People ex rel. Parker v. Burns

212 Ill. 227 | Ill. | 1904

Mr. Justice Wilkin

delivered the opinion of the court:

The drainage district in question was organized, or attempted to be organized, under section 11 of chapter 42 of our statutes. (Hurd’s Stat. 1903, p. 740.) It is a well settled rule of practice applicable to this action, that defendants must either disclaim the office which they are charged with usurping or they must justify, and that if they justify they must show on the face of their plea that they have title to the office. The seventh amended plea, to which relator’s demurrer was overruled, is a plea of justification, and if the ruling of the court upon the demurrer thereto was proper, its judgment must be affirmed. It is true that no disposition seems to have been made of the five additional pleas; but no question is here made as to that fact, and, as above stated, the judgment was upon the demurrer to the sixth and seventh pleas.

Counsel for plaintiff in error say: “The real question presented by the record is, are the pleas of the defendants in error good on demurrer ?” etc. In the view we take of that question it will be unnecessary to consider or decide the many other points raised in the argument of counsel for the defendants in error, our conclusion being that the demurrer to the seventh plea was properly overruled. Counsel for the relator assume that that plea did not allege that the petition to the commissioners for the formation of the drainage district was signed by a majority in number of the adult owners of lands lying in the proposed district, and that they owned, in the aggregate, more than one-third of the lands lying therein, or by the owners of the major part of the lands and who constitute one-third or more of the owners of lands therein. Their construction of that plea is, that those facts are only alleged to" have been found by the commissioners and do not appear by direct allegation, and they say the plea simply recites “the finding of the commissioners that the petition contained the signatures of a majority of the adult persons owning lands in the proposed district,” etc. We do not agree with this construction of the plea. As appears from the abstract filed by plaintiff in error himself, (there being an additional abstract by the defendants in error,) “amended plea No. 7 alleges that upon October 11, 1898, there was presented to and filed with the town clerk of the town of Harmon, in said county, a petition addressed to the drainage commissioners of said town, signed by John Gorman and other land owners in said proposed district, representing, among other things, that they desired that a drainage district might be organized, embracing the lands therein described, for the purpose of constructing, repairing and maintaining drains, embankments and grades within said district for agricultural and sanitary purposes, by special assessment upon the property benefited thereby; that the lands lying within the boundaries of said proposed district required a combined system of drainage and protection from wash and overflow, and that said petition was signed by a majority in number of the adult owners of lands lying in said proposed district, and that they are the owners, in the aggregate, of more than one-third of the lands lying in the proposed district, and by the owners of a major part of the lands, and who constitute one-third, or more than one-third, of the owners of the lands in the proposed district, and praying that the said drainage commissioners would proceed and cause said drainage district to be organized.” The abstract also shows that the plea set out the various steps taken by the land owners and the commissioners, as provided by the statute, in the organization of the district. It will thus be seen the plea does allege the petition was signed by the requisite number of land owners, as required by section n of the statute. It further alleges that on October n, 1898, the town clerk notified the commissioners of the filing of said petition, posted notices, etc., as required by section 12, and that a meeting of the commissioners would be held at his office on the 20th day of October following, for the purpose of organizing the district. It then recites that on the latter date, (October 20,) in pursuance of said notice, the commissioners met at the town clerk’s office for the purpose of considering the petition and for a hearing of the matters involved therein; “that the town clerk laid before the commissioners the petition, which was alleged to be signed by the required number of land owners, as provided by law,” and then follows the allegation: “And the said commissioners did examine and consider the papers laid before them and did hear the evidence of the witnesses produced before them and the affidavit of two of the petitioners who were credible persons, and became satisfied in the premise's that all the statements in said petition were true, did so find and did find in favor of said petition, and did reduce their finding to writing, and did sign and seal the same and file their said finding with the said town clerk, with the other papers in the case.” In other words, the plea, on its face, alleges that the petition was signed by the required number of land owners in the proposed district, and that upon the hearing, as provided in section 13 of the act, the commissioners found that allegation to be true.

We are unable to perceive upon what theory the objection to the seventh plea can be sustained and it held insufficient as a plea of justification. It may.be conceded that if the plea showed nothing but the finding of the commissioners as to the number of land owners who signed the petition it would be bad on demurrer as a plea of justification, because it would then be simply a finding unsupported by allegation, in which case the authorities cited by counsel in their argument would be in point; but, as before stated, this plea is not subject to that objection, and we think the court below properly overruled the demurrer thereto.

The sixth plea sets out the various steps in the organization of the district as in the seventh, and then alleges that the relator, W. D. Parker, was present at some of the meetings held by the drainage commissioners and acquiesced in their proceedings to such an extent that he is estopped from maintaining this action questioning the legality of the organization of the district, the theory of the plea being, that this proceeding is no't for the benefit of the public but for that of the relator, individually. The information is in the name of the People of the State of ..Illinois, filed by the State’s attorney, on the relation, etc. The public at large is therefore, upon the face of the information, interested in the drainage district, it being a public corporation. (Payson v. People, 175 Ill. 267.) The Attorney General or State’s attorney may file an information on behalf of the People where the interests of the public are involved, and lapse of time constitutes no bar to such a proceeding. The doctrine of estoppel does not apply to a matter in the nature of a public right, and the State is not embraced .within the Statute of Limitations unless specially named, and, by analogy, does not fall within the doctrine of estoppel. (People v. Gary, 196 Ill. 310.) In the organization of the district in question the public was interested, and could not be estopped from filing an information to question the legality of its organization merely because of the individual conduct of the relator, and, as we have seen, there is nothing in the record to show that the information as filed was for the private and exclusive benefit of the relator.

We aré of the opinion, therefore, that the demurrer to the sixth amended plea should have been sustained. The seventh plea, however, as a plea of justification, being sufficient, the overruling of the demurrer to the sixth worked no injury to the relator.

The judgment of the circuit court must therefore be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.