Saylor v. Duel

86 N.E. 119, 236 Ill. 429
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 86 N.E. 119 (Saylor v. Duel) 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
Saylor v. Duel, 86 N.E. 119, 236 Ill. 429 (Ill. 1908).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Vickers

delivered the opinion of the court:

At the election held in the city of Naperville, DuPage county, in April, 1908, the question was submitted to the voters of said city whether said city should become anti-saloon territory under the act of May 16, 1907, providing for the creation, by popular vote, of anti-saloon territory, and for the abolition, by like means, of territory so created. The city of Naperville consists of three wards, each of which constitutes a voting precinct. The result of this election, as declared by the city council acting on the returns made by the election judges, was 408 votes against the proposition submitted and 467 in favor of the city becoming anti-saloon territory. Within less than ten days after the election Henry E. Saylor, Albert Pringnitz, Mathias W. Sander, Samuel Wehrli and Walter Weigand, legal voters of the city of Naperville, filed a bond for costs in the county court of DuPage county and a verified petition to contest the election upon the proposition submitted, on the following grounds : (1) Because of alleged fraudulent and illegal proclamations and returns in the first and third wards; (2) because of irregular and unlawful arrangement and construction of the polling places in said first and third wards; (3) because of the loss of one regular, officially endorsed ballot in the first ward; (4) because of the casting of illegal votes in favor of said proposition in the first and third wards, sufficient in number to change the result of the election in the city; (5) because of fraud and misfeasance of the election officers in said first and third wards. The city of Naperville, as a municipality, was not made a party defendant.

The prayer for process and answer to the petition is as follows: “That summons herein issue out of this court, addressed to George C. Duel, the city clerk of said city of Naperville, DuPage county, Illinois, notifying said city clerk of the filing of this petition, and directing him to appear in this court on behalf of said city of Naperville on the fifth day of May, A. D. 1908, at the hour of ten o’clock in the forenoon, in the county court room in the court house in the city of Wheaton, in the county of DuPage and State of Illinois, then and there to answer this petition, in conformity with the statutes in such case made and provided.”

George C. Duel, city clerk of the city of Naperville, entered his appearance, as did eight other citizens and legal voters of said city, and filed a demurrer to the petition, setting out the following causes of demurrer: First, that neither the city of Naperville, DuPage county, Illinois, nor any other person, is made a defendant in or to the said petition; second, as to the matters and things contained in said bill wherein it is alleged that the polling places in the various precincts were not arranged in form as provided by law, the same and each and every one the allegations of said petition are wholly insufficient, because said petition does not allege that said illegal arrangement of the polling places resulted or in any manner tended to prevent a free and fair election as so arranged; third, because said petition is wholly insufficient to confer any jurisdiction on this court to grant the whole or any part of the relief prayed for by said petition. The county court sustained the demurrer and dismissed the petition, to which ruling of the court the petitioners duly excepted and prayed and obtained an appeal to this court. The errors assigned call in question the ruling of the court in sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the petition.

Section 19 of the act of 1907, under which this election was held, after providing for a contest of such election by five legal voters of any political division in which an election shall have been held as provided for in that act, provides: “The county court shall have final jurisdiction to hear and determine the merits of such cases.” Under the language of this statute we are met with the question whether any appeal lies from the judgment of the county court to this court from a judgment rendered in a proceeding to contest an election held under the statute of 1907. This question is raised by appellees in their brief but is not discussed. It is discussed at some length by appellants in their reply brief. Since in our view this is a question of controlling importance, we regret that we have been compelled to investigate it without any brief on one side and with but little assistance from the one filed by the other.

In this State the right of appeal in any case is purely statutory, with the possible exception of certain classes of cases enumerated in section u of article 6 of the constitution of 1870, in which the right of appeal from the Appellate to the Supreme Court in certain enumerated cases seems to be guaranteed by the constitution. Section 123 of chapter 46 of the Revised Statutes of 1905 provides for appeals to be taken to the Supreme Court from county and circuit courts in all contested election cases, “in the same manner and upon like conditions as is provided by law for taking appeals in cases in chancery from the circuit courts.” There is no provision in the act under which this election was held, granting to either party a right of appeal. Appellants contend that an appeal lies under section 123 of the general Election law. Whether section 123 of the general Election law could be held to apply to an election held under this statute, in the absence of any provision in the law of 1907 in relation to such appeal, is not involved, since in our view the language already quoted from section 19 must be held to take elections held under said act out of the operation of said section 123. The provision that the county court shall have “final jurisdiction” to hear and determine the merits of such cases must, we think, be construed as a denial of the right to an appeal from the judgment of the county court in contests arising under this statute. Jurisdiction is the power vested by the law in a tribunal to hear and determine causes properly coming before such tribunal. Final means last; conclusive; pertaining to the end. (Bouvier’s Raw Dict.) By conferring upon the county court “final jurisdiction,” the jurisdiction of all other courts subsequent to the determination in the county court is ex zfi termini excluded.

The case of Lampson v. Platt, 1 Iowa, 556, is an authority for the construction which we place on this statute. In that case section 12 of an act of the legislature of the State of Iowa, under which the proceeding was had, provided : “That any person feeling aggrieved by the decision of the county judge, under the ninth section of the act may appeal therefrom to the district court of the proper county, which shall have final jurisdiction over the matter and shall make such decision in the premises as justice and equity may require.” An appeal was prosecuted from the district court to the Supreme Court of Iowa, and in holding that no appeal could be taken from the judgment of the district court, the Supreme Court of Iowa, on page 558, uses this language: “The language of the statute is not that such district court shall have power, in such cases, to enter final judgment, but it shall have final jurisdiction. If the term ‘final judgment’ had been used, the right to appeal, in view of the general provisions of the code, could scarcely be questioned. Between judgment and jurisdiction there is a wide and clear distinction.

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Bluebook (online)
86 N.E. 119, 236 Ill. 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saylor-v-duel-ill-1908.