Peterson v. Lawrence

20 Ill. App. 631, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 196
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 8, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 20 Ill. App. 631 (Peterson v. Lawrence) 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
Peterson v. Lawrence, 20 Ill. App. 631, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 196 (Ill. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

Green, J.

On Dec. 29, 1879, W. H. Wilson, justice of the peace, before whom the “elm slough cut-off drainage district” was organized, appointed appellee drainage commissioner thereof under the drainage act then in force. Appellee accepted the appointment, qualified, entered upon the duties of and held said office from that date. The tax levied to construct the works of said district was originally $5,000, afterward reduced by said justice to $4,200. On Aug. 25, 1885, appellant, a justice of the peace and the successor in office of said Wilson, upon the petition of a land owner in said district, issued a citation commanding appellee to appear before him on Sep. 2, 1885, and render an account of the money collected by him as commissioner, the manner in which the same was expended, also an itemized account, under oath, of the amount due him for services and expenses from the date of his appointment. On September 2d appellee appeared as commanded; the proceeding was continued until September 11th, when appellee again appeared, filed his report as such commissioner, showing the amount collected and how the same had been expended; also an itemized account, under oath, of such receipts and expenditures, including the amount he claimed for his services as commissioner; the proceeding was then again continued until Oct. 17, 1885, at which time appellee appeared and also three persons claiming to be commissioners of said district, appointed by the order of appellant on Sep. 7, 1885.

These three persons claiming to be such commissioners, filed objections to said report of appellee with appellant, who heard evidence, and on Oct 17, 1885, made an order, in substance, finding $5,214.99 in the hands of appellee, as such commissioner, belonging to said district, ordering him to pay said sum to said three persons, Moore, Shirmer and Strickeljohn, as his successors in office, and deliver to them all books, papers, bids and contracts in his possession, belonging to said district, and disallowing and rejecting said report, and disallowing orders to the amount of $2,754.70, upon the treasurer of said district, issued to contractors by appellee as commissioner.

On Nov. 11,1885, appellee filed his petition for the'common law writ of certiorari, in the circuit court, to reverse and quash said order and proceeding, setting forth the foregoing facts, proceeding and order; also alleging said Moore, Shirmer and Strickeljohn had been instructed to demand from petitioner said sum so ordered to be paid them, and to bring suit on his official bond to recover the same upon his refusal to make such payment to them; that petitioner had no knowledge of the appointment by the county court of commissioners to succeed him in his office or of auy order removing him therefrom, or of the appointment of said three named persons as commissioners of said district by any court having authority ; that appellant did not have jurisdiction to make said order or pass upon, approve or reject said report of petitioner or to order the payment of said sum, or delivery of said books, etc., to said pretended successor in office ; that by law no appeal from said order is provided; prays for writ of certiorari requiring Peterson to certify and bring before the circuit court the record of said proceeding, citation and petition therefor, report of petitioner, vouchers accompanying the same, notices pertaining to said proceeding, papers and orders made therein. The writ as prayed for was issued.

Appellant appeared at the return term in the circuit court and moved to quash the writ; the motion was denied, and thereupon appellant filed his return to the writ set up therein, and brought before the court the record of proceeding, order, etc., as commanded in the writ, and also set up in his return, and brought before the court an order (not a part of said proceeding) made by him as justice of the peace and successor in office of said Wilson on Sep. 7, 1885, appointing said three persons commissioners of said drainage district, together with their official oath and bond approved by him.

The court heard the cause upon the record, found appellant exceeded his jurisdiction as justice of the peace in said proceeding and acted contrary to law, whereupon appellant entered his motion for a new trial, which the court overruled, and ordered that the record of said proceeding be quashed and appellant pay the costs, to reverse which order this appeal was taken.

We deem it unnecessary to advert to other than three of the points made by counsel for appellant and insisted upon as sufficient to require reversal; and of these, first, it appears appellant, upon the hearing in the court below, asked to be permitted to introduce evidence to prove that said Moore, Shirmer and Strickeljohn, after their appointment and qualifying as commissioners, organized, by electing Moore chairman, Shirmer secretary, and appointing a treasurer—not one of their number—who gave bond as required by law, and after so organizing, collected money belonging to the district, made contracts, and paid out money in the name of the district. Upon objection being made on behalf of appellee, this evidence was not admitted by the court and such decision is assigned for error.

To be admissible, the evidence should prove or tend to prove facts relevant to support appellant’s proposition “that the writ of certiorari ought to have been quashed.” Counsel for appellant claim it was relevant because if admitted, the facts would have been proven that said three persons, claiming to be duly appointed drainage commissioners, qualified and entered upon their duties as such by collecting money, making contracts and paying out money in the name and on behalf of said drainage district, and these facts, if established, required the quashing of said writ because the parties affected by such acts could not be placed in “ statu quo” if the record and order complained of be quashed.

We do not think so. The only parties that could be affected by such acts were Moore,' Shirmer, Strickeljohn, those with whom they dealt, and the drainage district. The three claiming to be commissioners and those with whom they dealt were bound to know the law, and all acted at their peril in so dealing together; if money belonging to the district was unlawfully collected and expended, those doing such unlawful acts would be liable to the district for the money so collected and received, and the contracts made on ' behalf of the district without lawful authority were not binding; and as nothing in the record or refused evidence indicates that the pretended commissioners or those with whom they dealt, were not able to refund all money by them unlawfully received and expended belonging to the district, or that the district could not collect it of them, no right of the public is interfered with or the district made liable to loss by quashing the proceeding and order of appellant. The refused evidence was not relevant to support any lawful defense and ought not to have been admitted. It is not insisted on behalf of appellant that appellee was not entitled to the common law writ of certiorari, because by statute he is given the right to appeal and because he was guilty of laches in not taking an appeal from the judgment in the ordinary way.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 Ill. App. 631, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-lawrence-illappct-1887.