Wayland v. City of Chicago

15 N.E.2d 516, 369 Ill. 43
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1938
DocketNo. 24458. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 15 N.E.2d 516 (Wayland v. City of Chicago) 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
Wayland v. City of Chicago, 15 N.E.2d 516, 369 Ill. 43 (Ill. 1938).

Opinions

Appellant, by this appeal, attacks the jurisdiction of the "Executive Committee" of the circuit court of Cook county to suspend him from the practice of law in that court. There was first filed before that committee a petition charging appellant with contumacious conduct before the Hon. Wm. J. Wimbiscus sitting as a circuit judge in the trial of a suit entitledWayland v. City of Chicago. Appellant was the trial attorney for the plaintiff in that case. A jury returned a verdict for $35,000 in favor of the plaintiff and against the city. Pending a motion for a new trial Barnet Hodes, corporation counsel, signed a petition addressed to *Page 45 the executive committee of the circuit court of Cook county, asking leave to file the same, and, if filed, that a rule be entered upon appellant, an attorney at law practicing in said court, to show cause why he should not be held in contempt of court, punished accordingly, and for such further orders as might seem appropriate for the vindication of the honor, dignity and authority of the court. Leave was granted to file the petition and a rule was entered upon appellant to answer the petition within fifteen days. The petition set up facts with reference to the filing, trial, judgment and motion for a new trial in theWayland case. It then charged that appellant, before Judge Wimbiscus, at a proceeding in the matter of a motion for a new trial, contumaciously, and in contempt of the circuit court, stated that he opposed the filing of any amended motion for a new trial, because he (appellant) was approached by one Chester L. Walker, who stated to appellant that if he (appellant) would cause the judgment to be entered on the verdict in that case to be assigned at sixty-five per cent of the amount of the judgment, the city's motion for a new trial would be withdrawn and the city's right to an appeal waived; that appellant also said that Walker told him that the city attorney's office cannot live on what they make and that there is graft in all public offices. The petition then sets out transcripts or excerpts from interviews between Barnet Hodes, corporation counsel, his assistants, and appellant. The petition prays that appellant be found guilty of contempt.

Appellant answered the petition under oath and moved to dismiss it on the ground that the executive committee of the circuit court had no jurisdiction to hear the matter. This motion was denied. A hearing was had before the Hon. Harry M. Fisher, circuit judge, who announced he was hearing the contempt matter and that he, with Judges Joseph M. Burke and John R. Caverly, as the executive committee of the circuit court, would sit and pass on the *Page 46 matter of whether or not appellant should be suspended from practice in the circuit court of Cook county. After a hearing of petitioner's evidence, Judge Fisher, on July 1, 1937, announced the dismissal of the proceedings as to the contempt. On July 9, 1937, over objection, the petitioner was given leave to amend the dismissed petition to pray that appellant be suspended from practice in the circuit court of Cook county. Appellant was ordered to answer the amended petition instanter, and on failure so to do his answer to the original petition to stand as the answer to the petition as amended. Appellant's renewed motion attacking the jurisdiction of the executive committee to hear the proceedings was denied. After further hearing the executive committee of the circuit court, consisting of Judges Fisher, Burke and Caverly, on July 15, 1937, entered an order finding appellant guilty of malconduct in his office of attorney and counsellor at law because of the matters and things stated in the opinion and ordered that appellant be suspended as attorney and counsellor at law from practice in the circuit court of Cook county and in every branch thereof, until October 5, 1937, the first day of the next term of the Supreme Court of Illinois.

On motion, this court granted leave to the Attorney General to file a brief on behalf of the circuit court of Cook county. With that brief is filed a motion to dismiss this appeal on the ground that the period of appellant's suspension having expired, the cause has become moot. While ordinarily such a motion would be allowed, the unusual nature of this proceeding, and the manner in which it was conducted, present questions that are not moot. Chief among those questions is the issue, raised by appellant, whether the executive committee of the circuit court was without jurisdiction and, therefore, whether the entire proceedings were void.

The judge of any court of record has power and jurisdiction to punish an offender, be he an attorney or layman, *Page 47 for contempt of court. Section 6 of chapter 13, Smith-Hurd Stat. 1935, page 189, provides that the justices of this court, in open court, shall have power at their discretion to strike the name of any attorney from the roll for malconduct in his office. That section also provides that any judge of a circuit court, or of the superior court of Cook county, shall, for like cause, have power to suspend any attorney or counsellor at law from practice in the court over which he presides, during such time as he may deem proper, subject to the right to have such order set aside by this court upon appeal. This statute is penal in its nature and is to be strictly construed and not extended by implication to things not expressly within its terms. (Moutray v. People,162 Ill. 194.) In the Moutray case it was also held that the judge who presides over the circuit court of the particular county has power to suspend an attorney or counsellor at law from practicing in the circuit court of the particular county where the judge is then sitting, but the power delegated or limited by statute does not extend to courts other than the circuit court of the particular county or the superior court of Cook County, and does not extend to other circuit courts established by law or other counties of the circuit, and that the order suspending the Moutrays from the practice of their profession in all of the fourteen counties comprising the second circuit, was void so far as it purported to suspend those attorneys from the practice in any court other than the circuit court in the particular county over which the judge was then presiding.

It has also been settled in this State that in the circuit or superior court of Cook county it is error for more than one judge to participate in the proceedings in a given case, but each step taken in the cause should be by a single judge and this fact should appear from the record. (Courson v. Browning, 78 Ill. 208. ) In Hall v. Hamilton, 74 Ill. 437, this court held that each of the judges of the circuit and superior courts of Cook county, under the constitution, is *Page 48 invested with all the powers of a circuit judge and may hold court in a branch thereof, and that it is error for more than one to preside at the same time during the trial of any case, or to participate in any decision and the record should show that but one judge presides. See, also, Harvey v. Van DeMark, 71 Ill. 117.

We are presented with no authority, and have found none, indicating that the executive committee of the circuit court of Cook county, as it is called, is a court or has any authority to sit as a court to pass upon any matter pending in the circuit court.

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.E.2d 516, 369 Ill. 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wayland-v-city-of-chicago-ill-1938.