THE PEOPLE ex rel. Slavko BRZICA et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
VILLAGE OF LAKE BARRINGTON, a Municipal Corporation, Defendant-Appellee.
Appellate Court of Illinois, Second District.
*67 Howard R. Teegen, Soffietti, Johnson, Teegen & Phillips, Ltd., Fox Lake, for Mary Brzica, Slavko Brzica.
James P. Bateman, Barrington, for Village of Lake Barrington.
Justice COLWELL delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiffs, Slavko and Mary Brzica, appeal from the circuit court's order of December 7, 1993, granting the motion of defendant, the Village of Lake Barrington, to dismiss their petition for leave to file a quo warranto complaint. Plaintiffs' petition sought to have the defendant's annexation of certain property declared null or void because the underlying petition filed during the annexation proceeding (case No. 92-MC-12) was not signed by the requisite majority of owners of the territory in question contrary to the statutory requirements of the Illinois Municipal *68 Code (Code) (65 ILCS 5/7-1-2 (West 1992)). The petition for leave to file a complaint quo warranto was filed on October 6, 1993, within the one-yеar limitations period after the annexation was completed by an ordinance adopted October 6, 1993. (See 65 ILCS 5/7-1-46 (West 1992).) Notice of the quo warranto proceeding was given to the State (which is not an active party to the action or appeal).
In granting defеndant's motion, the trial court found that the court in the annexation proceeding (annexation court) had jurisdiction to enter the order approving the annexation petition and that any challenge to that order should have been by direct appeal. Relying on People ex rel. Town of Richwoods v. City of Peoria (1967),
Defendant argues here, as it did below, that quo warranto was not an available remedy to attack the validity of an annexation ordinance premised on a prior court order finding the annexation petition vаlid because, as Richwoods concluded, a judicially sanctioned annexation differs from an annexation instituted purely by the legislative action of a municipality. (See Richwoods,
The рrinciple that statutory subject-matter jurisdiction may arise from statutory conditions precedent to a court's exercise of its power, we believe, is still alive and well in Illinois even though circuit courts derive their plenary power to adjudicate "justiciable matters" from the constitution generally. (Ill.Const.1970, art. VI, § 9.) Though the legislature has no power to limit a court's constitutional jurisdiction to hear a matter, an exception exists when the legislature creates a statutory right having no counterpart in common law or equity. In such a сase, the legislature is not limiting or precluding the court's jurisdiction, but is merely defining the justiciable matter it has created so that certain facts must exist before a court can act in a particular case (Skilling v. Skilling (1982),
Jurisdiction in a particular case involves not only the power to hear and determine *69 a given case but also the power to grant the particular relief requested, and every act of the court beyond its jurisdiction is void. (J.L. Simmons Co. v. Capital Development Board (1981),
The right of annexation by a municipality did not exist at common law (Scheuer v. Johns-Manville Products Corp. (1946),
It is well settled that jurisdictional defects can be raised anytime in purely statutory proceedings of this type, even where an objector did not timely object before the entry of judgment. (In re Carol Stream Fire Protection District (1977),
Quo warranto is an extrаordinary proceeding, prerogative in nature, addressed to preventing a continued exercise of authority unlawfully asserted which may be initiated by a citizen who shows the requisite invasion of a personal interest in the matter; the court in its discretion considers а number of factors when deciding whether to grant leave to file such a complaint. (People ex rel. Village of Long Grove v. Village of Buffalo Grove (1987),
Quo warranto is the only means of challenging a completed annexation of territory by a municipality. (In re Petition of Village of Kildeer to Annex Certain Territory (1988),
If a judgment sanctioning annexation has been entered because of fraud or lack of proper notice, or if, in fact, the court did not have before it a petition meeting the statutory subject-matter requirements, how else could a plaintiff properly challеnge the order and subsequent annexation if not by proceeding in quo warranto? Our review of the above authorities, as well as the history and uses of quo warranto, persuades us that the trial court erred in finding that the only remedy for plaintiffs' challenge to the validity of the annexation was by direct aрpeal and that quo warranto was not an available remedy. Plaintiffs were not parties to the original annexation proceeding. Since quo warranto is the exclusive remedy to challenge the validity of a completed municipal annexation and it is a limited remedy, plaintiffs should nоt be completely foreclosed from this remedy merely because they were not objectors in the original proceeding. A void judgment may be attacked at any time by proper application to the court, and due diligence in resisting the entry of such a judgment is not ordinarily a prerequisite. (Evans,
As defendant has pointed out, the Richwoods decision determined that a proceeding in quo warranto must not be used to collaterally attack a judicial determination where there was a means of direct review, but it should be limited to a direct attack upon the validity of a municipal annexation based solely on legislative action such as by the passing of an ordinance. (Richwoods,
Defendant has not provided us with a compelling reason to differentiate between an attack on the jurisdictional basis of a purely legislative annexation and an attack on the jurisdictional basis of a court-sanctioned annexation. The fact that a judgment in an annexation case is final and appealable should not serve to vitiate the well-established rule that a void judgment may be attacked directly or collaterally in any court at any time so long as the party is properly before the court. That rule allows courts to protect their integrity, to guard against fraud, and to prevent or correct the entry of judgments made, in fact, without authority. Courts must have sufficient means to protect their process. We believe that the elimination of the quo warranto remedy, under the circumstances presented, would have the opposite effect. Finally, we also disagree with defendant's suggestion that jurisdictional defects can be collaterally challenged only if they clearly appeаr on the record.
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the trial court should have proceeded to consider on the merits plaintiffs' petition for leave to file a complaint quo warranto. It was error for the court to dismiss the petition on the authority of Richwoods as opposed to that of Jordan.
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with the views expressed herein.
Reversed and remanded.
BOWMAN and DOYLE, JJ., concur.
