People ex rel. Duket v. Department of Agriculture

235 Ill. App. 552, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 146
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 31, 1924
DocketGen. No. 7,771
StatusPublished

This text of 235 Ill. App. 552 (People ex rel. Duket v. Department of Agriculture) 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. Duket v. Department of Agriculture, 235 Ill. App. 552, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 146 (Ill. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Crow

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case comes to this court on appeal by petitioner in the court below for mandamus against app ellee. Demurrer to the petition hy respondent was sustained and the petition dismissed.

By the petition it appears the relators are copartners, doing business as Duket-Novak Stock Farm. That they are desirous of obtaining the official permit of the Department of Agriculture of Illinois to purchase cattle which heretofore reacted to the tuberculin test, but wMch show no physical evidence of the disease, under and according to the provisions of the statutes of Illinois, to wit, under paragraph 61, section 15 of chapter 8 thereof, [Cahill’s 1923 St.] and which paragraph is set forth at large in the petition. That petitioners have repeatedly made application for such permit to respondent under and according to the provisions of said paragraph and offered in such applications to comply with all the terms of the statute in order to entitle them to such permit, but that they have been refused such permit absolutely and unconditionally by the respondent without its having the right to do so and in contravention of said statute. In the third paragraph of the petition they aver they made such application in writing and verbally, said application having been made to the Chief Veterinarian of the Department of Agriculture, and to other officers and agents of the department at different times stated in said paragraphs and that all of said requests were unconditionally refused by the Director of said department, who stated such permit would be issued only when compelled by writ of mandamus.

Following those averments of the petition are four pages stating the acreage of the farm possessed and operated by petitioners, its general nature and character as to sanitation, and the results of certain tuberculin tests to which cattle on the farm were subjected. It is also averred they have a remedy for the treatment of reacting cattle treated at the farm which, •with all cattle thereon, has been under strict quarantine since September 15, 1923. These averments are followed by a reference to exhibits A to J, made a part of the petition and purporting to show the results of treatment of cattle at the farm, and copies of certificates as to the nature and condition of the farm.

The paragraph preceding that praying for relief avers petitioners are desirous of carrying on upon the farm described in the petition “and elsewhere as they may choose properly in said State,” the business of purchasing and maintaining under strict legal quarantine such reacting cattle as have given no physical evidence of disease and there treating them for the petitioners’ own profit “and also incidentally” for the purpose of contributing to the eradication of tuberculosis among cattle of the State of Illinois. The scope of mandatory relief sought is that the Department of Agriculture be compelled to grant to petitioners a permit to purchase cattle described in the paragraph of the statute quoted in the petition under the conditions in that section prescribed, and which is hereafter more particularly noticed. This appeal presents the question whether the judgment of the circuit court sustaining the demurrer to the petition, thereby denying the writ of mandamus, was error. More narrowly stated, the point for judgment is, are relators entitled to the relief they demand?

The most elementary doctrine relating to mandamus as remedial process is that the writ will not issue unless the petitioner shows a clear legal right to the writ and unless the party applying for it shows a clear obligation on the part of the party against whom it is sought to do the thing petitioner seeks to have performed. It will not issue in a doubtful case, but only where the right of the relator is clear and undeniable and the party sought to be coerced is bound to act. People v. Blair, 292 Ill. 139 (144). The writ lies to enforce some duty of an imperative character imposed by law and involving no discretion in its exercise. People v. La Buy, 305 Ill. 11 (15). The right to mandamus must be clear and it will not be sustained in a doubtful case or where the allegations in the petition fail to show a legal right to the writ. Quernheim v. Asselmeier, 296 Ill. 494 (499).

Viewing the petition in the light of the principles governing the allowance of the writ, it is necessary to examine the statute which appellants contend gives them the right and imposes on respondent the obligation necessary to support the relief. The section invoked, and as matter of pleading improperly copied into the petition, is one of fifteen sections added by an amendment to the Act of 1909 entitled: “An act to revise the law in relation to the suppression and prevention of the spread of contagious and infectious diseases among domestic animals.” It is (section 15): “It shall be unlawful to sell, offer for sale, or to purchase any bulls, cows or heifers known to have reacted to the tuberculin test, except under regulations prescribed by the State Board of Live Stock Commissioners, to wit: Bulls, cows and heifers which have reacted to the tuberculin test, provided they show no physical evidence of disease, may be sold and delivered within the State, provided the purchaser shall first secure a permit from the State Board of Live Stock Commissioners, wherein it is agreed that such reacting cattle shall be kept separate and apart from all non-reacting cattle, and shall be maintained under strict quarantine until released therefrom for sale or slaughter under State or Federal inspection by permit issued by the State Board of Live Stock Commissioners.” [Cahill’s 1923 St.' ch. 8, ][ 61.]

The act of which this section is amendatory consisted of twelve sections. It created the Board of Live Stock Commissioners and State Veterinarian; authorized the quarantine of domestic' animals afflicted with communicable diseases and provided for the care and disposition of such animals during quarantine and for their slaughtering under restrictions imperative in their terms; provided for the inspection of such animals in infected districts or territory in the State, for notice thereof by proclamation and forbidding the removal of infected animals without having first obtained a special permit therefor; forbade the importation of such animals except under such restrictions and regulations as the board might make; authorized the removal of such animals or of exposed animals of infected districts upon such terms as should be prescribed; provided for penalties for concealment of diseases; provided for compensation for slaughtered animals. The fifteen amendatory sections are in furtherance of the purpose of the original act as disclosed by its title, the things directed and prohibited, and the plenary powers vested in the Board of Live Stock Commissioners and the State Veterinarians in the detection and suppression of disease. They all supply protective measures, without which the original act would or might lie impotent. All the amendatory sections, except 16 and 17, relate to transportation of cattle and importation thereof and regulations necessary to furnish notice of such diseases in cattle in the stockyards districts-of Chicago, East St. Louis and Peoria and to guard against the danger of the spread of contagion. Those stockyards centers are auxiliary to transportation of and commerce in live stock. By section 16 [Cahill’s 1923 St, ch. 8, [¶] 62] the State Board of Live Stock Commissioners is charged with the enforcement of the provisions of the Act. By section 17 [Cahill’s 1923 St. ch.

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Related

People ex rel. Albright v. Blair
126 N.E. 605 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1920)
Quernheim v. Asselmeier
129 N.E. 828 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1921)
People ex rel. Kennon v. LaBuy
305 Ill. 11 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
235 Ill. App. 552, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-duket-v-department-of-agriculture-illappct-1924.