Hepler v. People ex rel. Wetz

226 Ill. 275 | Ill. | 1907

Mr. Justice Vickers

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellees having filed replications to the amended plea after a demurrer thereto had been overruled, the sufficiency of the plea stands admitted upon the record. (Peck v. Boggess, 1 Scam. 281; People ex rel. v. Gary, 196 Ill. 310.) None of the replications purported to reply to all the facts set up in the plea, nor do all of the replications, when considered together, put in issue every material fact set up in the plea. All material facts set out in the plea and not specifically traversed by the replications, or some one of them, are admitted, and appellants were not required to offer proof in support of such undenied averments. Launtz v. People, 113 Ill. 137.

The questions arising on the record require a consideration of the rulings of the trial court in sustaining objections to defendants’ evidence and in directing a verdict of guilty.

Appellants introduced the clerk of Reading township to identify the book of records of the drainage district, and then offered the book itself. The book was objected to and a large number of special objections pointed out. The objections were in the main sustained, and this ruling is assigned as error. It will not be necessary to examine these objections in detail. Many of them were frivolous and all of them were more technical than substantial.

It appears from the evidence of the clerk and an examination of the original book, which has been certified to this court for inspection, that the method pursued in keeping the book of records was to make pencil notes of the proceedings of the board at the time a meeting was being held, and after-wards these original notes were turned over to the attorney for the drainage district, who wrote out the formal orders and proceedings on a typewriter, on legal-cap paper, and that these typewritten copies were pasted in the record book after being signed by the clerk. The clerk testified that he personally pasted the sheets in the book or was present and assisted the attorney in doing so, and that the attorney did nothing in connection with the making up or keeping of the record except at the request of the clerk. It is strenuously contended by appellees that this method of keeping the record is not a compliance with the statute, and the court below sustained this contention. In this the trial court erred. It is true, the statute provides that the clerk of the town shall be the clerk of the drainage commissioners of his town, and that he shall be the custodian of all papers and records pertaining to drainage .matters in his town, and shall keep a well-bound book, to be known as the “Drainage record,” in which he shall record the proceedings of the commissioners and enter at length therein all the orders and findings of the commissioners pertaining to the subject of drainage. (2 Starr & Cur. Stat. sec. 2, p. 1537.) We are not prepared to say that there is any language in this statute that implies that the clerk must with his own hand write out the findings and orders of the commissioners on this record. The essential thing is, that a record shall be kept by the clerk which will show accurately what findings and orders were made.

We are constrained to believe that appellees have misconceived the scope of the remedy here invoked. This information is not a writ of error sued out to the drainage commissioners to purge their records of mere mistakes and errors. It is a high prerogative writ, and theoretically, at least, issues from the sovereign to the defendants, calling on them to show by what right they assume to exercise the powers and franchises which can only proceed from the sovereign. If the power exists and is being exercised within legal limitations this must satisfy the State. If in the execution of powers granted errors are committed, the law affords a remedy to a party who is injured thereby. In such case the law interposes to redress a private right or correct a private wrong, whereas in quo zmrranto the State or public intervenes to inquire whether the person or body assuming to exercise powers and franchises derived from the sovereign in fact has such powers, or, having had such powers, whether the State has the right to declare them forfeited for non-user or mis-user or other illegal or ultra vires conduct amounting to a serious violation of the implied condition upon which such power was granted. The power to exercise an office or a franchise may exist yet in the exercise of the powers errors of judgment and mistakes may be made, but this will not ordinarily justify a judgment of ouster and a total denial of the right to act at all. If this rule prevailed it would be destructive of the ends of government in creating all corporations, public and private, and would compel all judicial and quasi judicial officers to surrender their official authority unless they were able to exercise their functions without committing error. It is not mere errors or irregularities with which this proceeding is concerned. It is matters of substance, rather than form, which must govern the decision, except wherein the law has made a mandatory requirement as to some' particular form. Whether the “drainage record” is written in longhand, printed or typewritten, so long as it is there in a permanent, readable form, cannot make the slightest difference in its adaptability to serve the purpose contemplated by the legislature in requiring such record to be kept.

We have been favored with an argument to show the danger of sheets of paper merely pasted in with mucilage becoming detached with moisture, and the facility with which one sheet might be detached and another pasted in its place containing different matter. All this is well enough as a matter of academic discussion, but it fails to show any reason for a judgment of ouster against defendants. The destruction of a part, or even all, of the records of a corporation by accident could have no effect on the legal existence of the body, and the fact that the defendants may have selected a book the material and binding of which or the character of entries made therein were léss likely to withstand the ravages of the elements than some other that might have been selected, is only an exhibition of a slight delinquency in judgment in a matter about which they must be held to have a wide discretion, which this court will not review.

Another objection pointed out specifically to the record relates to the date when the clerk certified that notices were posted. As originally written up, the certificate of the clerk stated erroneously that he posted the notices on the 19th day of August, 1904. The true date when he posted the notices was the 18th day of August. When the mistake was discovered the clerk corrected the certificate to make it conform to the facts. This, it is insisted, affords a reason for rejecting the record of the certificate. In this we cannot concur. The cleric had the right, and it was his duty, to correct the record to make it speak the truth. But aside from this, the certificate of the clerk is not the only evidence that the court could hear on the question as to when and where the notices were posted. It seems to be assumed in the argument that the certificate of the clerk as to the date of posting is the only proof that could be heard on these questions and that such certificate could not be amended. The statute does not require the making of such certificate, and in the absence of such requirement it may well be doubted whether it would be proper evidence of the posting if objected to for that reason. But however this may be, if the clerk had the power to make- the certificate in the first place, and he inadvertently wrote the 19th when he should have written the 18th, he had the right to correct it. Here, as elsewhere in the proceeding, substance should not be sacrificed to a shadowy form. The essence of the inquiry was, were the notices posted for the time required by and in substantial compliance with the statute? The uncontradicted evidence shows, outside of the entry in the record, that the notices were posted on the 18th of August and that the meeting in pursuance thereof was held on the 26th of August, which is within the requirements of the statute.

Appellants offered to prove by the clerk where he posted, the notices, but upon objection this evidence was kept out. Appellees cannot be heard to say that the evidence failed to show that the notices were posted “in or near” the drainage district, since by the objections made appellants were not permitted to make this proof.

Numerous other objections were made to the record, all of which are equally as unsubstantial and wanting in merit as those discussed.

The plea of the defendants showed a clear right and title in defendants to exercise the office of drainage commissioners and that the district was properly organized under the statute, and the record offered in evidence, which, as we have seen, was kept in substantial compliance with the statute, was competent as tending to prove the material averments of the plea that were in issue.. The trial court therefore erred in excluding this record and in directing a verdict of guilty, for which the judgment below must be reversed and the cause remanded.

Reversed and remanded.

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