People Ex Rel. Goldsbery v. Zoller

169 N.E. 228, 337 Ill. 362
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1929
DocketNo. 19167. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 169 N.E. 228 (People Ex Rel. Goldsbery v. Zoller) 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. Goldsbery v. Zoller, 169 N.E. 228, 337 Ill. 362 (Ill. 1929).

Opinions

Upon the relation of certain highway commissioners and private land owners an information in the nature of quowarranto was filed against respondents, Frank L. Zoller, William H. Johnson and J. W. F. Crouch, as commissioners of a purported drainage district designated as "Iroquois and Vermilion Drainage District of Iroquois and Vermilion counties, Illinois." In the original information, and four additional counts which were later filed by leave of court, relators attacked, upon various jurisdictional grounds, the organization of the district. In their pleas respondents relied for justification upon the record of the county court of Iroquois county, which had found and recited *Page 364 that it had jurisdiction and had entered an order declaring the district duly organized. Replications were filed. From the resulting judgment of ouster after hearing by the trial court two of the respondents, Zoller and Johnson, have appealed.

At the hearing respondents introduced in evidence the records of the county court of Iroquois county and rested their case. They took the position there, as they do here as appellants, that the district appears of record to have been duly organized, that the record of the county court of Iroquois county is conclusive upon the question of the jurisdiction exercised by that court in organizing the district, and that it was improper to admit any evidence tending to contradict the jurisdictional recitals of such record. In view of the fact that the county court's finding that it had jurisdiction was in the very instance here in question based in one essential particular upon an affidavit which was later claimed by appellants themselves to have been in error, the danger and unsoundness of the doctrine thus contended for is evident as a matter of principle. However, counsel cite People v. North ForkDrainage District, 331 Ill. 69, People v. Wells, 291 id. 584,People v. Waite, 213 id. 421, and other cases which are claimed to support their contention. These cases lay down a number of settled principles, but they do not bear out the argument of appellants in the present case. In establishing drainage districts the county court derives its jurisdiction from the statute, alone. No presumption arises to support its action in any particular. (Aldridge v. Clear Creek DrainageDistrict, 253 Ill. 251; Drummer Creek Drainage District v.Roth, 244 id. 68; Payson v. People, 175 id. 267.) The General Assembly having authorized the creation of such districts upon certain conditions, those conditions must be complied with in the manner prescribed by statute, else the court is without jurisdiction. (Soldier Creek Drainage District v. IllinoisCentral Railroad Co. 323 Ill. 350; Wayne *Page 365 City Drainage District v. Boggs, 262 id. 338.) If these prescribed conditions are not, in fact, met, the court has no power to confer jurisdiction on itself by making a finding purporting to show that they were met. A recital of jurisdictional facts will not in itself render a judgment conclusive. (Forsyth v. Barnes, 228 Ill. 326; Thompson v.Whitman, 18 Wall. 457; People v. Graham, 280 Ill. 303;People v. Seelye, 146 id. 189.) Jurisdictional facts as to the organization of drainage districts can be inquired into by quowarranto proceedings. (People v. McDonald, 264 Ill. 514; People v. Wells, supra.) Consequently the trial court in the present proceeding committed no error in permitting evidence to be introduced challenging the jurisdictional findings of the county court of Iroquois county.

Appellees introduced evidence to the effect that there had not been a compliance with the provisions of the Levee act as to the giving of notice of the presentation and filing of the petition for organization of the district in the county court. It is provided by section 3 of this act (Cahill's Stat. 1929, chap. 42,) that after the petition prescribed by section 2 of the act is filed, "the clerk of said county court shall cause three (3) weeks' notice of the presentation and filing of such petition to be given, addressed 'to all persons interested,' by posting notice thereof at the door of the court house of the county or counties in which the district is situated, and in at least ten (10) of the most public places in such proposed district." The notice thus prescribed is the process by which the court acquires jurisdiction of the parties interested. It answers the place of a summons. (Danaher v. Phillips, 318 Ill. 204; Pratt v. Harris, 295 id. 504.) Unless at least ten notices were posted within the proposed district as thus prescribed the county court of Iroquois county had no jurisdiction to proceed in the matter.

The only proof submitted to the county court of Iroquois county as to the giving of notices was in the form *Page 366 of an "affidavit of posting notices," executed by C.G. Hirschi. This document is before us as an original exhibit. It embodies a copy of a printed notice, which is signed by the clerk of the county court of Iroquois county, and which sets forth the starting points, routes, termini and general description of the work. The affidavit is to the effect that on the 14th day of November, 1924, Hirschi posted copies of the printed notice on the front door of the court house of Iroquois county, and also "in ten of the most public places within the boundaries of the said proposed drainage district, as follows." Then follows a description of these various places. The document was originally typewritten, but as it now stands it bears many changes and interpolations made with pen and ink in the portions which describe these places. One description bears changes and interpolations made with ink of two different shades. In four instances these pen and ink changes and interpolations have the effect of placing the notice in a different location altogether from that described by the affidavit in its original typewritten form. In one of these four instances the original typewritten words were: "One on a fence-post on the west side of the north and south public highway and 25 feet north of the southwest corner of section 4 in town 23 north, range 11 west of the second principal meridian." As the instrument stands, with the changes and interpolations, it reads: "One on a fence-post on the west side of the north and south public highway and 25 feet north of the southeast corner of section 4 in town 23 north, range 11 west of the second principal meridian, and west of the west line of the public highway running north and south along east line last aforesaid." It appears from the record that in its original typewritten form the description given in this latter instance fixed a point without the boundaries of the proposed district, whereas as it stands after the changes and additions it describes a point within the district limits. *Page 367

This affidavit was sworn to on December 8, 1924. Below the jurat there appears in handwriting the following: "The foregoing affidavit as amended sworn to before me this 22d day of June, A.D. 1925. — Gilbert W.

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Bluebook (online)
169 N.E. 228, 337 Ill. 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-goldsbery-v-zoller-ill-1929.