People Ex Rel. Arnd v. Heckard

173 N.E. 124, 341 Ill. 144
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1930
DocketNo. 20088. Reversed in part and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 173 N.E. 124 (People Ex Rel. Arnd v. Heckard) 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
People Ex Rel. Arnd v. Heckard, 173 N.E. 124, 341 Ill. 144 (Ill. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Orr

delivered the opinion of the court:

On January 5, 1929, the circuit court of Cook county awarded a writ of mandamus petitioned for by the relator, Frederick Arnd, a resident and tax-payer of Cook county, against the defendants, directing them to deposit with the county clerk of Cook county certain records of births, stillbirths and deaths in the time and manner specified in the judgment rendered. On appeal the judgment of the circuit court was affirmed by the Appellate Court for the First District, and the case comes here for review by writ of certiorari.

By his petition relator alleged that on May 4, 1928, he made written demand upon Robert M. Sweitzer, county clerk of Cook county, for certified copies of death certificates of his two brothers, at the time tendering the proper fees; that Sweitzer said he could not comply with the demand because the registrar of vital statistics for the city of Chicago had not deposited any records of births or deaths with him, as county clerk, since the year 1915. By their answer defendants claimed impossibility of performance by them since 1918, alleging that their failure to file such records was not occasioned by their own fault but because no money had been appropriated by the Chicago city council since 1918 to pay for this work; that in the years 1915, 1916, 1917 and 1918 the persons then serving as health commissioner and local registrar of Chicago prepared full and complete certified records of the registration of births and deaths in the Chicago district with money appropriated by the city council for that purpose and with the understanding that the moneys so appropriated would be re-paid by Cook county, but said county and its officers, upon demand, failed and refused to reimburse the city of Chicago for the moneys thus expended and have since refused to make any appropriation therefor; that the certified records of births and deaths prepared for the years 1915 to 1918, inclusive, were tendered by the registrar of Chicago for filing in the county clerk’s office but were refused on the ground that they were not needed and would not be paid for by Cook county, and that from the year 1919 to the present time the Chicago city council has made no appropriation whatever to pay for preparing such certified copies, but, on the contrary, adopted a resolution in 1919 directing the Chicago health department to discontinue making further certificates for the county-clerk’s office. These facts set up in defendants’ answer were all admitted by a general demurrer of relator, which was sustained by the circuit court, with a ruling that defendants further answer the petition instanter, and upon their failure or refusal to answer further the writ of mandamus was awarded.

The act of 1915 which provides for the registration of births and deaths, as amended in 1917, (Smith’s Stat. 1929, pp. 2222-2227,) provides for the filing of birth and death certificates with local registrars, who are required to transmit such original certificates to the State Board of Health after having made a copy or copies thereof on forms to be furnished or in a record book. (Sec. 18.) The act also provides by section 18, among other things, as follows: “Local registrars shall deposit with the county clerks of their respective counties on the tenth day of each month, one complete set of the records of births, stillbirths and deaths registered with them during the preceding month, and the county clerks are charged with the binding and indexing, or recording, and safekeeping of such records.” That section also, as applied to the city of Chicago, provides that the city “may cause to be made extra copies” of such birth or death certificates filed with the local registrar, “such extra copies to be in addition to those copies which are required to be made for and turned over to the county clerk, as provided for in this act, and such extra copies may be retained by any city, incorporated town or village as its permanent record.”

The statute thus makes the local registrar a receiving agent to receive the original birth and death certificates, to file them with the State Board of Health and to file a copy with the county clerk, who is to keep the record for the entire county. The act does not require the local registrars or the cities to make and retain in their files any permanent record, although it permits the city to do so, at its option and at its own expense. As will later appear, the act provides that the city shall be reimbursed for receiving the original certificates, sending them to the State Board of Health and delivering a copy to the county clerk.

From the wording of this act we believe that the first copy of the record of births and deaths made by the local registrar is the one required to be turned over by him to the county clerk, and that in case the local registrar, or the city for which he is acting, desires another copy or copies for his permanent record, such city must make such copies for itself and at its own expense. If a record has been made by the local registrar and is now on file in his office or under his control, it is his duty to turn that record over to the county clerk even though the city or the local registrar will then have no record of his own.

As against the foregoing construction of section 18 it may be said that since section 20 of the act requires not only the county clerk but also the local registrar to issue a certified copy of birth or death certificates on demand by any applicant entitled to the same, the act contemplates that the local registrar shall keep a permanent record for that purpose. This apparent inconsistency between sections 18 and 20 as they now exist can be explained by a consideration of section 18 of the act of 1915 as originally passed. That section originally required the local registrar to file a copy of the records with the county clerk within sixty days after the close of each calendar year. (Hurd’s Stat. 1915, p. 2479.) Since the local registrar was thus permitted to retain such a record in his possession during the entire calendar year he was in position during that year to issue certified copies of certificates with respect to births and deaths occurring during that year. Moreover, section 20, in requiring the local registrar to issue certified copies to all applicants, may be construed as applicable to local registrars only in the event the city has elected, in accordance with the provisions of section 18, to keep a permanent record for that purpose, which is made entirely optional with the city. If this be the intent of sections 18 and 20 as originally passed there is no inconsistency between those sections, and this construction would seem to be still applicable, notwithstanding the amendment in 1917 of section 18, to require the registrar to file a copy of the record with the county clerk monthly — i. e., within ten days after the close of each calendar month — instead of, as originally, within sixty days after the close of each calendar year.

Section 20 of the act, considered in the light of section 18 as now amended, has a double but not conflicting purpose. Under it the local registrar is required to issue certified copies on application so long as he has the records in his office — that is, in any event, during a current calendar month.

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Bluebook (online)
173 N.E. 124, 341 Ill. 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-arnd-v-heckard-ill-1930.