Trustees of Schools v. Griffith

263 Ill. 550
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 263 Ill. 550 (Trustees of Schools v. Griffith) 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
Trustees of Schools v. Griffith, 263 Ill. 550 (Ill. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Vickers

delivered the opinion of the court:

This appeal brings up for review a judgment of the county court of Lake county in a proceeding to condemn one acre of land for a school house site. The petition was filed by the trustees of township 43, range 12, east, in Lake county, for the use of school district No. 112. School district No. 112 is located partly in Deerfield township' and the remainder in Vernon township. The school house site in controversy is w'holly within Deerfield township. The petition for condemnation was presented in vacation and after several postponements the case was finally tried by a jury, resulting in a verdict finding the value of the lands taken to be $475 and that there was no damage to lands not taken. There was a preliminary finding that appellant Swift was the sole beneficial owner of the premises sought to be condemned and that appellant Griffith had no interest in the premises. .The compensation was accordingly assessed to appellant Swift, alone. It appears that appellant Griffith was merely holder of the naked legal title for the exclusive use and benefit of Swift. There is no contention here that Griffith had any beneficial interest in the premises. While appellants join in the appeal and have jointly assigned error upon the record, it will be unnecessary to consider any error in so far as appellant Griffith is concerned, Having no interest in the premises he could not be injured by any error that may have been committed in the proceeding.

It is first contended by appellants that the court erred in its ruling upon a plea filed by appellants which alleged that appellees had no authority to condemn a site for a school house because of alleged irregularities in connection with the election held for the purpose of voting upon- the selection of the particular site sought to be condemned. The hearing upon the issue raised by this plea involved questions of fact upon which evidence was heard. The hearing upon this plea was had on the second day of August, 1913, and the evidence was preserved in a bill of exceptions which under the order of the court was to be presented and filed within thirty days from the date of the hearing. The bill of exceptions was not filed until after the time fixed by the order of the court had expired. Appellees made a motion to strike said bill of exceptions from the files, and upon consideration of said motion this court sustained the same and announced its holding in open court at the February term. The striking of this bill of exceptions from the files leaves nothing in the record upon which the assignment of error questioning the ruling of the court upon the plea can stand. This eliminates all question as to the regularity of the election and the authority of appellees to condemn the school house site involved.

After the plea had been disposed of a demurrer was filed to the petition, which was sustained. Afterwards an amended petition was filed, and a demurrer was interposed to the amended petition. This demurrer was overruled. The principal ground urged in support of the insufficiency of the petition was the motion to make the trustees of Vernon township petitioners. After the demurrer to the-amended petition was overruled appellants filed a plea to the jurisdiction of the court, and appellant Swift filed a cross-petition claiming damages to land not taken, and participated in all of the subsequent proceedings up to and including the trial upon the merits. We might safely rest our judgment, so far as the error assigned in overruling the demurrer is concerned, upon the ground that appellants waived the demurrer by filing pleas and a cross-petition after the ruling upon the demurrer, but we are of the opinion that even if the point insisted upon was properly preserved there is no merit in appellants’ contention. The title to school property, under the statute, is vested in the trustees of the township within which the property is located. ■ It is held in trust for the use of the inhabitants of the several school districts to which the property belongs. In the case at bar, the fact of school district No. 112 being in two townships does not create a joint ownership, as between the trustees of the two townships, of the school property of this district. The legal title is in that board of trustees of the township within which the property is located. In this case the school site was entirely within Deerfield township. When acquired, the title will vest in the trustees of that township for the benefit of the school district to which the property belongs. The condemnation proceeding was therefore properly commenced by the trustees of Deerfield township, and the trustees of Vernon township have no interest whatever in this proceeding.

Appellants interposed a plea, which they term a plea to the jurisdiction of the court, setting up that after the commencement of this proceeding there were numerous adjournments of the court from time to time, without any formal order entered continuing the cause to the date to which the adjournment was had. This plea was demurred to and the demurrer sustained, and the ruling of the court is assigned as error. This plea presented no-legal ground why the court should not proceed to the final determination of the proceeding. It was commenced in vacation, and under the statute the courts are always open for proceedings of this character. The manifest purpose of the legislature in providing for the hearing of condemnation proceedings in vacation was to avoid delays which would necessarily occur if such proceedings could not be heard except in term time. The only difference between a hearing in vacation and one in term time is, that the judge must fix a day for the hearing and order a special jury, but when the court convenes for the purpose of hearing it is a court organized for the purpose of hearing that cause and has all of the power and authority that would exist if the court were regularly convened in term time. The statute under which the court proceeds in a condemnation proceeding in vacation does not require that when it is necessary to adjourn the hearing from day to day or from time to time there must be a written order entered upon the record showing the adjournment of the court, and in the absence of such requirement we can see no reason why the jurisdiction of the court should be made to depend upon the formal entry of such order. When the parties are all before the court and it becomes necessary to adjourn the further hearing of the case to some future day it is usually done by public announcement from the bench', and every one interested in the proceeding has due notice when the hearing will be resumed. When such notice is had all the rights of the parties are as fully and completely preserved as they would be if the clerk should note in the record that the further hearing of the case has been postponed until' a future time.

It is argued that the circuit or county court, when proceeding in vacation to hear a condemnation case, should be governed by the same rules that are applied to justices of the peace, who have no stated terms of court. We fail to see the force of this argument. A justice of the peace is not a court of record, and the law requires that the docket of such courts shall contain the evidences of all that has there taken place; hence the requirement that where a case is adjourned over to a later date by a justice of the peace it is necessary that the fact should be noted in his docket. But this rule has' no application to courts of record, and circuit and county courts, when proceeding in vacation, are still courts of record.

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Bluebook (online)
263 Ill. 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trustees-of-schools-v-griffith-ill-1914.