People Ex Rel. Murray v. Holmes

173 N.E. 145, 341 Ill. 23
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1930
DocketNo. 20263. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 173 N.E. 145 (People Ex Rel. Murray v. Holmes) 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. Murray v. Holmes, 173 N.E. 145, 341 Ill. 23 (Ill. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

The circuit court of Clinton county denied the petition of the State’s attorney for leave to file an information in the nature of quo warranto against B. F. Holmes and four others charging them with usurpation of the offices of members of the board of education of Sandoval Community High School District, and the petitioners have appealed.

The facts upon which the information was based were shown by the petition for leave to file, and an affidavit in support of it, as follows: A petition for the organization of the district was filed with the county superintendent of schools of Marion county on April 16, 1921. It purported to be signed by sixty-five legal voters, forty-seven of them men and eighteen women. Upon the order of the county superintendent an election was held on May 14, 1921, on the question of organization, at which both women and men voted, only one ballot-box being used, the men’s and women’s ballots not being kept separate, so that it could not be determined whether the majority of the men’s ballots were for or against organization. The majority of the whole vote was for organization, and the superintendent called an election for members of the board of education for June 4, 1921, when a board of education was elected, and annually since a board of education has been elected, the respondents claiming to be the board duly elected at the last election. They have been performing the duties of a board of education. Since the organization of the district no school house site has been purchased or selected, no bonds have been sold, issued or authorized, no school house has been built or purchased and no obligation of the district has been at any time outstanding. The only things the board of education has done have been to levy and collect taxes, rent a room or rooms and conduct a high school .therein, and the conditions and situation of the district and the territory are not different from what they were at the time of the attempted organization of the district. The only objection urged by the appellants to the organization is the alleged insufficiency of the petition to authorize the calling of the election for the organization of the district because not signed by fifty men voters.

The attempt to organize the district was made under section 89a of the School law, which was passed by the General Assembly in 1919, becoming effective on July 1 of that year. (Laws of 1919, p. 908.) By its terms a petition signed by fifty or more legal voters residing in any contiguous and compact territory described in the petition was required to authorize the county superintendent of schools to call an election upon the question of the organization of the territory as a community high school district, and proceedings for the organization of such a district without the filing of the petition were void.

The petition being signed by forty-seven men and eighteen women, and the eligibility of none of the sign-. ers being questioned except the eighteen women, who were claimed to be ineligible only because they were not men, the question is presented whether women were legal voters on April 16, 1921, eligible to sign a petition to organize a community high school district. They, were not eligible at the time section 890 was passed, because they were not then legal voters upon the questions of the organization of community high school districts. People v. Kinsey, 294 Ill. 530; People v. Lowenstein, 297 id. 395.

At the December term, 1917, it had been held in the case of People v. Vaughan, 282 Ill. 163, that women were qualified voters upon the question of the organization of high school districts. Nearly three years later this case was overruled by People v. Kinsey, supra, but in 1919, when section 89a was passed, the judicial construction of the law of the State was that women were legal voters upon the question of the organization of high school districts. It is argued by the appellees the General Assembly must be presumed to have known in 1919 the construction of the law by the Supreme Court in 1917 and to have considered such construction in using the words “legal voters” in section 89a, and the fact that the construction was erroneous and later was overruled and reversed by the court is immaterial. What might be the effect of a change in the view of the Supreme Court on a constitutional question where the General Assembly has enacted legislation based on the earlier decision and persons acting in reliance upon the validity of the legislation have changed their position in such a manner as to materially affect their interests we need not now decide. The General Assembly may be presumed to have had knowledge of the decision that women were legal voters on the question of the organization of high school districts in People v. Vaughan, supra, when it enacted section 89», and to have enacted that section with reference to that knowledge. The petitioners who filed the petition on April 16, 1921, however, and the superintendent of schools who received it, must also be presumed to have known of the decision in People v. Kinsey, supra, that women were not legal voters in such elections and therefore not qualified to sign the petition. They must also be presumed to have known of the ratification by the States of the nineteenth amendment of the constitution of the United States and the proclamation of the Secretary of State of the United States on August 26, 1920, declaring that amendment adopted. That amendment provided that “the right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.” The effect of this statute was to erase instanter from the constitution and laws of the State of Illinois every provision restricting the right of women to vote, and from August 26, 1920, women have had the same right to vote in this State on all questions as men have. The amendment did not confer upon women the right to vote. The right of suffrage is derived from the State. ■ The amendment to the Federal constitution merely provided that no State should discriminate concerning the right to vote between citizens on account of sex. The word “male” was stricken from article 7 of the constitution and from every place where it occurs in the statutes in regard to the right of suffrage. This was stated in People v. Barnett, 319 Ill. 403, and had been previously decided in principle by the Supreme Court of the United States in Neal v. Delaware, 103 U. S. 370, and Ex parte Yarbrough, no id. 651, cases involving the effect of the fifteenth amendment of the Federal constitution, which provides that the right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of race, color or previous condition of servitude, being in the exact language of the nineteenth amendment except that instead of the word “sex” in the nineteenth amendment the fifteenth has the words, “race, color or previous condition of servitude.” The last case cited states: “While it is quite true, as was said by this court in United States v. Reese, 92 U. S. 218, that this article gives no affirmative right to the colored man to vote and is designed primarily to prevent discrimination against him whenever the right to vote may be granted to others, it is easy to see that under some circumstances it may operate as the immediate source of a right to vote.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People Ex Rel. Adamowski v. Wilson
170 N.E.2d 605 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1960)
The People v. Chi. Transit Authority
64 N.E.2d 4 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1945)
People Ex Rel. Denny v. Traeger
22 N.E.2d 679 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1939)
People v. Caines
1 V.I. 413 (Virgin Islands, 1938)
Richardson v. Electoral Boards
1 V.I. 301 (Virgin Islands, 1936)
State v. Norton
255 N.W. 787 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1934)
Prewitt v. Wilson
46 S.W.2d 90 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 N.E. 145, 341 Ill. 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-murray-v-holmes-ill-1930.