People ex rel. Deneen v. Martin

178 Ill. 611
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 178 Ill. 611 (People ex rel. Deneen v. Martin) 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. Deneen v. Martin, 178 Ill. 611 (Ill. 1899).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellant filed in the circuit court of Cook county an information in the nature of quo warranto, upon the relation of the State’s attorney for the county of Cook, in which it was alleged the appellee, without legal right or warrant so to do, holds and executes the office of town clerk of the town of Cicero, and praying said appellee be required to answer by what warrant he claims the right to discharge the duties of the said office. A demurrer interposed by the relator to the plea filed by the appellee to the information was overruled. The appellant elected to abide the demurrer, and judgment was entered dismissing the information.

The ultimate question arising upon the record is whether the plea disclosed lawful authority in the appellee to hold the office and discharge the duties of clerk of the said town of Cicero. In substance the averments of the plea were that the county of Cook adopted the system of township organization about the year 1857 and has since maintained the same, and that under such system township 39 north, range 13, east of the third principal meridian, was organized under the general township organization laws of the State as the town of Cicero; that afterwards, on the 28th day of February, 1867, a special act was adopted by the General Assembly, whereby the inhabitants and residents of the said territory of said town of Cicero were declared a body corporate and politic under the "name and style of “The town of Cicero,” the boundaries whereof were the same as said town of Cicero under township organization, and that on the 25th day of March, 1869, a further act was passed to revise the charter of the said town of Cicero and giving additional corporate powers to said incorporated town; that on December 1, 1898, in pursuance of an act of the legislature entitled “An act to provide for the division of incorporated towns,” approved June 13,1891, a petition was presented to the county judge of Cook county to disconnect certain territory from the said town of Cicero and to organize the same as the town of Berwyn, and that in further pursuance of the same last mentioned act another petition was afterward presented to the said county judge for the disconnection of certain other described territory of the said town of Cicero and to organize the same as the town of Grant, and also still later another petition for the disconnection of still other territory of the town of Cicero and for the organization of the same as the town of Oak Park was presented to the said county judge; that the questions of the disconnection of the territory mentioned in said petitions, respectively, in pursuance of said act of June 13, 1891, were submitted to the legal voters of the town of Cicero at an election held on the 20th day of December, 1898, and that a majority of the votes cast at said election in said incorporated town of Cicero, as well as the majority of the votes cast in the territory sought to be disconnected by each of said petitions, were in favor of such disconnections, and of each of them, and that said towns' of Berwyn, Grant and Oak Park thereby became legally organized towns under the township organization laws of the State,- in pursuance of the provision of said act of 1891; that, as required by said act, the county judge of the said county called an election to be held for the election of one supervisor, one assessor, one town clerk, three highway commissioners, two justices of the peace and two constables in each of the said towns of Berwyn, Grant and Oak Park, at which election one Jacob R. Drent was duly elected to the office of town collector in and for the said town of Berwyn, and that said Drent accepted the said office and qualified as collector of the said town and is acting in that capacity; that said Drent, at the time of the disconnection of that part of the town of Cicero which was so organized as the town of Berwyn, was the duly elected, lawfully qualified and acting town clerk of the said town of Cicero; that he then resided, and has since resided and does now reside, in the said town of Berwyn, and by the disconnection of the said territory composing the town of Berwyn and the organization of that town the said Drent ceased to be a resident of the town of Cicero, and that an order was entered by the trustees of the said town of Cicero, and also by the town authorities of the said town, declaring the office of town clerk of the town of Cicero vacant, for the reason the said Drent, the incumbent of said office, had ceased to be a resident of the said town, and appointing the appellee town clerk of said town of Cicero to fill said vacancy; that appellee accepted the said appointment, and qualified as required by law, and thereby became and was and is the legal incumbent of the said position.

It may be conceded that the acts and proceedings set forth in the plea as having been had and taken for the purpose of disconnecting territory from the incorporated town of Cicero and erecting such territory into corporations known as towns under the township organization system were in full compliance with the provisions of said act of 1891, but our investigation of the subject has resulted in the conclusion that act is not in harmony with the provisions of the constitution of 1870. As the first step in the process of determining the validity of the act we may ascertain the character of the incorporated town of Cicero. Prior to the year 1867 it was a town under the Township Organization act. In that year an act was adopted by the General Assembly creating the incorporated town of Cicero, and in 1869 that act was revised and provisions added conferring additional powers upon the corporation. It is therefore unnecessary to refer to the first of these laws. The act of 1869 will be found on page 166 of volume 3 of the private laws enacted by the legislature at the session of that year. Its provisions substantially are, that the inhabitants and residents of the town of Cicero are constituted a body politic and corporate, by the name and style of “The town of Cicero;” that the boundaries of the town shall include the territory known as the town of Cicero, in the county of Cook; that the officers of the town shall consist of the same officers provided by law to be elected in a town under township organization, (except highway commissioners,) and also, in addition thereto, four trustees and a police magistrate.

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Bluebook (online)
178 Ill. 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-deneen-v-martin-ill-1899.