People ex rel. Evans v. Callaghan

83 Ill. 128
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 83 Ill. 128 (People ex rel. Evans v. Callaghan) 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. Evans v. Callaghan, 83 Ill. 128 (Ill. 1876).

Opinion

Hr. Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Under our statute, it has been uniformly held the granting of leave to file informations in the nature of quo warranto, is in the sound discretion of the court to which the application is made. As was said in The People v. Waite, 70 Ill. 25, leave is not given as a matter of course, but a court ought not arbitrarily to refuse leave, but should exercise a sound discretion according to law.

Assuming that defendant had accepted the office of town collector, and entered upon the discharge of its duties, an important question arises, whether the petition shows, in the language of the statute, there is “ probable ground ” for allowing the information to be filed, and for awarding the writ.

Unless it shall appear there was “probable ground for the proceeding,” the court below ruled correctly in denying leave to file the information.' Although the merits of this controversy can not be determined on this preliminary motion, some discussion of this question can not be avoided.

The allegation is distinct and positive,"the annual election for town officers in the town of South Chicago was held on the day fixed by law for holding such election. According to the canvass made of the votes cast at that election, the relator received a plurality of votes over all other candidates for the office of collector.

On the authority of The People ex rel. Cummings v. Head, 25 Ill. 327, the decision of the canvassers afforded prima facie evidence the relator had been legally elected, and unless his title to the office was contested in some mode known to the law, he would be entitled to hold such office for the period for which he was elected.

It is not contested the election was holden, and that legal voters voted at the election for candidates of their choice for the several town offices. Affidavits filed in opposition to this motion do not disprove this proposition; they tend to prove there may have been gross frauds on the part of the election officers, and that some legal votes may have been abstracted from the ballot-boxes, and fraudulent ones deposited. All this may be conceded, and yet it does not disprove that the relator was elected by the legal votes cast at the election. This question has not been determined, so far as we can know, from this record, by any tribunal competent to hear and determine contested elections, and hence we can not know how the truth is. But the decision does not turn upon the question whether relator was regularly elected. His title to the office is only incidentally involved in this litigation. It is defendant that is called upon to show by what warrant he claims to hold and execute the duties of the office with which he is charged as having usurped. The information discloses he derives his authority from the town board of appointment, and if it shall appear the action of the board was had in a case where the law conferred no authority, then the appointment was void, and the facts alleged show a “ probable ground for the proceeding,” and the writ ought to have been awarded.

This leads us to inquire, what authority the town officers, when acting as a board of appointment, have in the matter of filling vacancies in town offices. That authority is found in the 1st section of article 10 of the Township Organization Act, R. S. 1874, p. 1079, which provides that, “ whenever any town shall fail to elect the proper number of town officers to which such town may be entitled by law, or where any person elected to any town office shall fail to qualify, or whenever any vacancy shall happen in any town, from death, resignation,' removal from the town, or other cause, it shall be lawful for the justices of the peace of the town, together with the supervisor and town clerk, to fill the vacancy by appointment.”

Obviously, the contingency on which the board of appointment could act had not happened. At an election held at the appointed time, a full complement of town officers were elected, and among them a town collector, who accepted the office by taking the usual oath of office, and whether the election was fairly conducted or not, has not been contested before any tribunal competent to hear and decide such causes. What, authority has the board of appointment to hear evidence whether the election was fairly conducted, and if they should find it had been fraudulently conducted, to declare there had been a failure to “elect the proper number of town officers?” Certainly no authority can be found in the law for such action. Ho such authority is given them. The affidavits filed show there were more than one candidate for each office to be filled, and whoever received the majority of the legal votes cast could contest his right to the office, in case the canvassers did not award him a certificate of election, before the tribunal designated in the law.

All the members of the court concur in holding the board of appointment had no power to hear evidence, and declare the election had been fraudulent, and for that reason there had been a failure to elect town officers. In such a determination, questions of law and fact are involved, that can only be settled by a tribunal having and exercising judicial powers.

Another construction might, with great justness, be given to this statute, that the board of appointment can only act where there has been a failure “ to elect the proper number of town officers' to which the town is entitled by law.” If there was a failure to elect any officers at the regular election for town officers, it seems the statute contemplates the old officers shall hold over until an election can be ordered and their successors elected. Here, the proper number of town officers were elected, either legally or illegally, and accepted the several offices to which they had been elected. It has not been determined by any competent authority they were not legally elected. It can not, therefore, with any degree of accuracy, be said there was a failure “ to elect the proper number of town officers,” and hence the contingency had not arisen in which the board of appointment could exercise the appointing power.

The affidavits filed in opposition to the motion do not disprove that defendant obtained whatever title he may have to the office of collector, from the board of appointment, in the manner and under the circumstances set forth in the petition, and we are all of opinion the petition shows “ probable ground for the proceeding,” and to warrant the court in granting leave to file the information, if defendant was in possession of the office.

But the motion is resisted solely on the ground the petition does not show the essential fact of possession and user of the office by defendant, which he is charged with having usurped. This point has been elaborately argued, but, in view of the statutory provisions in relation to the tenure of town officers, it is one that can be readily determined by construction, without any extended review of authorities bearing on the question. The objection does not go to the merits of the controversy, and no subtle reasoning ought to be indulged to defeat the demand of the people to know by what warrant defendant sets up any claim to the office as alleged.

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Bluebook (online)
83 Ill. 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-evans-v-callaghan-ill-1876.