People ex rel. Bell v. Zane

105 Ill. 662, 1883 Ill. LEXIS 135
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 105 Ill. 662 (People ex rel. Bell v. Zane) 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. Bell v. Zane, 105 Ill. 662, 1883 Ill. LEXIS 135 (Ill. 1883).

Opinions

Mr. Chief Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the Court:

At the January term, 1883, of this court, leave was given to file a petition, in the name of the People of the State, for a mandamus, to require the Hon. Charles S. Zane, judge of the circuit court of Sangamon county, to take jurisdiction of the case of the People against Lewis Biggs, being an indictment for murder, and to proceed to try the cause so soon as the same could be done with justice to the parties concerned. Accordingly such a petition was filed, in which were set forth all the facts on which the judgment of the court is invoked.

No question is made as to the jurisdiction of this court to afford the relief prayed for in the petition. Respondent, by his answer, asks the court to “take cognizance of the cause, and hear and determine the same, and render such judgment therein as to the court may seem meet and proper, and in accordance with law. ” But had the jurisdiction of this court in the premises been challenged, its jurisdiction in such cases is manifest from its previous decisions. The People v. Scales, 3 Scam. 351; Brennan v. The People, 15 Ill. 511.

Concerning the facts of the ease there is no disagreement, as they all appear in the pleadings, by the admission of respondent. At the February term, 1882, of the Macoupin circuit court, Lewis Biggs was indicted by the grand jury of that county for the crime of murder. At the September term of that court next after the indictment was found, the accused presented his petition for a change of venue in the cause, on the ground the 'inhabitants of the county were prejudiced against him, and asked that the venue of the cause be changed to some county where the same prejudice did not exist. The prayer of the petition was granted, and an order entered to change the venue to the county of Christian, and the usual other orders in aid thereof were made. After-wards, and while the prisoner still remained in the custody of the sheriff of Macoupin county, and the records and all original papers in the cause still remained in that court, on the application of the accused, made at the same term of court at which the order just recited was entered, the circuit court of Macoupin county set aside its former order entered to change the venue of the cause to the county of Christian, and by an order entered of record at the same term of court, changed the venue of the cause to the county of Sangamon, and made the usual further orders as to sending the prisoner, and the records and papers in the cause, to that county. The transcript of the record and the original papers in the cause were transmitted, by the clerk of the Macoupin circuit court to the Sangamon county circuit court, and the sheriff, as was his duty, transferred the prisoner to the custody of the sheriff of Sangamon county. When the cause came up for trial in the county to which it had been sent, the State’s attorney of that county entered a motion to remand the cause to the county of Macoupin, for the reason the circuit court of Sangamon county had no jurisdiction to try the cause. The accused being present, in proper person and by written consent waived all objections to the jurisdiction of the court, and offered thereby to submit to its jurisdiction, but the court allowed the motion so far as to refuse to assume jurisdiction of the cause, and ordered the clerk to transmit the papers of the cause to the clerk of the circuit court of Macoupin county, and directed the sheriff to deliver the body of the prisoner to the sheriff of Macoupin county without delay.

On the facts, as they are admitted to be, no reason is perceived why the circuit court of Sangamon county should not have taken cognizance of the cause submitted to it, since the prisoner waived all objections to its jurisdiction, and to have caused the accused to be tried for the crime alleged against him, according to law, so soon as the same could be done with justice to the parties concerned. The statute authorized the circuit court of Ma'coúpin county to change the venue of the case then pending before it, for certain reasons specified, on the application of the accused. Its jurisdiction in such matters is obvious, and it acted within statutory power when it made the order changing the venue on the application of the prisoner, as was done in this case. The utmost that can be claimed is, the venue was improperly changed by the court in which the indictment was found against the prisoner. But can the circuit court of the county to which the cause is sent inquire into that fact, and if, in its opinion, the proceedings changing the venue were irregular, for that reason refuse to take cognizance of the cause, if the prisoner himself makes no objection to the jurisdiction of the court? This question seems to be fully'settled, both by. the statute and the previous decisions of this court. Section 35 of the Venue act, Rev. Stat. 1874, declares, “all questions concerning the regularity of proceedings in obtaining changes of venue, and the right of the court to which the change is made to try the cause and execute the judgment, shall be considered as waived after trial and verdict.” In the case of The People v. Scates, supra, although the point was not definitely passed upon because it was not necessary to the decision, it was said the court to which the cause is sent is not a court to review and reverse the decision of the court making the order changing the venue of a cause, and for that reason has no authority to inquire into the regularity of such order. This view conforms to the obvious meaning of the statute. Irregularities in obtaining a change of venue, where they exist, concern no one but the party asking it, and if he simply fails to make objection, before going to trial, to the jurisdiction of the court to try his cause, all irregularities that may have intervened are, by the provisions of the statute, considered waived. This construction of the statute would seem to exclude the idea the court to which the cause is sent may, of its own motion, refuse to take cognizance of the cause. In Brennan v. The People, supra, it was held that even if the venue was improperly changed, the defendants could not complain of what was done at their instance, and that all irregularities in obtaining the change of venue might be waived by the defence,—and that was a capital case. In its opinion in the Brennan case, the court recognized the rule declared in The People v. Scates, that although the venue may have been improperly changed, it was the duty of the court to which the case was sent to assume jurisdiction to try the cause, unless objections were made by defendant himself. It was there distinctly held that as the defendants in that case made no objections in the court below to the change of venue, they were concluded, by statute, from making any in the Supreme Court. In Logston v. The State, 3 Heisk. 414, it was said by the court in considering the jurisdiction of the court to which a case was sent on a change of venue: “The indictment being presented, and no objection made by the accused or his counsel, the court was authorized and obliged to proceed with the trial.” There are obvious reasons in support of the rule adopted in such cases. Should the court to which the cause is sent be permitted, of its own motion, to refuse to take cognizance of the ease when the prisoner himself makes no objection, it might greatly embarrass the administration of the criminal law, and lead to most unprofitable controversies between courts of equal jurisdiction.

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Bluebook (online)
105 Ill. 662, 1883 Ill. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-bell-v-zane-ill-1883.