delivered the opinion of the court:
This аppeal arises from a proceeding under the Administrative Review Act. Plaintiffs, holders of a local liquоr license, filed a complaint to review the findings and order of the License Appeal Commission of thе City of Chicago which sustained revocation of their license. The record discloses that the license was revoked on December 15, 1967. On December 26 plaintiffs appealed the revocation ordеr. The order sustaining the Local Liquor Control Commissioner was entered February 27, 1968. After reviewing the proceedings, the trial court reversed the License Appeal Commission because the findings were “[a]gainst the manifеst weight of the evidence” and the order of revocation is “[n]ot supported by the record taken аs a whole.”
In urging reversal here, defendants present two issues, both questioning the correctness of the judgment below. Plaintiffs, on the other hand, raise for the first time the issue whether the License Appeal Commission lost jurisdiction of the subject matter before it when it did not sustain or reverse within twenty days of plaintiffs’ appeal. Becаuse the resolution we make of it is dispositive of defendants’ appeal, we discuss only this issue.
Ill. Rev. Stat. 1967, ch. 43, par. 153 which gives the right of appeal from orders of the local liquor control commissioner providеs, in pertinent part, that “Within 20 days after the filing of such appeal, the license appeal commission shall render its decision in accordance with the provisions of section 5 of this Article.” Section 5 referred to is section 149 of chapter 43. This section, in the part pertinent here, provides that “Within 20 days after the filing of such appeal the license appeal commission shall render a decision sustaining or reversing the order of the local liquor control commissioner.” This language, plaintiffs argue, makes it mandatory that the license appeal commission either sustain or reverse the local liquor control сommissioner within twenty days after an appeal is filed, or the acts done will be invalid. (See Zbinden v. Bond Co. Schоol Dist.,
It is settled doctrine, however, that although an appellant waives a point not raised in the trial court, an appellee may urge any point in support of the judgment on appeal even though it was not ruled on in the trial court, as long as it finds support in the record. (Shaw v. Lorenz,
Plaintiffs rely on Johnkol, Inc. v. License Appeal Com.,
In the Johnkol opinion the Supreme Court first distinguished Corrigan, pointed out that the legislature, in 1961, amended chapter 43, section 149, and then said, “The language of the statutory time limitation [the requirement that a decision be rendered within 20 days] is mandatory, and while the consequence of loss of jurisdiction for noncompliance is not explicitly stated, the lеgislative purpose is unmistakable when the amendment is read in the light of the decisions which immediately preсeded its enactment. We hold, therefore, that by its failure to render a decision within the period limited by the statute, the License Appeal Commission lost jurisdiction to affirm the order of the Local Liquor Control Commissiоner.” (
Judgment affirmed.
DEMPSEY, P. J., and McNAMARA, J., concur.
