People ex rel. Bristol v. Pearson

4 Ill. 270
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 4 Ill. 270 (People ex rel. Bristol v. Pearson) 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. Bristol v. Pearson, 4 Ill. 270 (Ill. 1841).

Opinion

Lockwood, Justice,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

At the July term, 1839, of this Court, an alternative writ of mandamus was awarded to the judge pf the Seventh Judicial Circuit, and presiding judge of the Cook Circuit Court, requiring him to sign the bill of exceptions mentioned therein, or show cause to this Court, at the December term, 1839, why he did not sign the same. At the December term, 1839, it appearing that due service had been made of the alternative mandamus, and that the judge had refused to obey the writ, or show any good cause why he did not comply with its injunction, a peremptory mandamus was awarded.

At the June term, 1840, affidavits were read, showing that the writ of mandamus had been duly served upon the judge in open Court, by the attorney in the original suit, and that the judge had not only treated the writ contemptuously, by threatening to fine and imprison the attorney for .serving the writ, but actually caused him to appear and answer for a supposed contempt, in thus making such service. It also appeared that he had entirely disregarded the writ, and refused and neglected to make any return thereto. An attachment for this contempt was awarded at the June term aforesaid. During that term, the defendant was arrested on the attachment, and brought into Court, and admitted to bail. Interrogatories were thereupon filed, with the view of affording him an opportunity to purge himself of the contempt. To these interrogatories, answers were filed; after which, the Court heard the defendant, at great length, by able counsel, and with the view to give the defendant the benefit of a most mature and deliberate consideration of the case, as well as to ascertain whether the Court, in the previous steps it had taken, had acted in conformity to the well settled principles of law, as it regarded the rights and obligations of the judge, in the premises, as also to determine what was proper to be done for the protection of suitors in the courts of this State, so as to secure to them a faithful administration of justice.

After the argument, the cause was continued until the December term, 1840. At this term, the defendant came and suggested to the Court that he had resigned the office of judge of the Seventh Judicial Circuit of this State, and moved to be discharged from the attachment, because this Court had, by the act of resignation, been ousted of its jurisdiction, and had therefore no longer any compulsory power over him.

After a full hearing of the case on the part of the defendant, at that time, the cause was continued until the present term, with a view of affording the defendant an opportunity of a re-hearing before the Court, as now organized.

A re-argument at this term having been declined, and the case submitted, it becomes necessary to come to a final determination of the whole matter in controversy. This Court cannot, for a moment, entertain a doubt, but that it has jurisdiction to award a mandamus to a circuit judge; nor can they doubt that the facts of this case imperiously call upon them to exercise the power.

From an examination of the answers of the defendant to the interrogatories propounded to him, no satisfactory conclusion can be drawn, to exempt him from the charge, that his whole course, in his repeated refusals to obey the mandates of the Court, have unfortunately had their origin in a spirit of contumacy and resistance to the authority of the Court, or in a degree of ignorance not possible to be imputed to a person holding the important station of a judge of the Circuit Court.

The defendant seems, throughout, to seek to shelter himself upon the ground of a want of due service of the writs of mandamus, both alternative and peremptory, because they were served upon him in open Court, by the attorneys for the party, and not, as he contends they should have been, by the sheriff.

Be that as it may, when the writs were directed to him, and commanded him to do a particular act, or as in the case of the alternative mandamus, or to show cause why he refused to do the act, he should, at least from self respect, have complied, and not sought to shelter himself under a pretence that the sheriff was the only person who could lawfully serve the writ. When, however, the defendant had learnt, as he did by the decision in relation to the service of the alternative mandamus,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re: Leon A. Kendall v.
712 F.3d 814 (Third Circuit, 2013)
Pulliam v. Allen
466 U.S. 522 (Supreme Court, 1984)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Ill. 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-bristol-v-pearson-ill-1841.