People ex rel. Lutz v. France

145 N.E. 240, 314 Ill. 51
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1924
DocketNo. 14953
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 145 N.E. 240 (People ex rel. Lutz v. France) 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. Lutz v. France, 145 N.E. 240, 314 Ill. 51 (Ill. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court :

Floyd F. Putman, State’s attorney of Fulton county, presented to the circuit court of said county, on March 14, 1921, his petition on the relation of Orval Lutz, a citizen, resident and tax-payer in territory constituting Community High School District No. 226, in the counties of Fulton and McDonough, for leave to file an information against the persons acting as a board of education of that district, challenging the legal existence of such district and calling upon them to show by what warrant and authority they attempted to hold office as a board of education. The petition was verified by the affidavit of Lutz and gave a copy of the notice of an election to organize the district, but alleged that the county superintendent of schools did not post ten copies of said notice ten days prior to the election • and failed to comply with the statute in that regard. It alleged that the territory comprised within the pretended district did not consist of compact territory, but a part of it two miles in width and five miles in length extended west from the main body of the territory, forming an “L that some parts of the territory were nine miles from the village of Table Grove, where the school was located; that much of the territory was nearer to Adair, in McDonough county, than to Table Grove, and Adair was the community center of much of the territory; that there was located in Adair a community high school; that both men and women voted at the election, and separate ballot-boxes were not kept for men and women but the votes were commingled and counted together; that there were 243 votes cast for the community high school and 29 against it, and that the territory was of such form and so situated as not to satisfy the constitutional requirement for an efficient system of free schools.

When such a petition is presented to a court, if it shows prima facie cause for the filing of an information the court may act upon the petition or may enter a rule nisi upon the respondents to show cause why the information should not be filed, and in response to such rule the respondents may show by counter-affidavits any sufficient reasons for denying the petition. (People v. Waite, 70 Ill. 25; People v. Moore, 73 id. 132; People v. Golden Rule, 114 id. 34; People v. McFall, 124 id. 642.) The granting or withholding leave to file an information rests in the sound discretion of the court to which the application is made, even though there is a substantial defect in the title by which the office or franchise is held. (People v. Waite, supra; People v. Moore, supra; People v. Callaghan, 83 Ill. 128; People v. North Chicago Railway Co. 88 id. 537.) If the facts shown by respondents in answer to the rule are disputed, or if the answer presents new and doubtful questions of law, the court may make the rule for the information absolute, in order that questions at issue may receive a full and final determination. If, however, the facts are not disputed, and if the questions of law involved may receive as full and careful consideration upon the original application as if the rule to show cause were made absolute, such questions may be thus determined in the first instance without making the rule absolute. (People v. McFall, supra.) The petition must recite facts, — not mere conclusions of the pleader, — sufficient to satisfy the court or judge that there are competent grounds for the proceeding, and the petition must be full and positive and be drawn in such manner that perjury may be assigned thereon if any material allegation contained therein is false. People v. Union Elevated Railway Co. 263 Ill. 32; People v. Roberts, 279 id. 540; People v. Graham, 301 id. 446.

Apparently a rule nisi was entered in this case. At any rate, affidavits were filed in the case by appellees for the purpose of showing cause why the information should not be filed. The affidavit of P. H. Hellyer, county superintendent of schools, is to the effect that he posted ten notices of the election. The affidavit of C. L. Swedell, one of the respondents, states that the village of Table Grove is the center of the population of the community high school district; that all the lands and the territory are accessible to the village; that the part of the district in McDonough county two miles wide and running west five miles is accessible to the village, and the public highways of said part are among the best highways leading into the village; that no part is cut off or separated by a creek or river which during flood times would make it impossible for the inhabitants living beyond the creek or river to reach the village by public highway. There was a plat of the alleged high school district annexed to the petition, and appellees filed a map, in colors, of the territory in question and of three surrounding high school districts, the south one of which was Vermont Community High School District, the east one of which was Ipava Community High School District, and the northwest one of which was Adair Community High School District; that there is no non-high-school territory between the district in question and the other high school districts, except a strip of land a half mile north and south by two miles east and west, which lies about the center of the border line of the Vermont High School District and Table Grove district. There was also an affidavit of Hellyer that elections for the organization of the districts of Table Grove, Ipava and Vermont were all held the same day, and affidavits of Swedell and Rush Keating that 106 women and 167 men voted at the Table Grove election and that there were only 29 votes polled against it. The plat shows that the distance from the community center of the Table Grove district to the northeast corner thereof does not exceed .six and one-half or seven miles and that the distance to the extreme southwest part of the district does not exceed six and one-half miles, and that these two corners of the district are the farthest points from the center. The court refused leave to file the information and dismissed the petition at the costs of the relator.

It appears from the record that the court denied leave to file the information upon the ground that all defects in the proceeding to organize the district were cured by the validating act of May 10, 1921, (Laws of 1921, p. 797,) except as to appellant’s contention that the school center was not reasonably accessible to all the pupils of the district, and also held that the allegations of the petition were not sufficiently specific to show that the district violated appellant’s constitutional rights. He concedes that the court properly held that all defects were cured by the validating act except the constitutional question, under the holding of People v. Opie, 301 Ill. 11, but insists also that that decision is wrong and should not be followed. That decision has been repeatedly followed and re-affirmed by this court in a number of cases, including the cases of People v. Baird, 307 Ill. 503, and People v. Price, 310 id. 66. It is now the settled law of this State, and we again affirm the constitutionality of the validating act.

The court properly ruled that the petition did not contain allegations sufficient to show that any of the pupils in the high school district could not conveniently travel from their homes to and from the school center in time to have the benefit of the high school.

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Bluebook (online)
145 N.E. 240, 314 Ill. 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-lutz-v-france-ill-1924.