Perry v. Bozarth

198 Ill. 328 | Ill. | 1902

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

These appellees presented in the circuit court of McLean county a petition for a common law writ of certiorari ordering the appellant commissioners of highways of the town of Allin, Edgar Phillips, justice of the peace, and A. T. McReynolds, town clerk, also of said town of Allin, to bring before the court the record of the proceedings had and taken by said commissioners in which an order was entered by said commissioners laying out and establishing a certain new road in said town, (described in detail i.n the petition,) and vacating a certain other established road in said town, (also fully described.) The writ was issued as prayed and return thereto duly made by the appellants. The cause was heard by the court, and judgment entered finding that the proceedings for the vacation of the old road and the establishment of the new road were irregular and void, and adjudging that the order vacating the old road and that establishing the new road be each quashed, vacated and set aside. The appellant commissioners prosecuted their appeal to the Appellate Court for the Third District, and a judgment was entered in that court affirming the judgment of the circuit court. This is a further appeal attempted to be perfected to this court.

The interest acquired in the lands of others by proceedings taken by highway commissioners for the establishment of a public highway is a perpetual easement, and the right and interest of the highway commissioners, as the representatives of the public, in an established public highway, is a perpetual easement, and a perpetual easement in the lands of another is a freehold. (Chaplin v. Highway Comrs. 126 Ill. 264; Town of Brushy Mound v. McClintock, 146 id. 643; Waggeman v. Village of North Peoria, 160 id. 277; Village of Crete v. Hewes, 168 id. 330; Farrelly v. Town of Kane, 172 id. 415.) In the former of the cases cited, we held that the decisions in the cases of Lucan v. Cadwallader, 114 Ill. 285, and Eclchart v. Irons, id. 469, in which this court held that an easement in land did not constitute a freehold estate, were pronounced without sufficient consideration, and said: “A perpetual easement in lands, or any interest in lands in the nature of such easement, when created by grant or by any proceeding which, in law is equivalent to a grant, constitutes a freehold.” We further held in the same case that the Appellate Court was lacking in jurisdiction to entertain an appeal in a cause in which a perpetual easement in land was involved,- and reversed the judgment of the Appellate Court entered in the cause because it was so wanting in jurisdiction, and remanded the cause to the Appellate Court with directions to dismiss the appeal. In Town of Brushy Mound v. McClintock, supra, the town claimed a highway existed by prescription, and the appellee, who owned the fee in the land, disputed the existence of a highway. The cause came to the Appellate Court for the Third District, and that court dismissed the appeal for the reason the controversy involved a freehold. The town prosecuted an appeal from the judgment of dismissal to this court, and we held the decision of the cause involved the issue whether the public had the interest of a perpetual easement in a highway passing over appellee’s land, and'that that issue involved a freehold and that the appeal was properly dismissed by the Appellate Court. In Village of Crete v. Hewes, supra, the issue involved was whether the village of Crete had lost a portion of a street by abandonment, and we held the Appellate Court was without jurisdiction to entertain the appeal, and reversed its judgment for that reason and remanded the cause with directions to dismiss the appeal. Upon the authority of these adjudicated cases it is clear the" Appellate Court was without jurisdiction to entertain the appeal in the case at bar.

. In view of the phraseology of section 90 of the act to amend an act entitled “An act in regard to practice,” etc., approved June 2, 1877, being the section which now controls the matter of removal of cases from the Appellate Courts to the Supreme Court by appeal or writ of error, (being section 90 of the present Practice act,) it seems necessary we should consider the proper course to be pursued by this court when the Appellate Court entertains jurisdiction of a cause which involves a freehold and an appeal is prosecuted to this court from the judgment of the Appellate Court. Said section 90 provides that appeals may be taken from such Appellate Courts to the Supreme Court “in all criminal cases and in all cases where a franchise or freehold or the validity of a statute is involved,” etc. It here arises as a pertinent suggestion that the purpose of the phrase quoted from said section 90 is to authorize this court to entertain appeals from the Appellate Courts in cases which by design of the parties or by inadvertence were submitted to and determined in the Appellate Court, but in which a franchise, a freehold or the validity of a statute is involved. It is thought, also, section 11 of article 6 of the constitution of 1870, which authorized the creation of the Appellate Court, adds force to the suggestion. Said section 11 of article 6 of the constitution reads as follows: “After the year of our Lord 1874, inferior Appellate Courts, of uniform organization and jurisdiction, may be created in districts formed for that purpose, to which such appeals and writs of error as the General Assembly may provide may be prosecuted from circuit and other courts, and from which appeals and writs of error shall lie to the Supreme Court, in all criminal cases, and cases in which a franchise or freehold or the validity of a statute is involved, and in such other cases as may be provided by law.”

If said section 90 of the Practice act authorizes this court to entertain appeals from the Appellate Courts in cases acted upon in such courts in which a freehold, a franchise or the validity of a statute is involved, it will relieve this court of the by no means pleasant duty of saying to litigants whose controversies involve a franchise, a freehold or the validity of a statute, but who have by inadvertence appealed to the Appellate Court: “We would take jurisdiction of your case if you had prosecuted the appeal from the circuit coúrt directly to this court, but as you have carried your appeal to the Appellate Court we will require you to re-trace your steps throug'h the Appellate Court to the circuit court and return to this court by direct appeal from the trial court.” If, however, the Appellate Court be without jurisdiction of a case brought there by appeal, nothing but an express statute would justify this court in entertaining a further appeal removing the case from the Appellate Court to this court. Such practice, if indulged in this court, would subject successful suitors in the trial court to the delay and costs incident to the presentation of the case in the Appellate Court, and could be availed of by the defeated party for the mere purpose of delay and vexation of his adversary. A party who, upon a hearing in a trial court, has been found without a cause of action if the plaintiff, or to be in the wrong if the defendant, if he desires to have his case reviewed, should be required to take his appeal to or sue out his writ of error from the court which the law has invested with jurisdiction and power to hear and determine the controversy. Any other course would entail unnecessary delay to the party who had established his right in the trial court, and would subject him to the additional expense of defending the judgment which he had been adjudged entitled to hold, against the attacks of adversaries in a court which had no legal right or power to determine whether the judgment was correctly and legally entered or not.

The constitutional declaration that every person ought, under the law, to obtain justice and right “completely and without denial, promptly and without delay,” forbids any practice in the matter of entertaining appeals in this court which -would tend to enable one litigant to vex his adversary by adding delay and the burden of additional expense. If the defeated party in a case in which a franchise, a freehold or the validity of a statute is involved has a lawful right to but one appeal,— that to this court, — no action on the part of this court should be taken which would enable him to vex and wrong his adversary with the delay and additional expense consequent upon two appeals, — one to the Appellate Court and a second to this court. If, however, said section 90 of the Practice act, or the constitutional provision before referred to, gives the right of appeal to this court from the Appellate Court in such cases, we must, of course, entertain such appeals. But we do not think such is the meaning and effect of either the organic law or the statute in question. The constitutional authority to the legislature is broad enough to authorize the law-making power to invest the Appellate Court with jurisdiction to entertain and review cases in which a franchise, a freehold or the validity of a statute is involved, but it was the constitutional intent that if such power of review should be given the Appellate Court the action of such court in such cases should not be final, hence the provision in said section 11 of the constitution that appeals to and writs of error from the Supreme Court should lie from the decisions of the Appellate Courts in all such cases. That provisiou is but a limitation on the power of the legislature to invest the Appellate Courts with the power to finally decide cases of that character. Plainly stated, this section of the constitution authorized the legislature to create Appellate Courts and endow them with appellate jurisdiction in all cases, but makes it incumbent on the legislature, if authority is given the Appellate Courts to review criminal cases and cases in which a franchise or freehold or the validity of a statute is involved, to provide that such cases may be reviewed finally in the Supreme Court upon appeal or error.

On the 2d day of June, 1877, the General Assembly adopted the act establishing the Appellate Courts of the State and defining the jurisdiction of such courts, (Laws of 1877, p. 69,) and on the same day the General Assembly adopted an act amending the then existing Practice act and adding a number of sections thereto. (Laws of 1877, p. 148.) The amendatory sections thus added to the Practice act relate, in the main, to the mode and manner of obtaining the review of cases determined in the trial and Appellate Courts, and incidentally purported to affect the jurisdiction of the Appellate Courts. Section 8 of the Appellate Court act and such amendatory sections of the Practice act must therefore be construed together. (Young v. Stearns, 91 Ill. 221; Lynn v. Lynn, 160 id. 307.), Section 8 of the Appellate Court act denies to the Appellate Courts jurisdiction to review cases which involve a franchise, a freehold or the validity of a statute. Section 67 of the amendatory Practice act, as adopted in 1877, provided that “appeals from and writs of error to all circuit courts, the superior court of Cook county, and city courts, and from other courts from which such appeals and writs of error may be allowed by law, may be taken to the Appellate Courts from all final judgments, orders and decrees except as hereinafter stated.” Thereinafter, in section- 88 of the act, it was provided as follows: “Appeals from and writs of error to circuit courts, and the superior courts of Cook county, and city courts, in all criminal cases and cases in which a franchise or freehold or the validity -of a statute is involved, shall be taken directly to the Supreme Court in case the party appealing or prosecuting such writ of error shall so elect, excepting in cases of chancery.”

This section implies, at least, that an appeal from or writ of error to circuit courts and other trial courts shall be taken to the Appellate Courts unless the party who desires to appeal or prosecute the writ of error shall elect to proceed directly to the Supreme Court. Section 90 of the amendatory act of 1877 lends additional force to this implication. Said section 90 is as follows: “In all criminal cases and in all cases where a franchise or freehold, or the validity of a statute is involved, and in all other cases where the sum or value in the controversy shall exceed one thousand dollars ($1000) exclusive of costs, which shall be heard in any of the Appellate Courts, upon errors assigned, if the judgment of the Appellate Court be that the order, judgment or decree of the court below be affirmed, or if final judgment or decree be rendered therein in the Appellate Court, or if the judgment, order or decree of the Appellate Court be such that no further proceedings can be had in the court below, except to carry into effect the mandate of the Appellate Court, any party to such cause shall be permitted to remove the same to the Supreme Court by appeal or writ of error.”

This section was framed in view of section 88 of the same act, which, as before said, indicated that it was the legislative intent, in adopting the Practice act, that the Appellate Courts should have power to review cases involving a freehold, a franchise or the validity of a statute, unless the party desiring such review should elect that the case should be reviewed at once by the Supreme Court. Therefore section 90 was so framed as to authorize judgments rendered in the Appellate Courts in cases in which a freehold, a franchise or the validity of a statute was involved, to be reviewed in the Supreme Court on appeal or writ of error. Section 67 of the amendatory act of 1877 has not been amended or changed, but appears now as section 67 of our Practice act. Section 88 of the amendatory act was, however, amended at the session of the General Assembly in 1879, (Laws of 1879, p. 222,) and as amended and changed, (3 Starr & Cur. Stat. 1896, chap. 110, sec. 88, p. 3114,) constitutes the statutory authority for obtaining the review of judgments entered in the circuit courts, the superior court of Cook county or any city court, and it provides that in all cases in which a franchise or freehold or the validity of a statute is involved an appeal shall be taken directly to or the writ of error sued out of the Supreme Court. The amendment of said section 88 of the act of 1877 rendered the section consistent with the act of 1877 establishing the Appellate Court and defining its jurisdiction. But said section 90 of said act of 1877, which, as we have ’seen, was framed in view of the provisions of section 88 of the same act as originally adopted, and for that reason provided for the removal from the Appellate Courts to the Supreme Court, by appeal or writ of error, of all cases in which a freehold, a franchise or the validity of a statute was involved, has been retained in the body of our statute without change or amendment, and now appears as section 90 of the Practice act. (3 Starr & Cur. Stat. 1896, p. 3153.) The amendment and revision in 1879 of section 88 of the act of 1877, whereby all semblance of authority in the Appellate Courts to review cases involving a franchise, a freehold or the validity of a statute was removed by implication, operated to repeal the provisions of section 90 relating to the matter of the review in the Supreme Court of the judgments- entered in the Appellate Courts in cases involving a franchise, a freehold or the validity of a statute. All reason for such provisions in section 90 were removed by the amendment of section 88, and that amendment impliedly repealed such provisions in section 90. Hayward v. Gunn, 82 Ill. 385; Geisen v. Heiderich, 104 id. 537; 23 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, (1st ed.) 489.

The General Assembly has not conferred upon Appellate Courts jurisdiction of the subject matter of suits which involve a franchise, a freehold or the validity of a statute, and jurisdiction of the subject matter of a suit cannot be conferred, by consent of the parties, upon either a trial or Appellate Court. Ginn v. Rogers, 4 Gilm. 131; Fleischman v. Walker, 91 Ill. 318; Richards v. Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway Co. 124 id. 516; 17 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, (2d ed.) 1061.

The Appellate Court was without jurisdiction to decide the controversy in the case at bar and without authority to enter any judgment therein. We can take no other cpurse than that pursued in Chaplin v. Highway Comrs. supra, which, is to reverse the judgment so entered, for the reason the Appellate Court was wanting in jurisdiction to enter the same, and remand the cause to the Appellate Court with directions to dismiss the .appeal.

Reversed and remanded, with directions.

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