People Ex Rel. Lasecki v. Traeger

29 N.E.2d 519, 374 Ill. 355
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1940
DocketNo. 25613. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 29 N.E.2d 519 (People Ex Rel. Lasecki v. Traeger) 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. Lasecki v. Traeger, 29 N.E.2d 519, 374 Ill. 355 (Ill. 1940).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Murphy

delivered the opinion of the court:

The People of the State of Illinois on the relation of F. E. Lasecki, an elector and taxpayer of Cook county possessing the necessary legal qualifications for grand jury service, filed a petition in the circuit court of Cook county for writ of mandamus directed to John E. Traeger, Sr., William H. Cruden and John J. Hurley, as jury commissioners of that county, commanding them to follow the provisions of the Jury Commissioners act in the selection and drawing of grand jurors. The court sustained respondents’ motion to strike. A constitutional question being raised, petitioner brings the case direct to this court.

The Jury Commissioners act, (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1939, chap. 78, par. 24, et seq.) as amended in 1931, authorized the judges of the courts of record of Cook county to adopt rules of court to implement the statutory provisions in reference to the preparation, selection and drawing of grand jurors. Petitioner contends (1) that certain court rules which were promulgated for the guidance of the commissioners in selecting and drawing of grand jurors and which have been followed by them are outside the scope of statutory authorization and (2) that if the statute should be construed as delegating the power to make such rules then the statute is in contravention of article 3 of the constitution.

Section 11 of the act provides that the judges of the several courts of record of the county by majority vote are empowered to make such rules, not inconsistent with the act, as in their judgment may be necessary or proper for the purposes of prescribing the powers and duties of the jury commissioners, regulating in general the conduct of their office, and in carrying out the provisions of the act. Section 8, in prescribing some of the general duties of the commissioners states: “In such manner as may be prescribed by rules to be adopted by a majority of the said judges, the jury commissioners shall also” etc., then follows a general specification of duties relating to the preparation of active jury lists and period jury lists, a more detailed analysis of which is hereinafter made.

Section 2 directs the commissioners to prepare a list of all electors of each sex between the ages of 21 and 65 years possessing the necessary legal qualifications for jury duty. By section 7, such list is known as the general jury list. Rule No. 3, in supplementing section 2, directs that the general jury list shall be obtained from the records of registered voters as kept by the election commissioners and county clerk of Cook county. In the city of Chicago the list is to be arranged in numerical order beginning with the first precinct of the first ward. In the remainder of the county the lists furnished by the several cities, towns and villages are to be taken in alphabetical order. All such lists when prepared are to be bound together as one list.

Section 8 provides that the commissioners shall from time to time prepare a secondary list to be known as the active jury list. Such list shall consist of names taken from the general jury list and shall at no time contain less than five per cent of the aggregate number of the general jury list. The section makes provision for period jury lists and directs that the active jury list and the period jury lists, except as to the names certified back by the clerk of the court under section 10, shall be prepared in such manner as' to insure, as near as may be, a proportional representation therein of the whole body of electors in respect to occupation and the particular localities where they reside. It is the duty of the commissioners to make both lists available for the clerks of the several courts of record to draw therefrom by lot, the drawing to be by the devices and mechanisms prescribed by rules. The period jury list Is composed of the names of the prospective jurors who have indicated the particular time within a year which would be most convenient for them to serve. By rules, the year is divided into quarters and a juror’s name is placed on the period jury list according to the preference indicated. In supplementing section 8, rule No. 4 provides that the active jury list shall be taken from the general jury list and in its preparation the commissioners shall take the first name in each precinct and each succeeding tenth name and when all precincts are thus exhausted, the second name on the list shall be taken and shall continue with the next name following each name previously selected until the number required has been drawn which shall be not less than five per cent of the aggregate general jury list.

The rules direct that the commissioners shall give notice by mail to the persons whose names appear on the active jury list. Accompanying the notice is a questionnaire containing questions asking for information as to age, occupation, business or profession, whether married or single, whether living with the family or not, ownership of real estate, citizenship, former jury service, education, and whether the prospective juror has a preference as to the time of service. The rules also require examination of each prospective juror by a commissioner or commissioners touching his qualification and elegibility for jury service. If the prospective juror is found to be qualified the commissioner conducting the examination indicates on the questionnaire whether such person shall be accepted for grand jury service. After a person is accepted for grand jury service, his name is written on a card and the card is placed in a box designated by rule as the grand jury box. The rules provide that the grand jury box shall contain at all times not less than 1000 cards. Section 9 deals with the drawing of petit jurors and concludes with the directions that grand jurors shall be drawn and certified in the same manner as petit jurors. The rules prescribe that grand jurors as needed shall be drawn by chance from the grand jury box. There is no period grand jury box.

The cards bearing the names of the prospective jurors who have not been designated for grand jury service and who have not indicated a preference for time of service are placed in the active jury box. If preference for time of service has been made the cards are placed in the period jury list box for the quarter indicated by the juror. Petit jurors are all drawn from the period jury list boxes and the active jury list box.

Petitioner contends the statute does not authorize the adoption of a rule of court directing the commissioners to select from the active jury list certain electors for grand jury duty, and that there is no statutory provision empowering the courts to adopt a rule for the keeping of a grand jury box nor the drawing of names therefrom. It is urged that grand jurors should be drawn by lot from the active jury list box and the period jury list boxes the same as petit jurors.

The power conferred by section 11 upon the judges of the courts of record to prescribe by rule the powers and duties of commissioners is broad and comprehensive. It includes everything which the judges, in the exercise of their judgment, deem necessary or proper for carrying out the purposes of the act subject only that the rules so adopted must not be inconsistent with the provisions of the act and, of course, must not contravene constitutional requirements. In People v. Bain, 358 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.E.2d 519, 374 Ill. 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-lasecki-v-traeger-ill-1940.