Town of Woo-Sung v. People ex rel. Swett

Mr. Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The information in this case is in the nature of a quo ivarranto, and charges defendants, without any legal warrant, grant or right whatever, with having usurped, used and exercised the functions of the several offices, respectively, held by them, in the pretended town of Woo-Sung. There is no pretense these several defendants were not legally elected or appointed to the several offices the duties of .which they are charged with exercising, but the charge is, their holding of such offices is unlawful, because the town of Woo-Sung was never legally created by the board of supervisors, and consequently no such offices exist by law. If it shall be ascertained the town of Woo-Sung was legally created or established, no question is made against the right of defendants to hold the several offices, the functions of which they have assumed to exercise.

To the information which charges the town of Woo-Sung Avas not legally created by the board of supervisors, defendants made answer, setting forth with sufficient definiteness all that was done by the board and others concerning the establishing and creating such town. A demurrer was sustained to the answer, and defendants electing to stand by their ansAver, judgment of ouster was pronounced. by the court, and a fine of one cent was imposed on each defendant, together with costs of suit. Defendants bring the case to this court on appeal.

The.sufficiency of the answer is called in question because it does not show, first, that notice of the application for the division of the town of Buffalo was given by the county clerk or by the board of supervisors, or was ordered by the board to be given, before the final action of the board on the • application to have a new town established; and second, that notice was given hy the county clerk that the question of dividing the town of Buffalo would”be submitted to the legal voters of the town, nor that any consent to the division of the town was given by a majority of all the electors voting at a general election prior to the final action of the board dividing the town, or at any other time. Negatively, it is said the organization of the town of Woó-Sung was illegal because the notice that was in fact given was not that which the law requires to be given, before the board could rightfully act in the premises. Mainly upon the determination of these propositions the decision hinges.

Narrowing the discussion to the principal questions raised, the sufficiency of the notice will be first considered. Section 1, article 3, of the act concerning township organization, in force March 4, 1874, confers on the county board of each county full power and jurisdiction to alter the boundaries of towns, to change town lines, and to divide, enlarge and create new towns, to suit the convenience of the inhabitants residing therein; but no new town shall be created, under the provisions of the act, of less territory than seventeen square miles, nor unless there shall' be at least fifty legal voters residing in such new town, nor unless at least twenty of the legal voters of such town shall petition for such alteration; nor shall any new town be made, or any town divided, or the boundaries of any town changed by the county board, without notice 'thereof having been given by posting up notices in not less-than five of the most public places of the town interested, or if several towns are interested, in each of them, at least sixty days before final action of the board, and also by publishing such notice at least three times in some newspaper published in the county where the towns are situated, if any shall be published therein.

It will be noted, the answer shows the new towns, when created, would be composed of a territory, in excess of seventeen square miles, would have the requisite population, and that everything the statute requires to be done to legally create the new town was in fact done, as the parties acting understood the requirements of the statute. The sufficiency of the answer, except in the two particulars first noticed, seems to be conceded. It is said the notice required by the statute to be given before final action on the part of the board, should have been given by the county clerk, or at least the board should have ordered notice to have been given of the presentation of the petition, and of the proposed action. It would seem to be a sufficient answer to the position taken, that the statute has not required notice' to be given in that way. The county ■ clerk is not required by any law to give any notice in such cases, nor has the statute made it the duty of the county board to give any notice of the action proposed to be taken. It is a misapprehension to suppose the case of Clark v. Robinson, 88 Ill. 498, establishes the proposition that the board of supervisors only can create a new town after it has given the notice required by the section of the statute cited. No such question is discussed in that case, and what was said in that case in reference to the notice' required to be given, has no reference to the point now being considered. The notice given in this case was not signed by any one, and that, it is said, is a fatal defect. By whom should it be signed ? Upon this question the statute is silent. It is not made the duty of any one to sign such notice, and unless the statute requires it to be signed by some one, it can not be necessary it should be done. The notice given conforms exactly to the form given by Mr. Haines in his valuable ■work on Township Organization, and is no doubt the form commonly in use throughout the State.

In The People v. Carpenter, 24 N. Y. 86, a statute very much like the one under consideration received a construction. An objection the notice required to be given was not signed by the freeholders whose names were appended to the petition, was held to be untenable, for the obvious reason the statute did not require the notice should be signed by such freeholders. That is precisely the case here, and the usual practice seems to conform to the statute in that particular. It was no valid objection to the notice given in this case it was not signed by any one. It was good without signatures, for the reason the statute has not required any to be attached.

It remains to consider the other objection taken to the sufficiency of the answer. The position taken is, that notice should have been given by the county clerk that the question • of dividing the town of Buffalo would be submitted to the legal voters of the town, and as no consent to the division of the town was given by a majority of all the electors voting at a general election prior to the action of the county board, or at any other time, the action of the board in creating the. town of Woo-Sung was illegal. No warrant for the proposition insisted upon is to be found in any statute of this State. Attention is directed to that clause of section 1, article 3, which provides no “incorporated town” shall be divided except consent thereto is given by a majority of all the electors voting at a general annual election in such town, after notice given by the county clerk such question would be submitted, as sustaining the position taken. A conclusive and most satisfactory answer to this view of the law is, the words “incorporated toivn” have no reference to towns like the town of Buffalo, created under township organization laws. This court has expressly decided in Harris v. Schryock, 82 Ill. 119, the words “said town, ” employed in reference to the election and notice, as used in the proviso to the section cited, must be held to apply to an incorporated town or village. The town of Buffalo is a town under township organization, and not an “incorporated toion, ” in the sense those words are used in the statute, and hence no election was required to be held to give the consent of the electors to the proposed action o'f the board to divide the town. The case of Harris v. Schryock is conclusive of this question, and must control, and it will not be necessary to discuss the point made as a new question in this court. The former construction given to the statute in this particular is correct, and no reason is perceived for departing from it.

The answer of defendants shows the town of Woo-Sung was legally created, and as the offices they assumed to hold existed by law, they may rightfully perform the duties attached to such offices. The demurrer was improperly sustained, and the judgment of the circuit court will he reversed, and thq cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.

Judgment reversed.