People Ex Rel. Village of Westchester v. O'Connor

38 N.E.2d 157, 378 Ill. 249
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1941
DocketNo. 26486. Writ denied.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 38 N.E.2d 157 (People Ex Rel. Village of Westchester v. O'Connor) 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. Village of Westchester v. O'Connor, 38 N.E.2d 157, 378 Ill. 249 (Ill. 1941).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Smith

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an original petition for mandamus. Petitioners seek the writ to compel respondents, as judges of the First Division of the Appellate Court for the First District, to vacate a judgment of that court, entered in the case of Chicago Title and Trust Company, a corporation, as trustee, et al. v. Village of Westchester et al. 310 Ill. App. 498. Petitioners also ask that respondents be directed to vacate an order entered by said court refusing to transfer said cause to this court, and all other orders entered in said cause.

Upon leave granted by this court, the petition was filed and a summons ordered to issue. Respondents have answered the petition. The answer was treated as a demurrer to the petition and the case submitted upon the petition and answer. There was filed with the petition in this court an authenticated transcript of the record of the Appellate Court in the case above referred to, on which case the present proceeding is based. The decision of this court must be based upon the facts alleged in the petition, together with the record and opinion of the Appellate Court.

The ground on which the writ is asked is the allegation that there were involved in that case constitutional questions and it is urged that for that reason the Appellate Court had no jurisdiction to review the judgment of the circuit court of Cook county in said cause.

In order to determine the nature of the questions involved on the appeal in said cause, it becomes necessary to examine the opinion of that court. That case was a petition for mandamus, filed in the circuit court of Cook county, by Chicago Title and Trust Company, Trustee, against the village of Westchester and certain officers of that village. The petition alleged that the petitioners in that suit were the owners and holders of all outstanding bonds issued against, and payable from, a certain special assessment made by the village of Westchester; that petitioners had presented to the village and its proper officers a petition in accordance with section 86a of the Local Improvement act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1939, chap. 24, par. 792a) ; that said village, and its officers, had wrongully refused to act favorably on said petition by instituting the proceedings provided for by said section of the Local Improvement act in the court in which the original special assessment proceedings were had. To that petition for mandamus respondents therein appeared and filed a motion to dismiss. Among other grounds alleged in the motion to dismiss, it was averred that section 86a of the Local Improvement act was unconstitutional. The circuit court sustained the motion and dismissed the petition. An appeal was taken by the petitioners in that case to the Appellate Court for the First District. The cause was assigned to the First Division of that court, over which respondents here preside.

Petitioners here, who were the appellees in the Appellate Court in said cause, filed a motion to transfer the cause to this court upon the grounds that their motion to dismiss in the court below raised the question of the constitutionality of section 86a of the Local Improvement act. It does not appear either from the record or the opinion in that case, what were the specific grounds upon which it was claimed this section of the statute was unconstitutional in the circuit court. Petitioners, in their suggestions in support of their motion filed in the Appellate Court, to transfer the cause, alleged that said section of the Local Improvement act was unconstitutional because “it in effect subordinates the lien of general taxes to the lien of extended special assessments,” and because it “requires the municipality to file a petition in court in which it must state as a fact matters of which it has no knowledge or which it definitely knows not to be true.” The Appellate Court denied the motion to transfer the cause, in the opinion the Appellate Court stated that the constitutional objection urged was highly technical and without merit.

The jurisdiction of the Appellate Court to review the judgment of the circuit court in that cause depends upon the question of whether or not there was fairly involved, on the appeal, a debatable constitutional question. If no such question was involved the Appellate Court had jurisdiction of the appeal and its refusal to transfer the case to this court should be sustained.

The petitioners here, being the appellees in that case in the Appellate Court, had the right to raise any question concerning the constitutionality of the statute involved-, in the Appellate Court. By appealing the case to the Appellate Court, the appellants in that case could not deprive the appellees of that right. Neither would such an appeal by the appellants operate as a waiver against the appellees of the right to raise such questions in that court. However, in order to oust the Appellate Court of jurisdiction of a cause on the ground that a constitutional question is involved, it must appear that such question is one which is fairly debatable and that it is not a question which has already been settled by the decisions of this court.

As to the first grounds urged by petitioners, that said section subordinates the lien of general taxes to the lien of the extended special assessment, this question has been previously settled by this court in the case of Village of Bellwood v. Hunter & Co., Inc. 375 Ill. 627.

In support of the second ground urged by petitioners that said section 86a of the Local Improvement act is invalid, it is said that the section requires a municipality to file a petition in court in which it must state as a fact matters of which it has no knowledge or which it definitely knows not to be true. It is argued that this requires the municipality and its officers to state in the petition that the holders of the special assessment bonds issued in anticipation of the collection of the assessment to be refunded, will surrender their bonds in exchange for refunding bonds to be issued under the provisions of section 86a. It is contended in this connection that this section requires the municipality to state in its petition that the holders of such securities will surrender their securities when neither the municipality nor its officers can have any information as to whether they will do so.

Petitioners’ contention in this behalf is based upon a partial and unfair statement of the applicable provisions of section 86a. Immediately following the portion of said section 86a upon which petitioners rely and which they quote in their petition, the language of the act reads as follows, “or accept in payment thereof an amount not exceeding the par value thereof, with accrued interest thereon.” The statute itself provides that no refunding proceedings shall be approved by the court in which the petition is filed until all of the bonds outstanding have either been deposited in the court or with some depository, under an escrow agreement approved by the court. The section requires that at least 75 per cent of the holders of outstanding securities must join in the petition presented to the municipality in order to initiate the proceedings and to require the municipality to act.

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Related

Village of Westchester v. Holmes
62 N.E.2d 410 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1945)
People Ex Rel. Waite v. Bristow
62 N.E.2d 545 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1945)
Hardin v. Village of Westchester
50 N.E.2d 689 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
38 N.E.2d 157, 378 Ill. 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-village-of-westchester-v-oconnor-ill-1941.