Payne v. Emmerson

125 N.E. 329, 290 Ill. 490
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1919
DocketNo. 13106
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 125 N.E. 329 (Payne v. Emmerson) 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
Payne v. Emmerson, 125 N.E. 329, 290 Ill. 490 (Ill. 1919).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellant filed his bill of complaint in the circuit court of Sangamon county, alleging, in substance, that he is a citizen and tax-payer of said county; that appellee is the Secretary of State for the State of Illinois; that pursuant to a petition filed with him purporting to be signed by ten per cent of the registered voters of the State of Illinois, appellee is assuming and purporting to act under an act entitled "An act providing for an expression of opinion by electors on questions of public policy at any general or special election,” approved May 11, 1901, and intends to make and deliver to the county clerk of every county in the State of Illinois a certificate certifying to the correctness of three proposed questions of public policy to be therein given, and that they shall be submitted to the electors of this State to be voted upon on Tuesday, November 4, 1919, and that they shall be printed on separate ballots from the ballots containing the names of candidates; that said propositions are the following:

“Initiative and Referendum.

"No. 1. Shall the members of the fifth -constitutional convention be instructed to submit a proposal for the initiative and referendum; the term ‘initiative’ as herein used meaning the power to bring proposed laws and constitutional amendments to popular vote, at any regular election, by petition of 100,000 electors at large, all measures so submitted to become laws when approved by a majority of those voting thereon; the term referendum, as herein used, meaning the power to suspend a specified act or acts of the legislature, by petition of 50,000 electors at large, until such act or acts shall have been referred to popular vote and approved by a majority of those voting thereon; said powers of the initiative and referendum also to be understood as being extended by the constitution to the electors of every municipality and other political subdivision or district of the State, and to apply to all local, special- and municipal legislation in or for their respective municipalities and subdivisions or districts?

Gateway Amendment.

“No. 2. Shall the members of the fifth constitutional convention be instructed to submit the proposal for the initiative and referendum as defined in question No. i, for a separate vote, in such manner that said proposal, if approved by a majority of those voting thereon, shall take effect, either as part of a new constitution or as an amendment of article 4, section 1, of the present constitution?

Public Ownership.

“No. 3. Shall the members of the fifth constitutional convention be instructed to submit to the electors constitutional provisions granting to the State and to cities, towns, villages and other municipal corporations and districts the power to acquire outside of and beyond any constitutional debt limitations, income-producing utilities, such as water works, gas works, electric light and power plants, street railways, urban and interurban transportation system, telephone and telegraph systems, elevated railways, warehouses, elevators, wharves, docks and cold storage plants and stock yards, abattoirs and mines?”

It is further alleged in the bill that the certification of said proposed questions by appellee and the submission thereof to the electors to be voted on at said election are unlawful and in violation of the laws' of this State; that the printing thereof will be an unauthorized and illegal use of the revenue and moneys of the tax-payers of this State, and that unless restrained and enjoined appellee will certify to the county clerks said questions to be printed on ballots and will be submitted to the electors at said election. ' The prayer of the bill is that appellee be restrained by injunction from so certifying said questions.

On October 4, 1919, the circuit court, on motion, dissolved the temporary injunction theretofore granted, sustained a demurrer to the bill of complaint and dismissed it for want of equity. The cause was appealed to this court and submitted at the October term, owing to the urgency of the 'case. An order and judgment were entered denying the motion of appellant to continue in force the injunction and affirming the decree of the circuit court, and it was announced that the opinion of the court would be filed later.

It is contended by appellant, among other things, that the form of the questions proposed to be submitted to the electors indicates, beyond question, a purpose to secure from the electors definite and positive instructions to the delegates to the constitutional convention to embody specific proposals of amendments to the new constitution to be submitted by such convention for ratification. He further contends that -the electors have no such power or right; that such questions are not questions of public policy within the meaning of said statute giving the right to the people of an expression of their opinion, and if so the statute is unconstitutional ; that it is a constitutional right that the delegates to the convention shall be free to employ their best judgment, unfettered by directions or instructions of any kind or character, and that the Secretary of State has no power under the Public Policy act, or otherwise, to submit or certify for submission to the electors any such questions as proposed; that equity has jurisdiction to prevent such threatened wrong, as it is plainly in violation of the constitution and is unauthorized by law, and that in case such questions be certified, appellant and all other tax-payers will be required to pay the expense of printing and preparing ballots for such election or expression of the people, without warrant of law and for a wholly illegal purpose.

Appellee concedes that there is no power, under the constitution, to instruct or command the constitutional delegates to do any act within the scope of their official duties; that the expression of the people’s wish upon such questions is merely advisory, not binding upon the constitutional delegates, and that they would have the legal right to disregard such vote or expression of the people. He does contend that the questions are questions of public policy, and that under said section of the statute and under section 17 of article 2 of our constitution the people have “the right to assemble in a peaceable maner, * * * to make known their opinions to their representatives” and their wishes to the delegates by voting upon said propositions. The main contention of appellee is that the subject matter of the suit is not within the jurisdiction of a court of equity and that the allegations of the bill do not entitle complainant to the injunction sought by its prayer.

It is clearly apparent that the settling of the issues in this case upon the merits involves the settling of political as distinguished from civil, personal or property rights. The prayer of the bill is that appellee be enjoined from certifying said questions. No relief whatever can be granted under this bill unless that prayer is sustained, whether the same be relief against the paying by the tax-payers of the cost of printing and preparing the ballots or otherwise.

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Bluebook (online)
125 N.E. 329, 290 Ill. 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/payne-v-emmerson-ill-1919.