delivered the opinion of the court:
Whether jurisdiction attaches in the circuit court by the filing of a complaint for judicial review of an administrative decision on the last day for filing, with request to the circuit clerk that the summons issue that day, when the summons is not in fact issued on the same day, is the issue.
Here, the City National Bank and Trust Co., as trustee of trust No. 1122 (Owner), sought a reduction in the assessment of its real estate in Winnebago County, and after being denied relief appealed to the Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board (PTAB). The PTAB’s decision affirming the ruling of the Winnebago County Board of Review was certified and mailed to the parties on March 20, 1981. The Owner filed a complaint for judicial review on April 24, 1981, the 35th day after the mailing of the decision, a Friday. The summons was issued by the circuit clerk on April 27, 1981, a Monday, thus beyond the 35th day. The PTAB’s and the County Board of Rеview’s motions to dismiss were granted. Affidavits were filed by the Owner’s attorney and the deputy circuit clerk which stated that the attorney had told the deputy clerk that the summons had to be issued that day and that the сlerk told him that the summons would not be mailed until the following Monday, but assured him that this would be done in accordance with a procedure in the clerk’s office that it issued summons “effective” on the date thе complaint was filed although the summons might not be mailed until later. In fact the summons was dated April 27. The circuit judge found the complaint was timely filed and the delay was due solely to an inadvertent error by the clerk’s office. However, he concluded that both the complaint and the summons were required under the statute to be filed within the 35 days and that therefore no jurisdiction attached.
Under the Administrativе Review Law, applicable here, an action to review a final administrative decision “shall be commenced by the filing of a complaint and the issuance of summons within 35 days from the date thаt a copy of the decision sought to be reviewed was served upon the party affected thereby.” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1981, ch. 110, par. 3 — 103.) It is conceded that the complaint was timely filed. The defendants аrgue that the plain language of the statute requires that both the complaint and the summons issue within 35 days. The 35-day limitation for filing a complaint has been held a jurisdictional requirement. (See, e.g., Hoffman v. Dеpartment of Registration & Education (1980),
There is language in several cases to the effect that the filing of the complaint vests jurisdiction. (See, e.g., Glaseo Electric Co. v. Department of Revenue (1981),
In Cox, a complaint was found to have been timely filed but the majority concluded that the fact the summons presented to the clerk on the 35th day wаs not signed until the next day precluded review. The court reasoned that the clear language of the statute states both that the complaint must be filed and the summons issued within the required period. (
The facts in this case vary somewhat from Cox. The Owner did not prepare a summons but was told by the deputy clerk that she would do so. The Owner’s attorney, however, advised the clerk thаt the complaint was being filed on the last day and that summons had to be issued on April 24. He was informed by the deputy clerk that it is the standard procedure of the circuit clerk’s office to issue summonses еffective the date on which a complaint is filed “irrespective of the fact that the summonses might not be served [mailed] by the Clerk’s Office until the next day”; and the attorney was assured by the clerk that thе summons would be issued effective April 24, 1981, the day on which the complaint was filed. The deputy clerk further stated in her affidavit that due to “an inadvertent clerical error” of the circuit clerk’s office the summonses when issued were dated April 27,1981.
The inadvertent error which the clerk referred to and which was found by the court was in failing to place the Friday date on the summons. However, under the Supremе Court Rules the summons shall be dated on the date it is issued. (73 Ill. 2d R. 101; see also Ruffin v. Department of Transportation (1981),
Section 3 — 103 of thе Administrative Review Law appears to treat both the filing of the complaint and the issuance of the summons in the same manner. However, courts need not apply a statute literally, if to do sо would lead to results obviously not contemplated by the legislature. E.g., Zelkovich v. Industrial Com. (1956),
This leads us to the inquiry whether there is any reasonable purpose in requiring that the summons be issued within 35 days if the complaint is timely filed, as a jurisdictional matter. The Owner argues that the reason for a distinction is that the filing of the complaint is within the Owner’s control and thus that the filing of the complaint substantially supports the purpоse of the statute, to ensure prompt review of administrative disputes. There is a further rule of statutory construction that courts will “liberally construe a right to appeal so as to permit a сase to be considered on its merits.” (Glaseo Electric Co. v. Department of Revenue (1981),
Under section 2 — 201 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1981, ch. 110, par. 2 — 201), an action is “commenced” by the filing of a сomplaint, with the further provision that the clerk shall issue summons upon the request of the plaintiff. It would be reasonable to assume that the legislature intended, when it said in the Administrative Review Law that the action is “commenced” by the filing of the complaint and the issuance of summons, that a different intention was manifested. We conclude that the issuance of summons within the 35-day period was intended to be mаndatory and was for the purpose of insuring that the plaintiff could not unduly delay review. But analogizing from Glaseo we conclude that the issuance of the summons within the 35-day period was not intended to bе jurisdictional, but rather was stated to insure that there would not be the same kind of delay that would be possible after the filing of a complaint in other actions under the Code of Civil Procedure. If the same time frame is jurisdictional for both complaint and summons, the legislature, in practical terms, could be cutting down the time for filing the complaint, since it could not at all be certain that the cirсuit clerk could be forced to issue the summons immediately if for reasons inherent in the practical operation of the office it might not be able to do so on the same day in all circumstаnces.
We thus conclude that it is the legislature’s intention that if the complaint is filed within the 35-day period, and the plaintiff in good faith attempts to have the clerk issue summons within the same period, he is not deprived of his right to appeal on jurisdictional . grounds. (Cf. Hagy v. Allen (E.D. Ky. 1957),
Here, the plaintiff-owner, in good faith, sought issuance of summons in accordance with the mandatory provisions of the statute and advised the clerk of the time limitation. While, as defendant suggests, the Owner’s counsel could have prepared the summons himself, that would not hаve assured that the clerk would vary the practice and necessarily have issued it on the day the complaint was filed, the 35th day. Therefore the appeal is not barred.
The judgment of the circuit court of Winnebago County is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to proceed to the merits of the judicial review.
Reversed and remanded.
NASH and HOPE, JJ., concur.
