People ex rel. Fitzgerald v. Boyd

23 N.E. 342, 132 Ill. 60
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 21, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 23 N.E. 342 (People ex rel. Fitzgerald v. Boyd) 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. Fitzgerald v. Boyd, 23 N.E. 342, 132 Ill. 60 (Ill. 1890).

Opinion

Per Curiam :

In the Appellate Court, the following statement of the case and opinion were filed by Lacey, P. J.:

“This was an information for quo warranto, filed by the State’s attorney of Kendall county, in the circuit court of that county, on the 27th day of July, 1887, against the appellees, to compel them to show cause by what right they claimed to hold the office of directors of 'school district No. 1, town 37 north, range 7, east of the third principal meridian, in said county. At the January term of said court, the appellees appeared and demurred to the information. The court below sustained the demurrer, holding the application to be insufficient, and rendered judgment in favor of appellees on demurrer, from which judgment appellant has sued out a writ of error from this court seeking a reversal of the said judgment.

“The information alleges, that prior to April, 1882, school district No. 1, aforesaid, was comprised of territory in the said township No. 37, and the north half of section 5 and the northwest quarter of section 4 in township No. 36, north, range 7, east of the third principal meridian, in said county, and for more than twenty years last past, prior to 1882, the directors of school district No. 1, aforesaid, received and appropriated to the use and benefit of said district No. 1 the school taxes levied upon and collected from the territory embraced in said town 36 belonging to said school district No. 1, as aforesaid, including taxes collected from the personal property of residents of said district No. 1, aforesaid, residing in said town 36, and the benefit and advantages so arising from the taxes so collected had been enjoyed by the citizens of said district for and during all that time; and the State’s attorney aforesaid further gives the court to understand and be informed, that for more than twenty-six years last past, prior to 1882, school district No. 3, township 37 north, range 7, aforesaid, was comprised of territory and lands described as follows, to-wit: Sections 28, 29, part of section 30, of the south-west quarter of section 27, all of sections 32 and 33 north of Fox river, in «aid town aforesaid. The State’s attorney further gave the •court to understand, that on the 3d day of April, 1882, an ■attempted consolidation of said school districts Nos. 1 and 3 was made, and resulted in the formation of a pretended district No. 1, town 37 north, range 7, east of the third principal meridian, comprising lands aforesaid in townships 36 and 37 .aforesaid; that on or about said 3d day of April, 1882, a petition praying for a consolidation of said districts was presented to the trustees of schools of said township 37; that on the 13th day of April, 1882, said petition was acted on and the •prayer thereof granted, and the said consolidation of the said -two districts attempted and pretended to have been made, and -from that time to the present its pretended school officers have received and appropriated to its school purposes the school taxes from the whole of said territory lying in said two townships aforesaid, illegally, and without any warrant or authority of law, and have assumed to perform the duties of school directors of said district No. 1 as so pretended to be formed, and have collected' and have received taxes, contracted indebtedness, and have imposed taxes on the whole of said pretended district without warrant of law.

“For points of illegality, the information shows, in substance, that—

“1st. The petition praying for consolidation was never presented, as required by statute, to the trustees of schools of township 36, aforesaid, and such trustees never acted on such petition or upon the attempted consolidation, but the alleged •consolidation was wholly made by the trustees of schools of township 37, aforesaid.
“2d. Said petition was not filed with the trustees of schools ■of said township 37 twenty days before the regular meeting in April, 1882.
“3d. No notice of said petition was filed or copy delivered do the president or clerk of the board of directors, or either of -them, of said districts 1 and 3, as required by law, and the school directors of district No. 1 had no notice of the presentation of said petition to said board of trustees, or of the time and place when and where said petition was to be acted upon by said board of trustees.
“4th. The clerk of the board of trustees of said township 37 did not make a complete copy of said action of the trustees, certified by the president of the board of trustees and clerk, and file the same, together with a map of the township showing the districts, and an actual list of the tax-payers of the newly arranged districts, with the county clerk, within twenty days of the action of the trustees.
“5th. That the said trustees failed to order an election within fifteen days, to elect a board of directors of said newly formed district, after the action forming the district, or give ten days’ notice of such election, as required by the statute.
“6th. The board of trustees failed to make any order of the action upon said petition, or file the same as required by statute, or make any legal record of their action on said petition.
“7th. -The regular meeting of the board of trustees was on the 3d day of April, 1882, and the petition was not acted upon by said board on the 13th, as required by statute.
“8th. The petition was insufficient in law, in that it did not .-aver that said change and consolidation was petitioned for by a majority of the legal voters of each of said districts affected by the proposed change, or by any legal voters; nor that the change and consolidation was petitioned for by two-thirds of the legal voters living within certain territory to be affected by said change and consolidation; nor by two-thirds of the legal voters living within certain territory containing not less than ten families, asking that said territory be made a new -district; nor that the territory to be affected by said change and consolidation contained not less than ten families; nor that the people of said district were not properly accommodated with school facilities and privileges, but would be by the proposed change; and the said petition did not contain any or a proper description of the territory to be affected by the proposed change and consolidation.

“The above are all the causes relied upon as showing the illegality of the new district.

“Lacey, P. J.: The appellees question the sufficiency of the information in the respect that it does not show upon its face, in proper legal form, any grounds of illegality in the proceedings and formation of the new district, No. 1. But we are inclined to think that at least some of the causes (though not all) set out are in legal form, and would be sufficient if the information had been filed in apt time. As the decision of the case hinges upon whether the Statute of Limitations is a bar to the prosecution of the information, or whether, if not strictly a bar to all quo warranto proceedings, the lapse of time in this class of cases is not a sufficient ground to deny the writ, we will not further occupy our time in consideration of the questions raised as to the sufficiency of the petition on its merits, in case of its having been filed in proper time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 N.E. 342, 132 Ill. 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-fitzgerald-v-boyd-ill-1890.