People ex rel. Shake v. Lord

146 N.E. 506, 315 Ill. 603
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1925
DocketNo. 15846
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 146 N.E. 506 (People ex rel. Shake v. Lord) 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. Shake v. Lord, 146 N.E. 506, 315 Ill. 603 (Ill. 1925).

Opinion

Per Curiam :

This case was before this court at a former term under the title People v. Simpson, 308 Ill. 418. That case was an appeal from the judgment of the circuit court of Christian county quashing the quo warranto and dismissing the suit at the cost of relators. We reversed the judgment of the circuit court and remanded the cause to that court. A petition for rehearing was filed and allowed, in which it was alleged the original decision of this court was not in accordance with the facts or with the law, but these allegations were not sustained and the opinion and decision were adhered to.

It appears that in the proceeding then appealed from, a petition had been filed alleging that Community High School District No. 307 was improperly, illegally and unlawfully organized, in that it was not contiguous and compact and not in conformity with the law. Upon the basis of that petition the court permitted the information to be filed.

It is stated by appellees’ counsel and not denied by appellants’ counsel, that when the cause was originally tried oral evidence and stipulations as to facts were submitted and that the cause was not tried upon the pleadings but the issues were stipulated, and that the following stipulation was entered into and appears in the record of the original cause as to the pleadings, to-wit:

“It is stipulated and agreed between the parties hereto that a petition was filed for the purpose of organizing this district; that all steps were either taken in accordance with the law or validated thereafter by an act of.the legislature validating the high school district so as to organize this district as it now exists and the election of its officers, who are the defendants herein, except as to the issues which are hereafter submitted and which are as follows:

“First — As to the compactness and contiguousness of the district.
“Second — As to whether or not the district constitutes a community within the meaning of the law.
“Third — Whether the proceeding is one brought for the public or for the private interests of the relators.
“These questions are to be considered and determined by the court as though presented by proper pleas and independent of the present pleas at the present time, and all questions arising on the pleas are waived, it being considered that appropriate pleas and appropriate replications are filed without objections or exceptions to raise all the above and foregoing questions.
“Fourth — As to whether or not the public has or will suffer any inconvenience or public detriment by reason of the delay in filing the petition and suing out the writ in this case.”

As the above stipulation is not questioned we will assume it is true as quoted.

When the mandate of this court was filed'in the circuit court, appellees here, who were relators in the circuit court, presented a motion that judgment be entered by the circuit court ousting appellants here, defendants there, for the reason that the judgment of this court was a final decision of the merits involved in the litigation. Appellants entered a motion for leave to withdraw their plea of justification and' for leave to file a plea in abatement. That motion was denied. Appellants then moved for leave to file two special pleas, but the court denied the motion. They thereupon entered a motion to set the cause down for trial on' the issues made by the petition, plea of justification and replication to the plea, and for trial by jury, on the ground that they were entitled to a trial de novo, and alleged they were prepared to prove facts showing the district was compact and contiguous as defined by this court. The court denied that motion. The board of education of school district No. 163, which is one of the school districts embraced within Community High School District No. 307, asked leave to intervene, but the court denied, the leave. After denying all the motions referred to, the court, without hearing further evidence, entered a judgment of ouster against appellants and rendered judgment against them for costs. From that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

The real question presented for our decision is as to the effect of the decision of this court in People v. Simpson, supra, whether the circuit court was justified in rendering the judgment, or whether it should have permitted a new trial of the case, amendment of the pleadings and the introduction of additional testimony.

No question, as disclosed by the opinion of this court rendered in the Simpson case, was raised in the circuit court-as to the sufficiency of the information in form or substance. Under the above stipulation as to the pleadings no such question could be raised successfully. Parties, by their attorneys, may stipulate as to the pleadings or as to the issues for - trial, and where they do so all informalities are waived, and their right to demur to or to question the form of any pleading is waived by such stipulation. (Miller v. McManis, 57 Ill. 126.) Parties may also stipulate as to the facts and for trial before the court without a jury in jury cases. It is also the rule of law that a waiver of a jury for the purpose of a trial is exhausted by that trial, and when a case is remanded to the trial court both parties are restored to their orginal right of trial by a jury, and stipulations made on the former trial are not admissible upon the second hearing except by consent of the parties. (City of Alton v. Foster, 207 Ill. 150.) No such rule, however, prevails in a stipulation in regard to the pleadings. On remandment in such a case either party might be entitled to file further pleas to raise additional issues, if such appears to be necessary for the protection of the parties. There is no reason, however, for changing the stipulation already made as to the pleadings or issues already formed or agreed upon unless a real reason is shown to the effect that the pleadings agreed on are so defective that they do not properly present the issues intended or that some of the issues are immaterial in the case.

The opinion in People v. Simpson, supra, states that a plat of the district was introduced in evidence; that the proof shows the district was composed of ten common school districts, eight of . them in one township and one in each of two other townships; that no school house had been built or bonds issued but the school had been conducted in the school house in the village of Morrisonville; that there were two creeks in the district that overflowed several weeks in the year; that many of the students outside the village of Morrisonville were often compelled to board in the village to be able to attend the school continuously, and that on account of the distance or bad roads some of the pupils boarded in Morrisonville the entire school year. The court said it was manifest from the proof that the territory embraced in the district was not compact and contiguous within the meaning of those terms as defined by the court and that the school was not accessible to all of the pupils. A petition for a rehearing was allowed, as previously stated, but the decision was adhered to. The final order of the court, as disclosed in the opinion, was that “the judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause remanded.”

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Bluebook (online)
146 N.E. 506, 315 Ill. 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-shake-v-lord-ill-1925.