Leonard v. Arnold

91 N.E. 534, 244 Ill. 429
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 91 N.E. 534 (Leonard v. Arnold) 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
Leonard v. Arnold, 91 N.E. 534, 244 Ill. 429 (Ill. 1910).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Vickers

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellants, together with Andrew Hughes, filed a bill in chancery on May 13, 1909, to the June term of the circuit court of LaSalle county, in which they prayed that the court would decree that a new classification of all the lands in Union Drainage District No. 1 of the towns of Freedom and Ophir, in LaSalle county, should be made, and that, pending the hearing, Henry L. Arnold, the treasurer of said county, should be restrained from selling or attempting to sell the appellants’ land, or any part thereof, to pay a delinquent special assessment extended upon the classification of the lands of said district, and for general relief. At the same time they gave notice that they would move the court on May 15 to grant the injunction as prayed in said bill, and on that day they did enter such motion. On May 27 the motion was heard upon the bill, the answer of some of the defendants, affidavits and oral testimony, and the court entered a decree finding that there was no equity stated in the bill; that the equities of the case were with the defendants, and that the complainants were not entitled to the relief prayed for or to an injunction, and ordering that the injunction be refused, the prayer for relief denied and the bill dismissed.

The appellants insist that the court had no power to dismiss their bill on the hearing of a motion for a temporary injunction before the term to which the bill was addressed. The appellees insist that the cause was submitted for final determination and was heard upon issues joined, and that the bill was dismissed upon the merits of the whole case. This view is not sustained by the transcript of the record. The decree entered recites that the cause came on to be heard upon the “motion of the said complainants for an injunction, upon the bill of complaint duly sworn to by the said complainants, and upon the answer to the said bill of complaint of the said defendants, Joseph H Garland, William Hughes and James J. Cantlin, signed and sworn to by them, and upon the several answers of the said other defendants above mentioned and the replication thereto, and also upon the affidavits of witnesses filed herein, * * * and also upon the testimony of witnesses sworn and examined in open court.” In fact, no answer but that of the three defendants named appears in the record, and no replication, though the record is certified to be complete. But whether the issues were made up or not, the above recital is of a hearing of the motion for an injunction upon the pleadings and upon affidavits and evidence submitted. There is no finding of facts, but the court finds that thefe is no equity stated in the bill and that the complainants are not entitled to the relief prayed for, or to an injunction.

On a motion for a preliminary injunction a bill in chancery will not be dismissed unless the injunction is the only relief sought. (Hummert v. Schwab, 54 Ill. 142; Brockway v. Rowley, 66 id. 99.) The equity of a bill can only be questioned on demurrer or on the hearing. (Brill v. Stiles, 35 Ill. 305.) A motion to dismiss may be entertained upon the ground that there is no equity apparent on the face of the bill or that the court has no jurisdiction, and in such case the motion is treated as a general demurrer, admitting all the facts well pleaded by the bill. (Vicley v. Thompson, 44 Ill. 9; Grimes v. Grimes, 143 id. 550; Canal Comrs. v. Village of East Peoria, 179 id. 214.) It is only where it is manifest that no amendment can help it that a bill will be dismissed on such a motion. (Thomas v. Adams, 30 Ill. 37.) It is necessary, therefore, to inquire whether the bill shows, on its face, that it is without equity.

The bill alleged the organization of the drainage district in November, 1907, comprising the lands of complainants, the commissioners and five others, and the election of the appellees Cantlin, Garland and Hughes as commissioners ; that they made and filed with the clerk of the district a pretended classification roll containing all the lands of the district, a copy of which is set out in full, and a map of the lands of the district showing the relative size of the tracts of land, the names of the respective owners and the course of the proposed drain, a copy of which map is attached to the bill and made part thereof. The bill further alleged that the said commissioners wholly disregarded the provisions of the statute in making their rating and classification of said lands by conspiring and fraudulently confederating together to wrong and injure complainants, and to avoid the payment of their own just and fair proportion of the cost of said improvement according to the benefits received by their lands, made, returned and filed said rating and classification aforesaid by classifying certain of the tracts of land of divers owners thereof in tracts of less than forty acres, said tracts of land being then legally subdivided into tracts of forty acres and so described in the records, maps,, plats and proceedings of said district,— that is to say, said commissioners, instead of rating and classifying the south-east quarter of the north-west quarter of section 20, owned by said commissioner James J. Cantlin, in a tract of forty acres, as the same is legally subdivided, for the purpose of fraudulently reducing the assessment of said James J. Cantlin they wrongfully and fraudulently classified the said forty-acre tract in two parts .by rating and classifying the north ten acres at fifty-five points and the south thirty acres at zero; that the same illegal, wrongful and fraudulent practice of classification was adopted with reference to the lands of George P.

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Bluebook (online)
91 N.E. 534, 244 Ill. 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leonard-v-arnold-ill-1910.