MacGuidwin v. South Park Commissioners

164 N.E. 208, 333 Ill. 58
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1928
DocketNos. 19155, 19156, 19157. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 164 N.E. 208 (MacGuidwin v. South Park Commissioners) 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
MacGuidwin v. South Park Commissioners, 164 N.E. 208, 333 Ill. 58 (Ill. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

On July 7, 1928, appellant, Frederick J. MacGuidwin, and nine other petitioners, brought three separate suits and filed therein three separate petitions in the circuit court of Cook county to contest an election held on June 4, 1928, in the district referred to in this record as the South Park district in the city of Chicago, for the purpose of voting for and against three propositions to issue bonds for public improvements. The propositions submitted to the voters in the South Park district at the election were three, to-wit: (a) To issue bonds of the South Park Commissioners in the amount of $3,000,000 for completion of a stadium on the lake front, in the city of Chicago; (b) to issue bonds of said commissioners in the amount of $5,000,000 for general park purposes; and (c) to issue their bonds in the amount of $7,500,000 for improvement of the lake front, in the city of Chicago. Appellee the South Park Commissioners appeared in all three of the cases, and on July 26, 1928, filed a motion in each of the cases to dismiss the petition therein because of its insufficiency to give the court jurisdiction. The motions to dismiss were all based on the claim that the petitions were insufficient to give the court jurisdiction of the subject matter of the suits or of said appellee for reasons set out in fourteen separate and numbered paragraphs, which are substantially as follows: (1) There is no allegation of petitioners, except on information and belief, that they are, or any one of them is, an elector of the South Park district; (2) the petitions do not show when the result of the election was determined or that the result of the election has been determined as required by law; (3) the petitions are not, in fact, signed and verified by five or more electors of the South Park district who knew the contents thereof before signing; (4) there are no allegations of fact showing the propositions did not receive a majority of the votes cast at the election; (5) there are no proper allegations that a re-count of the votes cast would or might change the result of the election on any of the propositions; (6) there is no allegation of fact sufficient to sustain or support an order directing a re-count of the ballots cast at the election; (7) the averments of paragraphs 11 to 29, inclusive, of the petitions are insufficient to raise any presumption against the accuracy of the returns in the specific 413 precincts mentioned therein or in the remaining 645 precincts, are insufficient to overcome the presumption that the judges and clerks of election performed their duty, and insufficient to support the conclusion that the returns show on their face such inaccuracy as to warrant a re-count; (8) it does not appear from paragraphs 11 to 29, inclusive, that there was an overcast of votes in certain precincts as alleged, because it is not alleged that the numbers given as the total vote in those precincts are correct, and it is not alleged that the overcast votes were cast, counted or returned in favor of the propositions; (9) paragraphs 31 to 52, inclusive, of the petitions, alleging certain irregularities in 21 precincts, are insufficient to support the general charge of irregularities in the 1037 precincts of the South Park district concerning which no specific facts are averred; (10) it is not averred how or in .what manner the alleged fraudulent votes in the 21 precincts were counted or returned, or that if all the alleged fraudulent votes in said 21 precincts should be thrown out or disregarded on a re-count the result of the election would be changed as to any of the propositions; (11) from all the allegations of paragraphs 31 to 52, inclusive, it appears that a re-count of the ballots would be of no avail because the irregularities complained of appear dehors the ballots; (12) it is alleged in paragraphs 31 to 52, inclusive, of the petitions that certain voters were not residents at the addresses or places of residence at which the returns showed them to reside, but it is not alleged that said voters were not electors of the respective precincts in which they voted, on the day of the election; (13) it is alleged in paragraphs 31 to 52, inclusive, that the returns showed certain voters purported to vote from addresses or places which did not exist, but not that said voters were not electors of said respective precincts on the date of the election; (14) there is a non-joinder of indispensable parties defendant,- to-wit, the board of election commissioners of the city of Chicago and Robert M. Sweitzer, county clerk of Cook county. On August 3, 1928, on leave of the court five of the petitioners filed amendments to all of the original petitions. The amendments filed were amendments to the allegations of paragraphs 6, 58, 60 and 61 and the prayer of the petitions, and by way of supplementing and amending said four paragraphs of the petitions two new paragraphs were added to the petitions and numbered 62 and 63. The amendments were all for the purpose of having the definite allegations made that the returns of precinct election officials were canvassed and the results proclaimed by “the board of election commissioners, the county judge of Cook county, Illinois, and the city attorney of Chicago, Cook county, Illinois, acting as the general canvassing board for such city,” in lieu of the allegations in the original petitions that the returns of the precinct election officials “were canvassed and the result proclaimed by the board of election commissioners,” only. All of the petitions as amended were signed and sworn to by five of the original ten petitioners, all of whom had signed and sworn to the original petitions. The original motion to dismiss the original petitions was allowed to stand as a motion to dismiss all of the amended petitions, which was sustained by the court, and an order was then entered in all of the cases dismissing all of the amended petitions. Frederick MacGuidwin, one of the five petitioners verifying the three amended petitions, has perfected an appeal to this court in all of the cases.

The allegations in the original petitions and in the petitions as amended are the same in every particular, except the words therein employed to name and describe the particular propositions contested. The abstracts and briefs and arguments filed in this court are also identical, with the same exceptions above mentioned with reference to the petitions. The three suits in this court are prosecuted by the same appellant against the same appellees but bear different docket numbers. The only question presented in this court is as to the sufficiency of the amended petitions to give the court jurisdiction of the subject matter therein and to order a re-count of the ballots in all of the cases. A decision in any one of the three cases by this court must necessarily be a controlling decision in the other two cases, as the same questions are presented and argued in all of them. The causes were therefore consolidated in this court for consideration and determination and they will all be disposed of by this decision as if one and the same case.

All of the amended petitions contain sixty-three numbered paragraphs, exclusive of the prayers for relief and for process.

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Bluebook (online)
164 N.E. 208, 333 Ill. 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macguidwin-v-south-park-commissioners-ill-1928.