People ex rel. Byrnes v. Retirement Board of the Firemen's Annuity & Benefit Fund

272 Ill. App. 59
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 10, 1933
DocketGen. No. 36,487
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 272 Ill. App. 59 (People ex rel. Byrnes v. Retirement Board of the Firemen's Annuity & Benefit Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Byrnes v. Retirement Board of the Firemen's Annuity & Benefit Fund, 272 Ill. App. 59 (Ill. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Gridley

delivered the opinion of the court.

In a certiorari proceeding, the respondent, Retirement Board, etc. appeals from an order or judgment of the circuit court of Cook county, entered on October 26, 1932, as follows:

“This cause coming on to be heard upon petition for writ of certiorari, and the motion of respondent to quash the writ issued upon said petition, and, the court having heard the arguments of, counsel and having considered the briefs submitted by counsel in this cause and all parties in interest being now represented by their respective counsel.

“It Is Ordered that the motion to quash the writ of certiorari be and the same is hereby denied. It is further ordered that the action of the Retirement Board, etc., in refusing to place the name of the petitioner upon, or to restore the petitioner to, the pension roll of the said fund, be and the same is hereby reversed, and that the petitioner be restored to said pension roll as of the date of the annulment of her marriage.”

The verified petition of petitioner, filed, April 29, 1932, after stating that it seeks a review of a certain action of the Board of Trustees of the Firemen’s Pension Fund of Chicago, of which board the said Retirement Board, etc., is its successor and composed of the same persons, alleges in substance:

That petitioner married James P. Byrnes, now deceased, on March 17, 1904, while he was a member of the Chicago fire department, and lived with him as his wife until his death on March 7, 1926, during all of which time he was a member of said fire department; that after his death petitioner made application for and was granted a widow’s pension, in accordance with section 10 of an act of the Illinois legislature, passed in 1917 and amended in 1925, entitled “An Act to provide for a firemen’s pension fund and to create a board of trustees to administer said fund in cities having a population exceeding 200,000 inhabitants,” Cahill’s St. ch. 24, If 951 (section as amended set forth); that the section as amended remained in force continuously until July 1, 1931; that petitioner, after she had been granted the pension, “went through a marriage ceremony” with Frank Mawson on April 7,1928, at Crown Point, Indiana; that payments on the pension were made to her “up to and including January 10, 1929,” when said Firemen’s Pension Board, “on notice by petitioner of said marriage ceremony,” discontinued said pension; that petitioner lived with Frank Maw-son intermittently from April 7, 1928, until February, 1930, but not as man and wife; that the purported marriage was annulled in the circuit court of Cook county on June 6, 1930 (certified copy of annulment decree attached); that the Firemen’s Pension Board was duly notified of the annulment, and petitioner filed an application with the board, requesting the reinstatement of her name on the pension roll and the payment to her of her pension from January 10,1929, and thereafter; that a hearing before the board was had, at which petitioner presented evidence of the annulment, but that her application was denied; that the decision of the board “was that the said annulment did not render the subsequent marriage of petitioner void ab initio so as to entitle petitioner to be restored to the pension roll”; and that petitioner asks for a review of that decision, as it “involves a question of law and not of fact.”

The decree of annulment of June 6, 1930, is signed by the Honorable Thomas J. Lynch, one of the judges of the circuit court of Cook county, and was on that day duly entered of record. After stating in substance that as to the issues made by complainant’s bill and defendant’s answer, evidence was heard in open court on May 15, 1930, at which time the respective parties were present by solicitors, the court found, in part, that due notice of the pendency of the suit was had by personal service on the defendant and that the court has jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter; that the parties, pursuant to a license to solemnize marriage issued by the county clerk of Lake county, Indiana, “took part in a purported marriage ceremony on April 7,1928, at Crown Point, Indiana”; that subsequent to the ceremony the parties never cohabited as husband and wife and that no consummation of the purported marriage was had; that the reason for such non-cohabitation was due to the fact that the defendant “was impotent.” And the court decreed that “the purported marriage ceremony be declared null and void, and it is hereby annulled” and the court further found that “the legal status of complainant did not change as a result of the purported marriage ceremony, and that a legal marriage never existed between the parties.”-

During May, 1932, the respondent, Retirement Board, etc., was duly served with process in the certiorari proceeding, and on May 17, 1932, it appeared by the corporation counsel of the City of Chicago, and 'one of his assistants, and moved to quash the writ. The court’s order appealed from, as first above mentioned, was entered after a full hearing and argument by the respective attorneys on the motion to quash. No evidence was introduced. The present transcript, however, contains what purports to be a stenographic report of the proceedings on the hearing, including statements by opposing counsel and the court, and also the court’s reasons for its decision including references to numerous adjudicated cases. These proceedings are abstracted in appellant’s printed abstract here filed. It appears that after the court (Judge Thomas Taylor) had stated it to be his opinion that “the petitioner is entitled to reinstatement on thé pension roll and to the payment of her pension according to law, and that the ruling of the Pension Board must be reversed, ’ ’ the question arose at what date the payment of her pension should recommence, whether on January 10, 1929 (when it had been discontinued) or on June 6, 1930 (when the annulment decree of petitioner’s marriage to Frank Maws on had been entered), and the following in part occurred:

“Mr. Byrnes (attorney for petitioner): When does the reinstatement take effect?

“Mr. Mulligan (attorney for respondent): There are two questions involved, besides of course the question whether or not the holding of your Honor ipso facto restores her to the pension roll. . . . Does this annulment of the marriage, so far as her pension rights are concerned, commence at the date that the annulment was entered, or would she be entitled to back pension for the period that she lived with this man and received support from him, assuming that she did receive such support?

‘ ‘ The Court : Of course, the gravamen of this petition is the replacing of her on the pension roll. I think the petition asks that her name be put on as of the date it was taken off. . . . But the law will never permit a pensioner to receive, perhaps, two sources of livelihood. I suppose it must be assumed that while she was living with her second husband she was obtaining a livelihood through him, and, equitably considered, was not entitled to a pension from the board. Technically, on the face of this record, with the facts stated in skeleton form, so to speak, in the petition, without evidence, and with the ruling of the court that the annulment destroyed the marriage ab initio, she is entitled to a pension from the time she was taken off the pension roll. But . . .

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