dissenting:
The entire petition filed with the town clerk never appeared in the proceedings in the court below or in the record in this court, and there is no warrant for the assumption in the foregoing opinion that such petition was made a part of the petition for mandamus and showed, prima facie, a compliance with the statute. The petition for mandamus states “that the form of each sheet or page of said petition [filed with the clerk] is in substance the same as a copy of one of the pages of said petition hereto attached and marked ‘Exhibit A.’ ” Said exhibit contains 20 names out of a total of over 900 voters alleged to have signed the petition, and so far as showing a valid petition filed with the respondent, the town clerk, which ought to be considered by the court as a foundation of the right to the writ of mandamus, there is nothing except the averments and conclusions of the petitioners to show a compliance with the statute. The question of the jurisdiction of this court was specifically raised by a motion filed at the June term to transfer the cause to the Appellate Court for the Second District, which motion was considered and denied. The decision in Scown v. Czarnecki, 264 Ill. 305, had not then been rendered, and as the constitutionality of the act granting the right of suffrage to women was raised by plaintiff in error’s answer, the writ of error was properly sued out of this court. Diets v. Big Muddy Coal Co. 263 Ill. 480.
When the petition for mandamus was filed the respondent demurred to the sufficiency thereof. This demurrer was not overruled by the court, as stated in the foregoing opinion, but, on the contrary, the petitioners confessed the demurrer by taking leave to amend and amending the petition for mandamus. The respondent then filed pleas in which he traversed the allegations of the petition, which he had a right to do. Mandamus is an action at law. The respondent may demur or traverse the allegations of the petition or he may confess and avoid, setting up other facts showing that he is under no obligation to perform the act. This is elementary and has always been held by this court to be the law in this State. (People v. Salomon, 46 Ill. 333; People v. Holden, 91 id. 446; Chicago and Alton Railroad Co. v. Suffern, 129 id. 274; Mayor of Roadhouse v. Briggs, 194 id. 435.) The authorities cited in the foregoing opinion do not sustain the position there taken. In Town of Somonauk v. People, 178 Ill. 631, this court held that while the duties of a county board on a petition to divide a town were ministerial, it further held that the county board had the power to determine whether a petition to divide a town is signed by the requisite number of voters and whether the statutory requirements as to territory, etc., are satisfied. In that- case it was said: “The only functions of the board are to determine, before taking, action, whether the petition bears the signatures of the necessary number of qualified petitioners; that the territory to'be erected into a new town is of the requisite area; that the disconnection thereof does not reduce the area of the dismembered town below the statutory requirement; to give the notices required by the statute that the petition is pending before it for action, and to grant the prayer'of the petition if the requirements of the statute have been observed and fulfilled. * * * Transcripts of the record of the proceedings of the board, which were attached to the petition as exhibits thereto, disclosed that a committee, composed of members of the board appointed by the board for the purpose, verified the authenticity of the signatures of legal voters to the petition and ascertained the number thereof, and also the number of legal voters residing in the territory of the proposed new town, and made report thereof to the board, and it thus further appeared the names of three-fourths of said voters were subscribed to the petition. The determination of this preliminary fact, though it involved the exercise of judgment on the. part of the board and its members, was but a finding as to the existence of a fact necessary to be known to the board itself in order to determine whether a state of case existed calling upon it to act. Acts of that character are ministerial—not jtidal—in nature, and, if necessary, their determination, or the action taken upon them, may be reviewed and controlled by the writ of mandamus.—Merrill on Mandamus, sec. 44; 19 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 479.” In 38 Cyc. 612, cited in the majority opinion, it is stated: “The judgment of the officer to whom the application is addressed is conclusive as to the qualifications of the petitioners,”—citing State v. Lime, 23 Minn 521, which was a mandamus suit to compel the execution and delivery of certain bonds of the town of Lime issued pursuant to' a vote of the voters of said town at a special town meeting. It was claimed that the written statement filed with the town clerk under the laws of Minnesota, requesting a town meeting to be called, though purporting, on its face, to be regular and to be signed by the requisite number of freeholders of the? town, did not, in fact, contain such number. The court held that when a written statement is duly filed under the Minnesota law for a special town meeting, the question whether the persons subscribing such statement as freeholders are legally such, in fact, is one for the town clerk to determine prior to giving notice of the meeting. As stated in the opinion: “The power to call a special town meeting is vested by the statute solely with the town clerk. Upon that •officer the duty is imposed of making a call whenever the requisite written statement provided by section 16 is. filed in his office. Whether it is such a statement as is therein provided is a matter alone for him to determine, in the honest exercise of his best judgment upon the information before him and such as may lawfully be presumed to be within his reach and possession. The statute, doubtless, selected him as the most fit person to be entrusted with the exercise of this power, because his official relations with the town and its citizens are necessarily such as would likely well qualify him for an intelligent and impartial discharge of the duty imposed.” A similar question was considered by this court in the case of People v. Logan County, 45 Ill. 162, which was a mandamus suit to compel the board of supervisors of Logan county to submit to the voters of that county the proposition of subscribing stock in a railroad company and issuing bonds in payment therefor under a statute then in force which provided that upon a petition being filed with the board of supervisors, signed by 200 legal voters of the county, requesting the' submission of such proposition to the voters of the county, the county board should submit such proposition at the next ensuing election. In the opinion in that case the court said: “The petition being signed by the requisite number of names purporting to be legal voters of the county, the board would have been authorized to act upon it as genuine and what it purported to be. Or they might have required proof, if they desired it, before making the order submitting the question.” In State v. Eureka County, 8 Nev. 309, where the statute required the board of commissioners to- call an election for county officers when a certain number of qualified electors of the county petitioned therefor, it was held that the questions whether the necessary number of electors had petitioned and whether they were qualified electors must be determined by the commissioners acting judicially, and, therefore, mandamus would not lie to compel them to call an election. To hold that a clerk is obliged to- act upon any list of names that may happen to be presented,—a petition that is forged or one signed by aliens, non-residents, minors, and others who are known to the officer not to- be legal voters,—is simply to open the door to fraud and destroy the intent and effect of the law. The Local Option statute provides that such petition shall only be prima facie evidence that the signatures, statements and residence and dates upon such petition are genuine and true and that the persons signing the peti-. tion are legal voters of the political subdivision named. The decision of this court takes the words “prima facie” out of the statute and substitutes in their place the word “conclusive.” Any person interested can file a petition for mandamus to prevent submitting the question to a vote or printing the same on the ballots, and in such case the issue is formed by demurrer or answer or proper pleas as to whether or not the petition is valid and meets the statutory requirements and whether or not it has been properly and lawfully signed by one-fourth of the legal voters, and such has been the common practice. It would seem to- make no difference how the issue is presented if the issue is, iii fact, presented whether or not the petition has been ¿dually signed by the requisite number of legal voters. If a clerk has unlawfully entertained a petition which is not so signed, or if a clerk has refused to entertain a petition that has been signed by the requisite number, in either .case the issue is the same and should be tried accordingly.
The pleas or answer averred that 426 of the signers of the petition to the town clerk were women and were not legal voters. At that time the question was pending in this court as to- whether the Women’s Suffrage act of 1913, by which the right had been extended to women to vote for certain statutory officers and on certain propositions, was constitutional. The respondent had a perfect right to raise that question and have it decided. Had the petition for mandamus alleged the fact that the women signers were necessary to make up one-fourth of the total number of votes the point could have been properly raised by demurrer. Under the allegation that they were legal voters it was properly raised by plea or answer. The pleas or answer in the case at bar set up-, besides the matters of defense stated in the opinion, that 221 names appear on said petition of whom there was no statement, under oath, that they were legal voters; that 113 signers did not sign under their right names; that on pages 20- and 21 of the petition the oath of the person procuring the names was made before a person who did not designate in what capacity he administered the oath; that on page 48 of the petition there is no date showing in what year the person procuring the names made oath to their signatures; that on eleven pages of the petition it appeared that the persons whose names appeared thereon did not sign said petition in their own proper persons, only, as required by law, but that their signatures on the petition were written there by some persons other than the persons whose names appeared thereon and the writing in of such names by others was contrary to law, and that all of' said foregoing names could not be considered by the respondent in determining whether the said petition contained not less in number than one-fourth of the total vote cast at the last preceding election. The relators demurred to these pleas. If the pleas stated the truth,—and the demurrer admits they do state the truth,—then there were upwards of 600 names, as appears from the petition itself, that should not have been counted under the law, and with these names out, irrespective of the right of women to sign, the petition did not contain the names of one-fourth the legal voters of the town. The court sustained the demurrer and ordered the respondent to comply with the prayer of the petition for mandamus and cause to be printed on the ballots at the ensuing election the proposition as prayed. The respondent duly excepted to the ruling of the court and prayed an appeal. The appeal was denied by the court notwithstanding the provision of the statute of this State on mandamus that “appeals and writs of error may be taken and prosecuted in the same manner, upon the same terms, and with like effect as in other civil cases.” (Hurd’s Stat. 1913, chap. 87, sec. 10.) The respondent had a clear right of appeal, and it was error in the court to deny that right. Highway Comrs. v. Drainage Comrs. 257 Ill. 25; People v. Deneen, 201 id. 452.
The pleas set up facts which show that the alleged petition, on its face, did not comply with the law and that no legal petition had been filed. As to the truth of the matters set up- by these pleas, that could only be determined from an inspection of the petition alleged to' have been filed with the respondent as town clerk. In the case of People v. Wanek, 241 Ill. 529, this court held squarely that the filing of a proper petition under the Local Option law was ■jurisdictional, and that the town clerk was right in refusing to submit a proposition to make .the town anti-saloon territory unless a petition which conforms to the statute had been filed with him. An inspection of the record in that case on file in this court shows that the petition for mandamus, as originally filed, set out, by description, a petition filed with the town clerk, which petition was perfect in all respects, and purported, as is claimed for the petition in the case at bar, to be signed by more than one-fourth of the legal voters of the town. It further appears from such record that objections to the petition were filed with the clerk, as was done in the case at bar, and a hearing was had thereon. In refusing to submit the proposition the clerk exercised his knowledge of the territorial limits of the town as to what part- was within the city limits of Chicago and what part was without, and as to the names of the voters of the town who lived within the city limits of the city of Chicago and were obliged to be registered voters and as to those who lived without the city. It is true, the petition for mandamus was amended to show the true fact that certain of the petitioners lived within the city limits of Chicago and were not described in the petition as registered voters, as required by the Local Option law, and then the insufficiency of the petition filed with the town clerk was raised by demurrer. Can there be any doubt that if the petition for mandamus had not been amended but had alleged that a proper petition had been filed with the clerk such allegation could not have been denied by a proper plea or answer? The effect of the decision in the Wanek case is, that a clerk is not compelled to act on a petition which of his own knowledge he knows to be defective and cannot be compelled to act on such defective petition by mandamus. ■ That was the point decided, and that being true, it malees no difference whether the case is tried upon a demurrer to a petition which states the truth and therefore does not state a cause of action, or on a petition which is false and the truth of which is denied by plea or answer. In the case at bar the respondent traversed the petition for mandamus and by apt pleas tendered the issue that no lawful petition had been filed on which he was compelled to act. The foundation of the petition for the writ of mandamus was a valid petition alleged to- have been filed. A copy of the petition is not set out so we can determine its sufficiency. It is denied there was such a lawful petition. In the Wanek case the court held that a clerk with whom a similar petition was filed was not obliged to act on a petition he knew did not state the truth, although on its face it was in proper form. That was the law in this State when the writ of error was sued out and the supersedeas granted. While the petition for mmdamus in the case at bar alleged a lawful and proper petition had been filed with the respondent as town clerk, the pleas set up facts which showed such petition was defective on its face. The fact that it was not stated that certain of the petitioners were legal voters, that the date of signing by others does not appear, that the sworn statement as to certain signers is not dated,—all these matters are matters that appear on the face of the petition. The fact that certain of the alleged petitioners did not personally sign the petition but their names were written in by some other person and that others did not sign in their right names might also' appear from the petition itself. I think the plain meaning of the law is, that when a petition is presented to the proper officer with whom it is required to be filed, which petition is in conformity with the statute and apparently contains the names of the required number of legal voters of the political subdivision, such officer should act on such petition and the petition is prima facie evidence of what it purports to be. If, however, it is lacking in the statutory requirements, as can be seen by inspection, or if it contains the names of persons the officer of his own knowledge knows are not qualified legal voters of the subdivision or who. do not reside at the places stated by street and number or who were not present when the petition' was signed, or if po'sitive knowledge of such matters is brought to him before acting on such petition, then it ceases to be prima facie evidence of what it purports to be, and he is not compelled to act thereon and it is his duty to refuse to submit the proposition. The foregoing opinion holds that the clerk can set up matters of defense which appear from the petition itself, and then holds that a demurrer to pleas setting up these defenses should be sustained. I think the correct rule was laid down in the Wanek case,, and that case should be followed. If the clerk is obliged to act, without question, on any list of names that is presented to him, the effect will be to nullify the law, the intent of which is to afford an honest election on an honest petition.