Town of Somonauk v. People ex rel. Hess

178 Ill. 631
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 18, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 178 Ill. 631 (Town of Somonauk v. People ex rel. Hess) 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
Town of Somonauk v. People ex rel. Hess, 178 Ill. 631 (Ill. 1899).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion, of the court:

Towns under the township organization system are political subdivisions of counties. The power to create, enlarge, divide or destroy them rests primarily in the General Assembly, (Coles v. County of Madison, Breese, 154; People ex rel. v. Power, 25 Ill. 187; Wilson v. Board of Trustees, 133 id. 443;) subject, however, to the constitutional requirement such power shall be exercised by statutes having general and uniform operation. (Const. 1870, par. 22, art. 4; People ex rel. v. Martin, ante, p. 611.) The legislature does not exercise this power directly, but has adopted the policy of enacting statutes vesting the governing body,—the board of supervisors,—of the counties, respectively, with authority to exercise it, subject to the directions, regulations and restrictions specified in the enabling' enactment. The authority possessed in this regard by the board of supervisors of DeKalb county at the time the petition in question was presented and acted upon by that body is, expressed in section 1 of article 3 of the Township Organization act. (Hurd’s Stat. 1897, p. 1593.) The section is as follows:

“The county board of each county shall have full and complete power and jurisdiction to alter the boundaries of towns, to change town lines and to divide, enlarge and create new towns in their respective counties to suit the convenience of the inhabitants residing therein; and it shall be the duty of the county board to make such alterations of the town boundaries and create a new town whenever, in any territory of not less than ten square miles, not less than three-fourths of the voters residing in such territory shall petition for such new town: Provided, however, the county board shall give notice thereof by posting up notices in not less than five of the most public places of the town interested, at least sixty days before their final action; also by publishing such notice at least three times in some newspaper published in the county wherein said towns are situated, if any shall be published therein: Provided, further, that no incorporated town shall be divided except consent thereto is given by a majority of all the electors in said town,—notice that the question of dividing said town will be submitted to the legal voters thereof having been given by the county clerk at the same time and in the same manner as the notice of said general election.”

The proceeding does not involve the division of an incorporated town, hence the provisions of the second proviso to the section need not be adverted to.

It is urged the end to be secured by the creation of a new town under the provisions of this section is the convenience of the inhabitants thereof, and that the determination of that question involves the exercise of the discretion and judgment of the board of supervisors, and the well known rule that while mandamus will lie to compel action on the part of officers vested with discretionary power it cannot be availed of to require them to decide or exercise their discretion in a particular manner, is relied upon in support of the insistence the demurrer to the petition for mandamus should have been sustained. The section of the statute which we have quoted grants to the board of supervisors full and complete power and jurisdiction to alter the boundaries of towns or create a new town, whenever, in their judgment, the convenience of the inhabitants of the town or towns to be affected demands such course should be taken. The board, if its judgment so dictates, may take such action of its own motion, and in such case the courts would not interfere, by the writ of mandamus, to control or dictate the judgment or decision of the board, unless it should appear the discretionary power had been exercised with such manifest injustice as to amount to an abuse of discretion. But it is manifest from the consideration of the entire section it was not the legislative intent to clothe the board, by delegation, with absolute and uncontrolled power to decline to act except upon its own motion. The section provides it shall be the duty of the board to take action and create a new town whenever, in any territory of not less than ten square miles, three-fourths of the voters residing in such territory shall petition the board to so create a new town. The language employed is explicit and unambiguous, and we can conceive of no reason why this provision of the section should not be regarded as mandatory. Where such a petition is presented, the law, in express terms, charges it upon the board as a duty to entertain the petition and to grant the prayer thereof if the statutory requirements are fulfilled. The action to be finally taken upon such a petition by the board does not involve the question whether, in the judgment of the board, the proposed change will conduce to the convenience of the inhabitants of the territory to be affected. The theory of the statute is, the desire of three-fourths of the leg'al voters of the territory to be made a new town, manifested by a petition, is to be accepted as a better indication than the judgment of the board as to what will best “suit the convenience” of the inhabitants of the territory. This construction gives effect to the letter of the law and tends to the accomplishment of the primary object of the system of township organization, which is to bring" local affairs under the immediate control and direction of the people. When such a petition is presented the board is not authorized to consider whether it is wise or unwise, or whether it is for the convenience of the people of the territory to create the proposed new town. The only functions of the board are to determine, before taking action, whether the petition bears the signatures of the necessary number of qualified petitioners; that the territory to be erected into a new town is of the requisite area; that the disconnection thereof does not reduce the area of the dismembered town below the statutory requirement; to give the notices required by the statute that the petition is pending before it for action, and to grant the prayer of the petition if the requirements of the statute have been observed and fulfilled. The controlling principles here applied are illustrated in expressions of this court in opinions rendered in the cases of Board of Supervisors v. People ex rel. 110 Ill. 511, Trustees of Schools v. People ex rel. 121 id. 552, and Whittaker v. Village of Venice, 150 id. 195.

Nor is it necessary the petition presented to the board should contain an allegation the convenience of the inhabitants of the town of Somonauk or of the proposed new town would be subserved by the creation of the new town. No such requirement is found in the statute, and compliance with the statute is all that is required.

Nor is the objection tenable the petition is insufficient because it does not contain an averment the names of three-fourths of the voters residing in the territory of the proposed new town are appended thereto. Such an averment could not be truthfully made by any petitioner except the one whose signature would complete the requisite number and those who might afterwards sign,—a consideration which demonstrates the groundless character of the objection. That the requisite number of voters had joined in the petition is a preliminary fact for the determination of the board as affecting its jurisdiction to act.

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Bluebook (online)
178 Ill. 631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-somonauk-v-people-ex-rel-hess-ill-1899.