People Ex Rel. Broomell v. Hoffman

152 N.E. 597, 322 Ill. 174
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1926
DocketNo. 17260. Writ awarded.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 152 N.E. 597 (People Ex Rel. Broomell v. Hoffman) 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. Broomell v. Hoffman, 152 N.E. 597, 322 Ill. 174 (Ill. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DeYoung

delivered the opinion of the court:

Pursuant to leave granted, the People of the State, on the relation of Francis E. Broomell, filed an original petition for a writ of mandamus, alleging that the county court of Cook county, by an order entered September 15, 1925, upon a rule against William Burke, Fred Nehring, Charles Newman, William Restivo and Jack Balaban to show cause why they should not be punished for contempt, and upon their sworn answers to the rule and on the evidence heard, found that a special proposition election was held in the city of Chicago on April 7, 1925, on the question of the adoption of an ordinance providing for a comprehensive municipal local transportation system; that Burke, Nehring and Balaban served as judges and Restivo and Newman as clerks of the election in the sixteenth precinct of the forty-second ward; that they were officers of the county court by virtue of their respective offices; that Burke, Nehring and Balaban, as judges, wrongfully received, and Restivo and Newman, as clerks, wrongfully recorded, votes twice in the names of the same registered voters; that the respondents willfully kept a false poll-list and knowingly inserted in it the names of one hundred persons who did not appear at the polling place of the precinct; that the respondents, without cause, absented themselves from the polls during the hours of the election, and that by reason of these facts they were guilty of misconduct and misbehavior as officers of the county court and had failed to purge themselves from the contempts so found. By the order the rule was made absolute, each respondent was adjudged guilty of contempt of the county court and committed to the county jail for six months, and the sheriff was commanded to arrest and imprison them. Later it appeared that Restivo and Balaban had not been apprehended or served with a copy of the rule, and by an order entered on October 22,- 1925, nunc pro tunc as of September 15, 1925, the original order was amended by striking their names therefrom. The petition further shows that “An act regulating the holding of elections and declaring the results thereof in cities, villages and incorporated towns in this State,” approved June 19, 1885, as subsequently amended, was adopted by the city of Chicago and applied to all elections within the city and particularly to the election of April 7, 1925; that the act provides that the judges and clerks of election appointed by its authority shall “become officers of such court and shall be liable in a proceeding for contempt for any misbehavior in their office, to be tried in open court on oral testimony in a summary way, without formal pleadings,” and that the order of September 15, 1925, was entered by the county court pursuant to authority conferred by that act. The concluding allegations of the petition are that no appeal was prosecuted from the county court’s order, but that Nehring, Newman and Burke on September 18, 1925, surrendered to the sheriff, who released them in an hour, and that they have since been at large; that on October 23, 1925, a certified copy of the order as amended was delivered to the sheriff and demand was made upon him to execute the order, but that he refuses to do so. The prayer of the petition is for a writ of mandamus commanding him to perform that duty.

The sheriff made a motion, supported by suggestions, to dismiss the petition. A similar motion, with like suggestions, was made by Nehring, Newman and Burke. These suggestions deny that the sheriff released Nehring, Newman and Burke without authority or that he refused to execute the county court’s order, but aver that on September 18, 1925, a petition for a writ of habeas corpus was filed in the circuit court of Cook county in behalf of Nehring, Newman and Burke which charged that they were detained by the sheriff without authority, and set forth the petition filed in the county court alleging misconduct and misbehavior on the part of Burke, Nehring, Balaban, Newman and Restivo as officers of election and asking a rule to show cause why they should not be attached for contempt. The suggestions show that the petition for a writ of habeas corpus further set forth the rule entered on the petition filed'in the county court and the joint and several answer, under oath, of Nehring, Newman and Burke to that rule. The answer specifically denied the misconduct and misbehavior charged; averred that a judge of the county court had no power or authority to enter the rule because the City Election act was unconstitutional; charged that the petition for a rule to show cause was insufficient to require an answer and that the county court had no jurisdiction of their persons; averred that on April 7, 1925, criminal informations based on the acts charged in the petition for a rule to show cause had been filed against them in the same county court; that the informations were still pending, and that, having purged themselves of contempt, they asked to be discharged. The suggestions further show that the petition for a writ of habeas corpus alleged that Nehring, Newman and Burke, upon the filing of their answer to the rule to show cause, moved the county court to discharge them but that the motion was denied; that by the filing of their answer under oath they were entitled to their discharge, but that the county court, although it had lost jurisdiction of the cause, ordered a hearing; that their demand for a jury trial was denied, the county court heard evidence, and on September 15, 1925, entered an order adjudging them guilty of contempt of court and committing each of them to the county jail for six months; that the order is void and that a writ of habeas corpus should issue. It further appears from the suggestions that a hearing was had on the petition for a writ of habeas corpus before one of the judges of the circuit court; that the sheriff, by his counsel, resisted the granting of the prayer of the petition; that the circuit court found that Nehring, Newman and Burke, as officers of the special election held on April 7, 1925, were not officers of the county court within the meaning of section 13 of article 2 of the City Election law and that the county court had no jurisdiction of their persons; that they were accordingly discharged by the order of the circuit court on October 23, 1925, and that by virtue of that order no duty rests upon the sheriff to take them into custody.

The motions of the respondents to dismiss the petition for a writ of mandamus requested, in the event the court denied those motions, that the suggestions supporting them be treated by the court’s order as the answers of the respondents to the petition and that the petitioner be ruled to demur or plead to those answers. Petitioner filed objections to respondents’ motions to dismiss and asked that those motions be denied and that the suggestions made in their support be treated as the answers of the respondents to the petition, in accordance with their alternative motions. The suggestions were taken as the respondents’ answers and the petitioner filed general demurrers to those answers. The cause is thus submitted.

The petitioner contends that the act entitled “An act regulating the holding of elections and declaring the result thereof in cities, villages and incorporated towns in this State,” approved June 19, 1885, as subsequently amended, commonly called the City Election act, controls elections in the city of Chicago and that it applied to the election of April 7, 1925, in the sixteenth precinct of the forty-second ward of that city and to the judges and clerks conducting the election.

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Bluebook (online)
152 N.E. 597, 322 Ill. 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-broomell-v-hoffman-ill-1926.