State of Illinois v. Aiello

147 N.E. 916, 317 Ill. 159
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1925
DocketNo. 15973. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 147 N.E. 916 (State of Illinois v. Aiello) 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
State of Illinois v. Aiello, 147 N.E. 916, 317 Ill. 159 (Ill. 1925).

Opinion

Per Curiam :

At the June, 1923, term of the county court of Sangamon county, the State of Illinois, by the city attorney and corporation counsel of the city of Springfield, filed a bill for injunction against plaintiffs in error, Phillip Aiello and Theodore Benz, with M. A. Jones, charging violation of the Illinois Prohibition act. On the 25th of June, 1923, plaintiffs in error entered their appearance and consented that a decree for permanent injunction be entered against them. On the 22d of August following, they were arrested and charged with selling intoxicating liquors in violation of the Prohibition act. In December, 1923, warrants were issued charging them with contempt by reason of the violation of the injunction granted at the June, 1923, term. They moved to dismiss the petition on the grounds, among others, that the Prohibition act is unconstitutional and that the county court had no jurisdiction to grant the injunction. This motion was overruled and plaintiffs in error filed answers and affidavits denying the charge in the petition. A hearing was had before the court, and testimony was offered and received over the objection of plaintiffs in error, the ground for the objection being that the contempt alleged was a criminal contempt, and that their sworn answers purged them of that contempt. Plaintiffs in error offered no evidence other than the affidavits filed with their sworn answers, and the court found and adjudged them guilty of violating the permanent injunction, and that by reason thereof they were in contempt of court. Aiello was adjudged to pay a fine of $1000 and one-half of the costs and to serve a term of ten months in the county jail, and Benz was sentenced to pay one-half of the costs of the proceeding and to be confined in the county jail for a period of six months.

Plaintiffs in error contend here that the judgment of the court is contrary to the evidence; that the county court, under the constitution, has no jurisdiction to issue a writ of injunction or to punish for contempt for the violation thereof; that a proceeding in contempt is criminal in character, and that therefore the answers of the defendants, under oath, purged them of contempt. It is also contended that the judgment of the court was unreasonable, cruel and unusual. Plaintiffs in error further say that the Illinois Prohibition act is so vague in its terms and so conflicting in its provisions that it cannot be executed and is therefore void. Since this assignment of error is not in any way supported by either argument or citations of authority and counsel do not point out wherein they consider this objection to apply, no further attention need be given it,

Considering first the objection that the decree of the court is contrary to the evidence, we find from the affidavits •on file and the evidence heard that the petition for the issuance of warrants charging plaintiffs in error with contempt is supported by the affidavits of Ward Sheneman, Henry Sheneman, John R. Conrey and Austin Jones, who positively state that they purchased intoxicating liquors from plaintiffs in error. All of them except Ward Sheneman testified on the hearing. His affidavit was that he is eighteen years of age; that on the night of the 27th of August, 1923, he entered the fruit stand and confectionery store conducted by Aiello and that he there purchased intoxicating liquor from him. The affidavit and testimony of Henry Sheneman, father of Ward, show that the witness was a police officer in the city of Springfield; that on the 27th of August he drove with his son to a place near the fruit stand conducted by Aiello and gave his son one dollar and an empty half-pint bottle and directed him to go into the fruit stand and see if he could purchase some “mule whisky;” that his son went into the place and returned with a half-pint bottle full of mule whisky; that he later went back to the same place and found Benz, who was pointed out to him by his son, Ward, as being one of the men who had participated in the sale of the liquor to him; that he arrested Benz, and on the way to the police station Benz pulled a bottle out of his pocket and broke it by throwing it onto the sidewalk and that its contents gave off the odor of intoxicating liquor. Conrey and Jones both testified to having purchased liquor from Benz after the issuance of the injunction; that they paid him for it the sum of fifty cents per drink, and that they also later purchased two drinks of mule whisky from Aiello. The affidavits filed by plaintiffs in error deny these statements. The record establishes, beyond a reasonable doubt, the truth of the charges in the petition. The first contention of the plaintiffs in error, therefore, cannot be sustained.

Section 23 of the Illinois Prohibition act (Smith’s Stat. P- 839,) provides as follows: “Complete equity jurisdiction is hereby conferred upon all county courts, concurrent with circuit courts, and the superior court of Cook county, to hear and determine all injunction cases which may be brought under this act.” In support of plaintiffs in error’s contention that the Illinois Prohibition act is unconstitutional, in that it confers equity jurisdiction upon the county court, they cite sections 12 and 18 of article 6 of the constitution. Section 12 is as follows: “The circuit courts shall have original jurisdiction of all causes in law and equity, and such appellate jurisdiction as is or may be provided by law.” Section 18, in so far as it is material here, is' as follows: “County courts shall be courts of record, and shall have original jurisdiction in all matters of probate * * * and such other jurisdiction as may be provided for by general law.” Plaintiffs in error contend that under these sections all equity jurisdiction is exclusively conferred on the circuit court. The argument is, that since section 12 confers original jurisdiction in all cases of law and equity on the circuit court, the rule expressio unins est exclusio alterius applies, and the legislature has no power to confer equity jurisdiction on the county court.

In Myers v. People, 67 Ill. 503, the act of 1872, increasing the jurisdiction of county courts, was considered, and it was held that the language of the last clause of section 18 of article 6 of the constitution, conferring on county courts such other jurisdiction as may be provided for by general law, “is broad enough to warrant the legislature in conferring upon the county courts of the State concurrent jurisdiction with the circuit courts,” though the legislature could not deprive circuit courts of the original jurisdiction vested in them by the constitution.

In People v. Loomis, 96 Ill. 377, this court considered an application for a writ of mandamus to compel the clerk of the county court of Cook county to issue summons in a foreclosure suit filed in that court under an act of the legislature conferring on county courts power to foreclose mortgages. The county clerk had refused to issue summons on the ground that the legislature had by the act of 1877 established a probate court in counties of more than fifty thousand population, and that Cook county came within the requirements of that act, the foreclosure of mortgages was thereby transferred to the probate court.

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Bluebook (online)
147 N.E. 916, 317 Ill. 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-illinois-v-aiello-ill-1925.