People ex rel. Illinois Midland Railway Co. v. Supervisor & Town Clerk

91 Ill. 422
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 91 Ill. 422 (People ex rel. Illinois Midland Railway Co. v. Supervisor & Town Clerk) 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. Illinois Midland Railway Co. v. Supervisor & Town Clerk, 91 Ill. 422 (Ill. 1878).

Opinion

Per Curiam :

On the 28th day of January, 1878, a peremptory writ of mandamus was issued from this court, in pursuance of its former award of such writ, (85 Ill. 313,) commanding the supervisor and town clerk of the township of Barnett, in the county of DeWitt, in the State of Illinois, forthwith to execute, in the name of said township, to the Illinois Midland Railway Company, or its order, bonds of said township to the amount of §30,000, payable within twenty years from the date thereof, with coupons attached, bearing ten per cent interest per annum, payable annually, in payment of a subscription for that amount to the capital stock of said railway company, theretofore Voted by the legal voters of said township, which writ was returned by the sheriff of DeWitt county as served on the said supervisor and town clerk, by the delivery to them of a copy of the writ, on February 12, 1878.

On January —, of the present term, on motion of the relator, service of the writ having been shown and non-obedience to its command, a rule was entered against the supervisor and town clerk, to show cause why an attachment for contempt should not issue against them for not obeying the command of the writ. In answer to this rule they appeared, on the 7th day of January, and filed their return to the peremptory writ of mandamus, and excuse for not obeying the same, in substance as follows:

That the service of the writ upon them was not good, it being by delivery of a copy, and not the original; that' they had learned, since the first hearing in this- court on the return to the alternative writ first issued,, that the bonds did not belong to the railway company, but to two of its directors, Dills and Dunham, to whom they had been requested to deliver the bonds; that the delivery of the bonds to Dills and Dunham would not be a compliance with the writ, or defence for not delivering them to the company; that they should not deliver the bonds to the company, because it has no right or property in them,—that it is insolvent and in the hands of a receiver; that if delivered to the company, then Dills and Dunham will not get them, and will not get the benefit of their contract with the company for the bonds; that Dills and Dunham, as such directors, and'one Hervey, a director in the Peoria, Atlanta and Decatur Railroad Company, (one of the three companies which, by consolidation or-purchase, became the Illinois Midland Railway Company,) had wrongful and fraudulent dealings with each other, through which, in violation of the rights of the town of Barnett and other stockholders in said railroad company, Dills and Dunham obtained a fraudulent contract for the construction of six miles of the railroad, through the town of Barnett, for a large sum of money, greatly above the cost of the work, a part whereof, $30,000, was to be paid to them in the bonds of the town of Barnett; that large profits were realized from the execution .of the contract, which Dills and Dunham should account for as belonging to the railroad company, and that the bonds should -not be-delivered to them until they have so accounted and paid over such profits;’ that through their fraudulent dealings and management illegal purchases were made by the Peoria, Atlanta and Decatur Railroad Company of the Decatur and Paris railroad and the Paris and Terre Haute railroad, and that through such management the property of the company was rendered of no value; that the interest on the bonds should’ not be more than six per cent per annum, and that it should be left with the respondents, to fix the time for. which the bonds should run, and that they should not be compelled to deliver the bonds until the relator tenders to the town of Barnett its certificate of stock; and that' the suit of mandamus was prosecuted by Dills and Dunham for their benefit in the name of the relator, without its consent or procurement.

" This return was adjudged not to be a sufficient answer to the,rule, and an attachment was ordered' to issue against Nathan M. Barnett, the supervisor, which was issued accordingly on the 13th day of January.

On the 22d day of .January, the respondent being brought before the court upon the attachment, as the only answer thereto and justification of his conduct, filed his sworn statement, in writing, to the effect that he had not obeyed the peremptory writ of mandamus because a purported copy only was served on him without delivery of the original, and that his counsel informed him that such a service did not compel him to comply with the writ, stating, as before, that Dills and Dunham claimed the bonds, and had notified respondent to deliver the same to them, and that, he was informed and believed their claim to the bonds was illegal, if not fraudulent, upon which he moved his discharge from the attachment.

The motion was overruled, and it was-declared that no sufficient excuse had been shown for the disobedience to the writ of mandamus, and further time was given, until the 4th day of February, of the present term, to afford opportunity to comply with the command of .the writ of mandamus. , In the meantime, blank bonds, of the amount and description named in the writ, were prepared by the attorneys for the relator, and presented to the respondent for execution, which he declined to execute.

: On the 4th day of February the respondent appeared, and; by his attorneys, filed his petition and declaration for a writ of audita querela. This is a well known writ of the ancient common law; but the modern practice of granting summary relief, upon motion, in cases for which the only remedy was formerly by audita querela, has occasioned this remedy now to be rarely resorted to in England. We are not aware of any occasion of its having been resorted to in our practice; but without stopping to inquire whether or not there may be any case where, with us, this form of remedy might be adopted, we shall, for the present purpose, consider the subject matter of the application upon its merits, as cause for purging the alleged contempt, regardless of form as to the mode of presentation.

The petition and declaration filed upon this application contain, essentially, no more than a repetition of the matters set forth in the return made to the peremptory writ of mandamus, which we have already adjudged an insufficient excuse, but it may be proper to state the reasons therefor more at large than has heretofore been done.

Whether the service of the writ of mandamus was strictly correct or not, the defect has been waived by appearing and making return to the writ. Regina v. B. and O. R. R. Co. 16 Eng. L. and Eq. Rep. 94. There have been filed herein the written order of the relator, under its corporate seal, for the delivery of the bonds to Dills and Dunham, as also its receipt for the bonds, to be delivered upon the giving of the bonds to Dills and Dunham. The command of the writ is to deliver the bonds to relator, the Illinois Midland Railway Company, or its order. There is, then, no reason for embarrassment as to which of the parties the bonds should be delivered. A delivery to either would suffice, and may be done with safety to the town.

It appears that the bonds had been contracted to be paid by the company to Dills and Dunham, in part payment for their work in building and completing the construction of the railroad through the town of Barnett, and in' such case Dills and Dunham would have implied authority to use the name of the railroad company in the prosecution of a suit against the town to compel the issuing of the bonds.

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Bluebook (online)
91 Ill. 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-illinois-midland-railway-co-v-supervisor-town-clerk-ill-1878.