McWhorter v. People ex rel. Chicago & Rock River Railroad

65 Ill. 290
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 65 Ill. 290 (McWhorter v. People ex rel. Chicago & Rock River Railroad) 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
McWhorter v. People ex rel. Chicago & Rock River Railroad, 65 Ill. 290 (Ill. 1872).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Breese

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an application for a mandamus, by The People, on the relation of the Chicago and Rock River Railroad Company, made to the circuit court of Whiteside county, and taken, by change of venue, to the Rock Island circuit court, the object of which was to compel the proper officers of the town of Montmorency, in Whiteside county, to subscribe fifty thousand dollars to the capital stock of- that company, and issue its bonds therefor in payment of such subscription.

The petition sets forth the act of the general assembly of this State incorporating this company, and the route of the road, and also sections six, ten and eleven of the charter, upon the true interpretation of which this controversy mainly depends.

The sixth section authorizes the directors of the company to receive subscriptions to their capital stock from any corporation, county, city or town, on such terms and in such amounts as they may deem for the interest of the company, in accordance with the by-laws of the company.

Section ten authorized any incorporated city, town, or any township organized under the township organization laws of this State, along or near the route of the road, to subscribe to its capital stock.

Section eleven provides for holding the election to determine the question of subscription, and provides, “if it shall appear that .the majority of all the legal voters of such city, town or township, voting at such election, have voted for subscription, it shall be the duty of the president of the board of trustees, or other executive officers of such town, and of the supervisors in townships, to subscribe to the capital stock of said railroad company, in the name of said city, town or township, the amount so voted to be subscribed, and to receive from said company the proper certificate therefor.” The president, or other executive officer, was authorized and required to issue bonds in the name of the corporation voting the subscription, bearing ten per cent per annum interest, payable annually, and payable within twenty years.

It is alleged the railroad company was duly organized in May, 1869, and at an election called and held in the township of Montmorency, on the 28th day of August, of that year, a majority of the legal voters of that township voting at such election voted to subscribe fifty thousand dollars to the capital stock of the company.

It is further alleged that, after the result was declared, the railroad company, on the 12th day of February, 1872, made a demand on the township officers to subscribe to the capital stock, and issue bonds in payment of their subscription, which they refused to do, on various pretexts.

It appears that parties friendly to this enterprise, and connected with the railroad company, prepared, and circulated among the tax-payers a petition, which was duly signed by eleven tax-payers and legal voters of the town, and presented to the town clerk, which bears upon its face strong indications of careful preparation, and which, being necessary to a full understanding of the case, is here copied, leaving out mere formal parts:

“ The undersigned, legal voters and tax-payers in said town, do hereby petition you that a special meeting of the legal voters of said town be called, to be holden at the usual place of voting in said town, at which the question of said town making a subscription to the capital stock of the Chicago and Rock River Railroad Company shall be submitted to them, and that such call be made in the within words and figures.”

These “ words and figures” are as follows:

“ SPECIAL TOWN MEETING.
“Whereas, By section ten (10) of an act to incorporate the Chicago and Rock River Railroad Company, in force March 24,1869, any county, incorporated city or town, or any township organized under the township organization laws of the State, along or near the route of said railroad, is authorized to subscribe to the capital stock of said company;
“ And whereas, Said railroad company has constituted that portion of their road extending from Rock Falls to Am-boy the first division of said road, and created a separate and distinct stock for the construction of said first division;
“And whereas, A petition has been presented to me, signed by ten citizens, who are legal voters and tax-payers in the said township of Montmorency, asking that a special election shall be called in said town, at which the question of said town subscribing to the capital stock of said railroad company, to the amount of fifty thousand dollars, shall be submitted to the legal voters of said town; the bonds to be issued in payment of said stock to be in such form as to entitle the same to registration, under the act of the legislature in that behalf, in force 16th April, 1869; said bonds to be issued to said company only when said road is in readiness for operating into or near said township;
“Now, therefore, The legal voters of said town are hereby notified to meet at the school house in district number two (2), on the 28th day of August A. D. 1869, for the purpose of voting for or against said town subscribing the sum of fifty thousand dollars to the capital stock of the first division of the Chicago and Rock River Railroad Company. At said election, the form of voting shall be, ‘for subscription/ or ‘ against subscription/”

At the time and place appointed in this notice an election was held, the polls being opened at 11 o’clock in the morning. At 12 M. there was an adjournment of one hour, and a closing at 6 in the afternoon. The votes being counted, as appears by the returns made by the moderator and clerk, seventy-seven votes were found for subscription, and thirty-four against. It is alleged in.the petition that, from this canvass, it appeared that a majority of the legal voters voting at the election had voted for subscription.

It is further alleged in the petition that a special town meeting of the voters of this town was called by the clerk, on the petition of twelve freeholders, and was held on the 7th day of May, 1870, to reconsider the former vote; that the polls were kept open from 10 o’clock in the morning to 5 o’clock in the afternoon; that sixty votes were cast, of which fifty-nine were in favor of, and one vote against, reconsideration.

The return sets forth that, prior to making the request and call for the first special election to vote on the question of subscription, the relator had falsely, and with a view to influencing the result, given out that it had created a separate and distinct stock to represent the first division of the road. 2. That it was falsely given out to the voters that the subscription, if made, should be paid for in the bonds of the town, to be issued in such manner and form as to entitle them to registration, as provided by law; and that the town should have the benefit thereof; and that the proposed election in that behalf should be in pursuance of the act of the general assembly, approved April 16, 1869, referred to in the call for the election; and that the vote should be such as to entitle the town to the benefits of that act. 3.

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Related

Stripe v. City of Waukegan
254 Ill. App. 74 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1929)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 Ill. 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcwhorter-v-people-ex-rel-chicago-rock-river-railroad-ill-1872.