103 Ill. 110 | Ill. | 1882
delivered the opinion of tfte Court:
The points rélied upon for the reversal of the judgment are, the ordering by the circuit court that the cause be certified to the county court of Will county for trial, the refusal to quash the venire, and the insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict.
As the prayer of the petition for a change of venue was that the venue be changed according to law, and the circuit court ordered that the venue of the cause be changed according to the prayer of the petition, and there was at the time a statute in force providing that when the cause for a change of venue is the prejudice of the judge, and there were the proper petition and affidavits, “thereupon the ease may be tried by any other of the circuit judges of the circuit in which the case is pending to whom the cause alleged does not apply, ” it is argued that upon the filing of the proper petition and affidavits, the cause then, by operation of law, stood transferred to some other judge of the circuit, and the judge from whom the change of venue was asked had no jurisdiction afterward to change the venue to'the county court. This is a too straitened construction of the statute. The Revised Statute in relation to the change of venue, of July 1, 1874, provided that when a change of venue is granted, it may be . to some other court of competent jurisdiction in the same county to which there is no valid objection. (Rev. Stat. 1874, p. 1095, sec. 19.) We understand that provision of this 19 fch section to be still in force, and not repealed by the later statute above referred to, providing that in case of such an application, because of the prejudice of the judge, the case may be tried by any other of the circuit judges of the circuit to whom the cause alleged does not apply. This later act has no repealing clause, and so does not expressly repeal any provision of the statute of 1874, and does not do so by implication, unless, according to the well known rule, there is such a repugnancy between the provisions of the two statutes that they can not stand together. The later statute does not say the case shall, but that it may, be tried by any other of the circuit judges of the circuit. This is not inconsistent with the power under the former statute to change' the venue to the county court of the county, and the two statutes in this respect may well stand together.
Even before the statute of 1874, changes of venue to courts of the same county, against which no valid objection existed, were authorized. In the case of Curran v. Beach, 20 Ill. 259, this court sustained a change of venue granted from the judge of the Cook county circuit court to the common pleas court of Cook county.
Further, by section 120, ch. 37, Rev. Stat. 1874, p. 344, it is provided that when the grand jury of the circuit court shall indict for offences cognizable in the county court, such indictments may, in the discretion of said circuit court, be certified under the seal thereof to the county court for process and trial, etc. The offence in question was one cognizable in the county court, though the mode of commencing the prosecution there is by information instead of by indictment.
We are of opinion there was full power in the circuit court to order the change of the venue of the cause, as it did, to the county- court, and that the latter court had jurisdiction to try the same.
At the July term of the county court, at which the defendant was tried, the court made the following order for a jury:
“It is ordered by the court that the clerk issue a venire facias, directed to the sheriff of said county, commanding him to summon twelve good and lawful men of said county to serve as jurors during the present term of court, or until discharged, returnable on Monday, the 19th day of July, A. D. 1880, at 10 o’clock A. M.” It is insisted the motions in challenge of the array of the jury, and to quash the venire, should have been sustained, because the county court had no right to summon a jury in that manner.
The eighth section of chapter 78, Rev. Stat. 1874, p. 631, provides in what manner jurors shall be selected and summoned for the term of the circuit court, and section 110, of chapter 37, Rev. Stat. 1874, p. 342, provides that unless the court shall otherwise order (as was not done in this case), the jury for the law terms of the county court shall be drawn and summoned in the same manner as juries are drawn and summoned for the circuit court. This jury was not drawn and summoned in that manner, as is contended it should have been. But said section 110 provides further another manner of getting a jury for the county court, when a jury is not summoned as above provided, which is by the court, on the first day of each term, calling all the eases for trial on the docket, to ascertain what eases are to be tried by a jury; and if a jury shall be demanded by either party to any one ease on the docket of the county court, the judge may direct the clerk of the county court to issue a venire for twelve jurors, unless the parties to the case shall consent to have the case tried by a less number of jurors, and the sheriff shall then summon such jurors from the body of the county to serve as jurors for such trial, and then the court may retain such jury so summoned to try all jury cases which are for trial at that term. For anything that appears in the record, the jury were summoned in conformity with 'this provision of section 110, and the presumption that the jury were so summoned will be indulged in support of the action of the court.
It is objected that there should not be this presumption here, for the reason that it appears the action of the court was not in pursuance of this provision, in that the venire was not issued or ordered to be issued in and for any particular case, and that the order of the court and the venire show that it • was a general order of court for twelve men to serve as jurors for the term, without reference to any case. As the provision is that the jurors summoned to serve as jurors for the trial of the particular case in which a jury is demanded, may be retained by the court as a jury to try all jury cases which are for trial at the term, the legal effect is, that a jury ordered and summoned in compliance with this provision of the statute is a jury to serve during the term, if such be the pleasure of the court; so that the ordering and summoning of the jury to serve during the term, instead of in the particular case in which a jury is demanded, is but expressing the legal effect of summoning a jury in the latter mode, and the distinction is but one of form. We find nothing substantial in the objection to the jury.
Upon perusal of the testimony, we see no reason for disturbing the verdict of the jury on the ground that it was not supported by the evidence.
The judgment of the Appellate Court will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.