Irmegar v. County of Tazewell

264 Ill. 172
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 264 Ill. 172 (Irmegar v. County of Tazewell) 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
Irmegar v. County of Tazewell, 264 Ill. 172 (Ill. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the coiirt:

This is an appeal from an order of the circuit court of Tazewell county dismissing, on motion of the State’s attorney, a petition for contesting a special election held in that county on October 20, 1913, upon the proposition of issuing bonds in the sum of $250,000 to build a court house.

November 19, 1913, appellants, together with certain others,—eleven in all,—filed in said circuit court their written petition to contest the said election, in accordance with the provisions of section 117 of the Election law. (Hurd’s Stat. 1913, p. 1062.) It seems to be conceded that the petition was in due form, and signed, as by statute required, by the requisite number of qualified electors. It set forth various reasons for contesting the election which need not be considered here, as the petition was dismissed without consideration .as to the merits of the contest. After the thirty-day period allowed by statute for filing contests had elapsed, seven of said petitioners filed in the circuit court their written withdrawals from said petition. Without notice and without the presence of counsel the trial court entered an order permitting the withdrawal of said signers and dismissed the petition as to them, leaving the petition with but four signers while the statute requires five. As soon as counsel for appellants heard of this order they filed a motion to vacate. They also filed a petition, signed by nearly one hundred other qualified petitioners, asking the court for leave to intervene in said petition. L. B. Irmegar, one of the original petitioners whose name had been allowed to be withdrawn from said-petition by the court, filed a motion to have his name re-instated, supporting this motion with an affidavit to the effect that he had not authorized anyone to so withdraw his name. The court allowed Irmegar to be re-instated, but in the meantime W. W. Goddard, another petitioner on the original petition, asked leave to withdraw, which was granted by the court, leaving the petition still with but four signers. The State’s attorney of Tazewell county filed a motion to dismiss the petition for want of jurisdiction. The day after the filing of the original petition in this case a similar petition, setting forth the same grounds of contest as to the same election, was filed in said circuit court, signed by six other qualified voters. At the time the motion was made to vacate the order dismissing the petition in this case, a motion was also made to have the- two cases consolidated. Four o'f the petitioners on the petition last filed had in the meantime withdrawn, leaving only two petitioners thereon. After a hearing the circuit court denied the motions of appellants and allowed the motion of the State’s attorney to dismiss the petition in this case because of want of jurisdiction of the court by reason of the withdrawal of names from said original petition. .This appeal was prayed by the remaining petitioners.

While a proceeding to contest an election is not an action at law or a suit in equity, (Devons v. Gallatin County, 244 Ill. 40; Shirar v. Elbridge Township, 249 id. 617;) still, under our statute it is to all intents and purposes a chancery proceeding, subject to all chancery rules, except as otherwise provided by the statute. (Conway v. Sexton, 243 Ill. 59; Quartier v. Dowiat, 219 id. 326; Dale v. Irwin, 78 id. 170.) When such election contests are brought in court, as required under the statute, the rules as to jurisdiction must necessarily be the same as in other judicial proceedings, unless the statute on election contests, from its wording, should be construed otherwise. The general rule is, that the jurisdiction of a court over a cause depends on the state of facts at the” time the action is brought; that after jurisdiction has once vested it cannot be divested by subsequent events. Change of residence or of the condition of the parties or of the amount in dispute cannot take away jurisdiction that has once attached. (Tindall v. Meeker, 1 Scam. 137; Alley v. McCabe, 147 Ill. 410; Mullen v. Torrance, 22 U. S. 536; Clarke v. Mathewson, 37 id. 163; United States v. Dawson, 56 id. 467; State v. Wilkins, 67 N. H. 164; Hawes on Jurisdiction of Courts, sec. 23.) Under these authorities jurisdiction attached as soon as this petition was filed. Nothing is found in the wording of the statute on election contests that indicates in any way that the question of jurisdiction in such court proceedings should be treated differently from the question of jurisdiction in any other cause. Obviously, therefore, jurisdiction having vested, it was not divested by the withdrawal of certain of the .petitioners, unless, under the statute, they had the right to control and dismiss the petition.

A part of the complainants, if this were an ordinary lawsuit, would have no authority to dismiss this proceeding so as to oust the court from jurisdiction to try the same on behalf of the other complainants. After suit brought, part of the plaintiffs cannot be permitted to withdraw if by so doing the remaining plaintiffs in the suit are injured. (Holkirk v. Holkirk, 4 Madd. 50; Jeffcoat v. Jeffcoat, 3 L. J. Ch. [O. S.] 45.) This court has held that one of two plaintiffs has no right.to dismiss the action against the objections of the other, even though the person desiring to dismiss is liable to be injured by the further prosecution, provided his co-plaintiff shall indemnify him against the loss. (Winslow v. Newlan, 45 Ill. 145; see, also, Andrews’ Stephen’s Pl.—2d ed.—sec. 31.) If the argument of counsel for appellee is sound, then why should not death, insanity, conviction of felony or removal from the- election district of any one of the petitioners after the filing of the petition operate, in and of itself, as a dismissal of the pe^ tition and thus oust the court of its jurisdiction? There appear to be no decisions of this question' by courts of last resort, except that of Hawaii by a divided court. The decisions in other jurisdictions could, in any event, be only persuasive and not conclusive. The statutes of other States on this question, so far as they have been called to our attention, are not identical in wording with the Illinois statute. In- McCrary on Elections (4th ed. sec. 454) the author says that a contested election, whatever the form of the proceeding may be, is in its essence one in which the people are primarily and principally interested; that “it is not a suit for the adjudication and settlement of private rights, simply. It follows that the parties to the record cannot, by stipulation or otherwise, discontinue or compromise a case of this character without the consent and approval of the court or tribunal trying it. Nor should such consent ever be given unless the court giving it is sufficiently advised to be able to sa)r that it is for the interest of the public to do so.”

The cases relied on by counsel for appellee, such as Littell v. Board of Supervisors, 198 Ill. 205, Theurer v. Peopie, 211 id. 296, Kinsloe v. Pogue, 213 id. 302, and Malcomson v. Strorig, 245 id. 166, holding that signers upon various kinds of statutory petitions, before the petition is acted upon by the tribunal created by law to determine the matter, may withdraw their names, are not controlling. Every one of the statutes there considered is different in wording from the one now under consideration. In none of the cases was the petition in any sense a pleading in a judicial proceeding in court, and in none of them did the dismissal of the petition operate to dispose finally of the question involved.

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

Related

Beghr Willowbrook Venture v. Village of Willowbrook
576 N.E.2d 853 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1991)
Konald v. Board of Education
448 N.E.2d 555 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1983)
Velk v. Reilly
386 N.E.2d 462 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1979)
In Re Estate of Reilly
386 N.E.2d 462 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1979)
Kovac v. Kovac
167 N.E.2d 281 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1960)
Black Hawk Motor Transit Co. v. Illinois Commerce Commission
48 N.E.2d 341 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1943)
Harries v. McCrea
219 P. 533 (Utah Supreme Court, 1923)
Olson v. Scully
129 N.E. 841 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1921)
Sayers v. Drainage Commissioners of Drainage District No. 5
214 Ill. App. 576 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
264 Ill. 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irmegar-v-county-of-tazewell-ill-1914.