People ex rel. Rock Island County v. Lyons

168 Ill. App. 396, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1154
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 13, 1912
DocketGen. No. 5585
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 168 Ill. App. 396 (People ex rel. Rock Island County v. Lyons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Rock Island County v. Lyons, 168 Ill. App. 396, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1154 (Ill. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Willis

delivered the opinion of the court.

On September 13, 1902, the board of supervisors of Bock Island county fixed the annual salary of the county treasurer for the term beginning December 1, 1902. Later David H. Lyons was elected treasurer of said county. He presented to the county board an instrument dated January 16, 1903, purporting to be his official bond as such, which was approved January 27, of that. year. It contained, among other recitals, the following: “signed with our hands and sealed with our seals,” and was signed by all the defendants except W. C. Bennett and Thomas E. Cassidy, executors of the will of J. S. Leas, a deceased signer. The signers of the instrument omitted to affix their seals. On December 3,1906, the date of the expiration of his term of office he withheld $3416.70. The board of supervisors demanded this sum and he refused to pay it, claiming it as compensation for services as supervisor of assessments. Later a bill in equity charging the foregoing facts in detail was filed in the name of the people for the use of Bock Island county against Lyons and all the living signers and the executors of Leas, a deceased signer, praying that the bond be reformed by affixing the seals of the signers and that an accounting might be had with Lyons and a money decree entered against all the signers for any amount found to be due, with interest thereon, and for general relief. A demurrer to the bill was overruled. Lyons answered the bill in full, admitting some of the charges, denying others and demanding strict proof thereof. The other defendants answered, professing ignorance of the charges, demanding proof thereof and adopting Lyons’ answer. There was a hearing and a decree. reforming the bond by affixing the seals of the signers thereof and a finding that it was the official bond of Lyons as county treasurer and that its conditions had been broken and the defendants were ordered to pay $3416.70 with interest thereon at 5% per annum from December 3, 1906, the date of the demand, and costs of suit, except the defendants, Bennett and Cassidy, who were directed to pay in due course of administration of Leas’ estate. The court retained jurisdiction of the cause for the purpose of enforcing the decree. All the defendants appealed.

Appellee offered in evidence a transcript of the proceedings of the board of supervisors of Bock Island county fixing the salary of the county treasurer, signed, “Henry B. Hubbard Clerk of the County Court.” To the left of the signature was the word, “Seal”. It is contended that this certificate should have been signed by the county clerk and should have had the seal of the county attached. No authority is cited in support of this contention. The law makes the county clerk keeper of the records of the board of supervisors. Hubbard explained that he had but one seal, that of clerk of the County Court, and he certified that he was clerk of the County Court and keeper of the records of the board of supervisors, and that the copy was true and correct. As the same person acts in the dual capacity of county clerk and clerk of the County Court, a certificate is not necessarily vitiated because he attaches to his' signature the words, “Clerk of the County Court,” when he should attach the words “County Clerk”. Parties are bound to take notice of the fact that the clerk of the County Court is county clerk. People v. Munroe, 227 Ill. 604; People v. Phinney, 231 Ill. 180. Since the presumption always is that public authorities do their duty, it will be presumed until the contrary is shown that. the public official who signed this certificate attached the proper seal. Lyman v. City of Chicago, 211 Ill. 209; City of Peoria v. Central National Bank, 224 Ill. 43; Waite v. Green River Drainage Dist., 226 Ill. 207. Besides the evideuce of the county clerk proved the correctness of the copy, and a record may he proved by an examined copy. People v. Joyce, 154 Ill. App. 13.

It is also contended that the proceedings, if properly certified, are insufficient because the record thereof does not show the legal organization of the board or that there was a quorum present and a majority voting for the resolution. In passing judicially upon the records of county boards where authority appears or is implied by law, such records will be construed according to their intent and it will be presumed that the proceedings were rightfully had, in the absence of all suggestion in the record to the contrary. State v. Crawford Co. Supervisors, 39 Wis. 596. It will be presumed that the members of such board as public officers have done their duty (Loesnitz v. Seelinger, 127 Ind. 422, 25 N. E. 1037), that their meetings were properly convened and at the time designated by law (Loesnitz v. Seelinger, supra; Bartlett v. Eau Claire county, 112 Wis. 237), and that a quorum of the board was present. Lacey v. Davis, 4 Mich. 140; State v. Crawford Co. Supervisors, supra. And where the record recited the adoption of a certain resolution without disclosing a majority, it will be presumed that such resolution received the necessary majority. Giddings v. Wells, 99 Mich. 221. In Bartlett v. Eau Claire Co., supra, it is said: “All reasonable liberality must be accorded the minor deliberate bodies of the state; notably county boards * * * where, by reason of the character and vocation of the men comprising such bodies, the technicalities of procedure are not strictly enforced, nor perhaps fully understood. We must not expect nor demand the records of such meetings should be made with the accuracy and technicality of. those of monetary corporations, conducted under the direction of skilled counsel; nor, indeed, of the legislature itself.” In Giddings v. Wells supra, the court, in speaking of a record of a board of supervisors, said: “When, therefore, the record does not disclose the majority, bnt does set forth the adoption of. the resolution, it will be presumed that it received the necessary vote under the law.”

The jurisdiction of a court of chancery to so correct mistakes in contracts and agreements as to make them express the actual intent of the parties is one of the ancient and well established heads of the jurisdiction of that court. Where, through mistake or oversight in the execution of an agreement, a seal necessary to its validity is omitted therefrom, but the instrument purports, on its face, to be a sealed instrument, it will, ordinarily, itself furnish the evidence showing the oversight or mistake, and a court of chancery will correct it. Henkleman v. Peterson, 154 Ill. 419. The bond, by its recitals, shows plainly that it was intended as and for the official bond of Lyons as county treasurer. That it was intended to be under seal is shown by the recital, “Sealed with our seals.” Lyons and his sureties,’by signing, acknowledging and delivering this instrument, furnished all the proof the law requires to justify the decree of reformation. Henkleman v. Peterson, supra.

In Keith v. Henkleman, 173 Ill. 137, damages were assessed on the bond reformed in Henkleman v. Peterson, supra, on the ground that equity having taken jurisdiction to reform the bond would retain it for the purpose of giving complete relief, by assessing the damages on the bond.

All the sureties except Allen, Ainsworth and Leas testified that they signed the instrument as and for the official bond of Lyons as county treasurer, and all who testified, except Oakleaf, said that they did not notice the absence of the seals. He said he signed the instrument as the bond of Lyons but that he noticed the absence of the seals.

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Bluebook (online)
168 Ill. App. 396, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-rock-island-county-v-lyons-illappct-1912.