Smith v. People ex rel. Malone

154 Ill. 58
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 30, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 154 Ill. 58 (Smith v. People ex rel. Malone) 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
Smith v. People ex rel. Malone, 154 Ill. 58 (Ill. 1894).

Opinion

Bailey, J.:

This was an information in the nature of a quo warranta, brought in the name of the People of the State of Illinois, by the State’s attorney of Morgan county, on the relation of Louis A. Malone, a tax-payer and legal voter of the city of Jacksonville; charging Thomas S. Knowles with usurping the office of president, George W. Smith, John O. Widenham, Ethelbert D. Rothwell and Nathan R. Jerald with usurping the office of members, and O. I. Milburn, George W. Fanning and Andrew Russell with usurping the offices, respectively, of clerk, deputy clerk and treasurer of the board of education of the city of Jacksonville. The information contains three counts. The first and second counts attempt to set up and state affirmatively the title claimed by the respondents to their respective offices, while the third count charges, generally, that the respondents unlawfully hold and exercise the powers of their respective offices, and that there is no law authorizing such offices. The information was afterwards dismissed as to respondents Milburn, Fanning and Russell.

A demurrer was interposed to each count of the information and overruled as to the third count. The demurrer to the first and second counts was also overruled as to respondents Bothwell and Jerald, and sustained as to respondents Knowles, Smith and Widenham. Answers were thereupon filed by the three respondents last named to the third count, and by the other two respondents to the entire information. Demurrers being filed to each of the answers, the demurrer to the answer of respondent Knowles was overruled, and final judgment was rendered thereon in his favor dismissing the information as to him. The demurrers to the answers of the other four respondents were sustained, a nd they having elected to abide by their answers, final judgment was rendered against them, ousting them from the office of members of the board of education of the city of Jacksonville, and imposing upon each a fine of one dollar, and also for costs. To reverse that judgment they now bring the record to this court by writ of error.

Without attempting to state the several issues presented in the form in which they are submitted by the pleadings, we shall content ourselves with as brief a statement as practicable of the material facts involved, as they appear admitted of record.

The city of Jacksonville was incorporated by a special act of the General Assembly, approved February 16, 1867, the act being, by its own terms, declared to be a public act. (1 Private Laws of 1867, p. 336.) By section 3, article 1, of the act,' the city was divided into four wards, and in the same section it was provided that the city council might, from time to time, change the boundaries of the wards and create additional wards, as occasion might require. By subsequent articles it was provided that the municipal government of the city should consist of a city council, consisting of a mayor and one alderman from each ward, and provision was also made for the election or appointment of various other city officers, and for an election to be held on the first Monday of April, 1887, and on the first Monday of April in each year thereafter, at which should be chosen the mayor and aldermen and the other city officers required to be ■ elected. The elections were required to be held in each ward, and power was given to the city council to determine the time of day and the place’in each ward for holding the election, and to appoint the judges thereof, and it was provided that the manner of conducting the election, of voting, of keeping the poll-lists, of canvassing the votes and certifying the result, and of contesting the election, should be the same that then was or thereafter might be prescribed by law for State elections.

Article 11 of the act provided for the establishment of a system of graded schools in and for the city. By section 1 of that article all the territory witliin the limits of the city, according to its then present or future boundaries, was erected into a common school district. Section 2 made provision for an equitable division of the school funds belonging to the township of which the city formed a part, between the school district thus created and the residue of the township, and section 3 required the township trustees to pay over and deliver to the board of education of Jacksonville the portion of the school funds to which that district was entitled. Section 3 also provided as follows :

“The public schools of said district shall be under the exclusive management and control of a board of education, to consist of the mayor of the city, who shall be president of the board, and one from each ward of the city, to be known as the ‘Board of Education of Jacksonville School District, ’ each of whom, with the treasurer of said board, shall be sworn to discharge their duties with fidelity.”

Section 4 gave the board thus constituted exclusive control over the school property and funds, and provided that a majority of its members, with or without its president, should constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. Section 5 gave the board full power to buy or lease sites for school houses, with the necessary grounds • therefor; to erect, hire or purchase buildings for school purposes, and to keep them in repair; to furnish schools with necessary books, fixtures, apparatus and libraries ; to establish, conduct and maintain a system of graded schools, to be kept in one or more buildings in the district ; to supply the insufficiency of school funds for the payment of teachers, and other school purposes and expenses, by, school taxes, to be levied and collected as in the act provided; to determine the number, make the appointment and fix the amount of the compensation of teachers within the district, and to appoint a general superintendent of schools and prescribe his duties and fix his salary, and to appoint all other agents and servants and fix their compensation; to prescribe the branches to be taught and books to be used; to lay off and divide the district into smaller districts, and to alter the same or erect new ones at pleasure; to pass by-laws, rules and regulations to carry the powers of the board into complete execution, and for the government of its own body, its officers, agents and servants, and providing for its own meetings and adjournments, and, generally, to have and possess all power and authority necessary for the proper establishment and control of an effective system of graded schools within the district.

Subsequent sections made provision for determining the amount of money needed to be raised for school purposes, and for raising the same by taxation, or, in case of necessity, by borrowing, and also for keeping school funds not needed for immediate use loaned out at interest. Section 17 was as follows:

“The board of education shall be appointed, one in ¿ach ward of said city, by the city council, by a majority vote or ballot, and no person shall be appointed unless a householder and a resident of said ward for which he is appointed, and each shall serve and hold his office for the term of one year from the date of their said appointment.”

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Related

People ex rel. Moyer v. Hausen
114 N.E. 596 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1916)
People ex rel. Rogerson v. Crawley
274 Ill. 139 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1916)
People ex rel. Board of School Inspectors v. Mottinger
74 N.E. 150 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1905)
Trustees of Schools v. Board of School Inspectors
115 Ill. App. 479 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1904)
Beenan v. People ex rel. Kraus
176 Ill. 620 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1898)

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Bluebook (online)
154 Ill. 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-people-ex-rel-malone-ill-1894.