People ex rel. Gregory v. Strohm

121 N.E. 223, 285 Ill. 580
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1918
DocketNo. 12233
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 121 N.E. 223 (People ex rel. Gregory v. Strohm) 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. Gregory v. Strohm, 121 N.E. 223, 285 Ill. 580 (Ill. 1918).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

The State’s attorney of Moultrie county filed an inf or- • mation in the nature of quo warranto, on the relation of James A. Gregory and forty others, against the respondents, J. S. Strohm, T. E. Pargeon and S. A. Booker, in the circuit court of Moultrie county, charging that the respondents were usurping the offices of president, secretary and members of a pretended board of local improvements of the village of Lovington, and, as grounds for charging such usurpation, alleging that a certain ordinance purporting to create said board was not legally passed by the board of trustees of the village and that the ordinance did not make the superintendent of streets a member of the board.

The respondents filed a plea in which they set out that J. S. Strohm was and is president of the board of trustees of the village of Lovington and that T. E. Pargeon and S. A. Booker are trustees of said village; that said village at the time in question had a population of less than 50,000 and had not adopted the commission form of government; that on June ix, 1917, there was no ordinance creating and providing for the office of public engineer of said village; that ordinance No. 114, duly passed by a yea and nay vote of the board of trustees of said village in regular session, designated Pargeon and Booker, trustees of the village, and Strohm, president of the board of trustees, to be and constitute the board of local improvements of the village; that said ordinance was approved as required by law, and that thereafter the respondents constituted the board of local improvements of said village.

To this plea a replication was filed, alleging that by another ordinance, No. 10, in full force and effect when said ordinance No. 114 was passed and approved, the office of superintendent of streets of the- village of Lovington was created, and that said village had at that time a duly appointed and qualified officer known as superintendent of streets who was not among those designated by ordinance No. 114 to be and constitute the board of local improvements of said village; that ordinance No. 114 was not legally passed by the board of trustees of said village; that no sufficient record or minutes of the meeting of the village board at which ordinance No. 114 was claimed to be passed were made and kept, as required by law, and that said ordinance is void. All ordinances and purported records are fully set out in the pleadings.

To the replication the respondents filed a general and special demurrer, setting forth special matters as follows : That admitting that at the time of the designation of the board of local improvements there was an officer known as superintendent of streets who was not designated as a member of the said board, this fact would in no way bring into question the right of Pargeon and Booker, trustees, to be designated, if, in fact, there was no office of public engineer of said village provided by ordinance; that the minutes of the meeting of the board of trustees submitted in said replication are sufficient to show the legal passage of ordinance No. 1x4; that this is not a proper proceeding to determine the right of the superintendent of streets of said village to sit at' the deliberations of the board of local improvements. The relators moved that the demurrer to the replication be carried back to the plea. The trial court sustained the demurrer to the replication and overruled the motion to carry the demurrer back to the plea. The relators elected to abide by their replication, and the court entered judgment for the respondents on their plea, quashed the writ and held the information for naught and entered judgment for costs against the relators. Exceptions were preserved and an appeal perfected to this court.

It is urged by appellants that the plea is defective in that respondents do not set-up their election and qualification, respectively, to the offices of president and trustees of the village of Lovington, by virtue of which offices they may be designated as the board of local improvements, and for that reason the demurrer should have been by the trial court sustained as. to the plea. The issues made do not call upon respondents to show why they hold these offices, respectively, nor does the information charge them with unlawfully holding or usurping said offices. Appellants in their pleadings treat such president and trustees as being duly elected and qualified to said offices. In quo warranto the issues are made up on the pleas and replication thereto. In these pleadings no question of the election or qualification of the president and members of the village board of trustees is raised. The issue raised by the pleadings is whether respondents were legally designated as the board of local improvements of the village. The question as to the election or qualification of the president and trustees is therefore not before this court. The president of the board of trustees of the village is by statute made ex-officio president of the board of local improvements. As no question concerning the election or qualification of the president of the board of trustees, as such president, is raised by the pleadings, it follows, as a matter of law, that he is the legal president of the board of local improvements and that as to him this action must fail.

It is contended by appellants that the trustees, Pargeon and Booker, are not legally members of the board of local improvements for two reasons: First, that the ordinance designating said trustees as members of the board, known as ordinance No. 114, was not legally passed; and second, that said village had by ordinance created the office of superintendent of streets, and that such office existed and was filled in the manner provided by law at the. time of the passage of ordinance No. 114; that neither of the trustees there designated as members of the board of local improvements was the street superintendent, and that the said ordinance was therefore void.

In support of appellants’ first contention it is urged that the minutes of the village clerk do not show that said ordinance was properly passed nor what the ordinance is. The record of the village clerk as set out in the second replication of appellants is as follows: “Village board met in adjourned session at the village hall with the following roll call,” (reciting the names of the president of the village board and six trustees as present.) “President Strohm appointed T. E. Pargeon and S. A. Booker as members of the board of local improvements, and an ordinance, No. 114, designing such a board was read by the clerk and on roll call the ordinance was passed.” Then follow the names of the six trustees, and opposite each name appears the word “yea.” The record then proceeds as follows: “Ordinance passed unanimously.” The title of ordinance No. 1x4 is set out in the plea of respondents and is as follows: “An ordinance designating members of the village board of trustees, who shall, with the president of said board of trustees, constitute the board of local improvements of Lovington, Illinois.” Section 1 of the ordinance designates the respondents Pargeon and Booker, together with the president of the village board, as members of the board of local improvements for said village. There is added to the ordinance the following: “Passed by the local board of trustees of the village of Lovington, Illinois, this nth day of June, A. D. 1917. Approved by the president of the board of trustees of the village of Lovington, Illinois, this 11th day of June, A. D. 1917."

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 N.E. 223, 285 Ill. 580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-gregory-v-strohm-ill-1918.