of laws in conflict with the act, and section 6 specifically repeals an act on the same subject approved June 5, 1911, in force July 1, 1911.

The case has been brought direct to this court on the ground that a constitutional question is involved. Section 10 of article 10 of the constitution of 1870 provides that “the county board, except as provided in section 9 of this article, shall fix the compensation of all county officers,” etc. It is argued that this court has held that the State’s attorney is a county officer, (Cook County v. Healy, 222 Ill. 310; Peoples Cook County Comrs. 260 id. 345;) and that as the State’s attorneys are not within the exceptions in section 9 of said article 10, the county board, under said section io of the constitution, must fix their compensation; that the legislature, in attempting to fix the compensation of said State’s attorneys as provided for in this act, has acted without authority. If article io contained all the provisions referring in any way to. State’s attorneys and their compensation there would be some force in this argument. Section 22 of article 6 provides for the election of State’s attorneys in each county for four years. Section 25 of the same article, referring especially to Cook county, reads: “The judges of the superior and circuit courts, and the State’s attorney, in said county, shall receive the same salaries, payable out of the State treasury, as is or may be ■paid from said treasury to the circuit judges and State’s attorneys of the State, and such further compensation, to be paid by the county of Cook, as is or may be provided by law; such compensation shall not be changed during their continuance in office.” Section 32 of the same article,' among other things, provides: “All officers, where not otherwise provided for in this article, shall perform such duties and receive such compensation as is or may be provided by law.” The duties and compensation of the State’s attorneys are not “otherwise provided for” in said article. It follows, necessarily, from the wording of these provisions of article 6 of the constitution, that it was the intention of those who framed them that the law-making power of the State,—that is, the General Assembly,—was authorized to fix and regulate the duties and compensation of State’s attorneys. The legislature has fixed their compensation since the constitution of 1870- was adopted, and it has always been assumed by everyone concerned in the administration of the law that the legislature had such authority. Indeed, to hold, as contended here, that the legislature does not possess this power would be, in effect, to overrule the decisions of this court in Cook County v. Healy, supra, and People v. Williams, 232 Ill. 519, where we had under consideration statutes regulating and fixing the salaries of State’s attorneys. The reasoning in Wulff v. Aidrich, 124 Ill. 591, only went to the extent of holding that the county board should fix the compensation of all county officers for which the constitution did not otherwise provide. This was the construction given to said section 10 of article 10 as to the county board fixing the. compensation of county officers, in Jimison v. Adams County, 130 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
264 Ill. 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoyne-v-danisch-ill-1914.