People ex rel. Campbell v. Taxman

186 Ill. App. 348, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 898
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 15, 1914
DocketGen. No. 5,871
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 186 Ill. App. 348 (People ex rel. Campbell v. Taxman) 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. Campbell v. Taxman, 186 Ill. App. 348, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 898 (Ill. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

On January 8,1913, the People, by the State’s Attorney on the relation of James A. Campbell, by leave of court filed in the Circuit Court of Bock Island county an information in the nature of quo warranto against J. J. Taxman, requiring him to show by what warrant he exercised the license of keeping a saloon at No. 3106 Fifth avenue, in the city of Bock Island, which the information averred that he was keeping without any lawful license. The respondent filed four pleas, to which a demurrer was sustained, and then, by leave of court, amended said pleas and filed two additional pleas, to all of which pleas demurrers were sustained. He abided by said pleas and there was a judgment of ouster, from which he prosecutes this appeal.

Pursuant to section 81 of the Practice Act, as amended in 1911 (J. & A. ¶ 8618), appellant filed a praecipe, by which he directed the clerk to make up a record containing the information, pleas, demurrers, judgment and appeal. Appellee filed a praecipe, directing the inclusion of objections filed by appellant to the filing of the information, and an affidavit filed therewith, and a certain motion by appellant to vacate the leave to file the information, and an affidavit filed therewith, appellant’s election to stand by his pleas and the relator’s motion for judgment. The record filed in this court contained all the matter required by each praecipe. Appellant moved to strike from the record all the papers inserted by direction of appellee and we took that motion with the case. Said papers were not made a part of the record by any bid of exceptions. Very many cases in the Supreme and Appellate Courts of this State hold that such papers are not a part of the record, unless made so by a bill of exceptions. Town of Scott v. Artman, 237 Ill. 394, is a recent example. Appellee, however, argues that in said written objections and motion, as filed, appellant expressly made said affidavits a part thereof, and that said objections and motion are pleadings, and that all pleadings are a part of the record without a bill of exceptions, and that therefore these affidavits are a part of the record. The proper contents of a common-law record are stated by McAllister, J., in Van Cott v. Sprague, 5 Ill. App. 99, and we collected other authorities on the subject in Burke v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co., 108 Ill. App. 565. They do not include written motions and affidavits unless made a part of the record by a bill of exceptions. We hold that such objections and motions have none of the qualities of common-law pleadings. The filing in the office of a clerk of a court of a paper purporting to be a motion is not a motion, unless brought to the attention of the court. City of Marengo v. Eichler, 245 Ill. 47; City of Decatur v. Barteau, 260 Ill. 612. Even then it can only be preserved by a bill of exceptions. People v. Ellsworth, 261 Ill. 275; Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. Hazelwood, 194 Ill. 69; Radeke Brewing Co. v. Granger, 101 Ill. App. 599. The documents incorporated in appellee ’s praecipe were lengthy papers filed with the clerk, stating many objections to the leave to file the information and many reasons why the order giving that leave should be vacated. The matters written up by the clerk in his record are the things which were actually before the court, and that record is all that there is before the court now on that subject, in the absence of a bill of exceptions. The record, so written by the clerk, does not incorporate these affidavits. If the clerk had undertaken to incorporate them in his written record, that act would have been a nullity. In an action at law, no one but the trial judge has power to certify what affidavits were presented to him in support of these objections and of that motion. These affidavits, therefore, are no part of the record. The affidavits tend to show that this is a controversy between rival saloon keepers, and that the vital result will be to determine what brew of beer shall be sold at retail in that locality. But the purpose of appellee in desiring to get these affidavits into the record is because he claims that there is an inconsistency between certain allegations in the affidavits and certain allegations in the pleas, from which he argues that there are sham pleas, and that because thereof the demurrer was properly sustained. We grant the motion to strike from the record said objections and motion and affidavits, but deny it as to other matters contained in said praecipe. There is therefore nothing in the record to show that these are sham pleas.

There have been in force in Bock Island two ordinances concerning saloons, one adopted April 16, 1903, and the other August 18,1910. The latter alone is relied upon in the first plea and both are relied upon in other pleas. The ordinances divided the license year into two periods, one from the first Monday of May to the first Monday of November, and the other from the first Monday of November to the first Monday of May, and fixed a license fee for a whole year and one-half thereof for each period. This seems to be approved in Hoyt v. McLaughlin, 250 Ill. 442, 451. The application by appellant for a license was for the period ending the first Monday of May, 1913. The ordinances required the application to be accompanied by a petition, signed by a majority of the property owners on each side of the street within a certain distance from the front door of the premises for which it was proposed to issue a license, and also required that every application should be published in a newspaper for a certain length of time. Appellant did not have a petition and did not give such notice. The ordinances did not make these requirements as to any place where at the time such ordinance was adopted a saloon was being conducted under a license already issued, but provided that if any place then used for saloon purposes and vacant and abandoned for said use and so remained for more than seven months, then it should be necessary to file the petition of property owners. These pleas alleged that No. 3106 Fifth avenue in said city was occupied as a saloon under a license when each ordinance went into effect and from thence continuously until the first Monday of May, 1912, and that appellant made application to the mayor for a license to keep a saloon at that place on November 19, 1912, which was less than seven months after the first Monday of May, 1912, and that he filed therewith the bond required by the ordinances and the bond required by the statute, and that he possessed the requirements and had paid the fee fixed by the ordinance, and that the mayor, on January 13, 1913, issued to him a license to keep a saloon at that place from that date to the first Monday of May, 1913, and that it was a mistake of the mayor not to date the license back to November 19, 1912; and each plea set up that at the time the information was filed he was exercising the right to keep a saloon at that place by virtue of said license so obtained.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 Ill. App. 348, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 898, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-campbell-v-taxman-illappct-1914.