Court Opinion

ID: 6975696
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 02:10:35.334403+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:08:58.390442
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Hand delivered the opinion of the court: On April 12, 1910, Frank T. Fowler, superintendent of streets in the city of Chicago, filed charges with the civil service commissioners of the city against Frank W. Solon, assistant superintendent of streets. On April 13 a copy of the charges was served on Solon and a trial was had before the civil service commissioners, which resulted on May 4, 1910, in a finding and order that Solon be discharged, under which order he was discharged. A petition for a rehearing before the commissioners was filed and denied, and on April 17, 1911, Solon filed a petition in the circuit court of Cook county against said civil service commissioners for a writ of certiorari. The writ was issued and the civil service commissioners filed a return thereto. The case was tried on May 24, 1911, and a judgment was entered quashing the proceedings before the civil service commissioners, from which judgment the civil service commissioners prayed an appeal to the Appellate Court for the First District, which was allowed. Thereafter, on September 2, 1911, Herbert E. Fleming, a citizen and tax-payer of the city of Chicago, filed a motion in the circuit court asking leave to file a petition in that court to set aside the judgment entered on May 24, 1911, which motion was denied on September 30, 1911. The civil service commissioners did not perfect the appeal prayed to the Appellate Court, and on October 4, 1911, Fleming filed a transcript of the record of the circuit court proceedings in the certiorari case in the Appellate Court, together with a motion seeking, as a citizen and tax-payer of Chicago, to be allowed to prosecute the appeal in the name of the civil service commissioners, or, in the alternative, that he have leave to sue out of the Appellate Court a writ of error to review the record of the judgment of the circuit court in the certiorari proceeding. With the motion was filed what was said to be a transcript of the proceedings before the civil service commissioners, together with an affidavit of Fleming. November 8, 1911, the Appellate Court denied Fleming leave to prosecute said appeal or tó sue out a writ of error, and on cross-motion struck from the files the transcript of the record of the proceedings in the circuit court and the claimed transcript of the proceedings before the civil service commissioners and the affidavit of Fleming, and the record is brought to this court by appeal upon a certificate of importance by Fleming to review the judgment of the Appellate Court. The sole question presented for review in this court is, had Herbert E. Fleming, as a citizen and tax-payer, the right to perfect and prosecute the appeal of the civil service commissioners to the Appellate Court from the judgment of the circuit court, or to sue out a writ of error from the Appellate Court in his own name or in the name of the civil service commissioners, toi review the judgment of the circuit court in the certiorari proceeding? It' is first urged that the Appellate Court should have taken jurisdiction of the appeal on the motion of Fleming as a citizen and tax-payer, or permitted him to sue out a writ of error, on the ground that the record of the civil service commissioners and the affidavit of Fleming filed in the Appellate Court show that the judgment entered in the circuit court in the certiorari proceeding quashing the proceedings before the civil service commissioners was caused to be entered by the circuit court in consequence of the bad faith and collusion of Frank W. Solon and the civil service commissioners, or by their attorneys. In considering this contention it must be borne in mind that Fleming did not prosecute an appeal from the judgment of the circuit court denying him leave to intervene in the circuit court "and have the judgment of the circuit court quashing the proceedings before the civil service commissioners set aside and that he be allowed to be heard in that proceeding, but it is a motion entered by him in the Appellate Court asking that he be permitted to perfect the appeal of the civil service commissioners or to sue out a writ of error in their name or in his own name to review the judgment of the circuit court in the certiorari proceeding, which it is sought to have reviewed in this court. It would, we think, have been the proper practice, if Fleming had the right, as a citizen and tax-payer, to be heard in the certiorari proceeding, for him to have intervened in that proceeding, and if he were denied such leave and desired to have the Appellate Court review the judgment of the circuit court which denied him leave to be heard in the certiorari proceeding, to have preserved his rights by proper exceptions and then appealed to or sued out a writ of error from the Appellate Court, when he could have presented to that court, sitting as a court of review, a record upon which his right to be heard upon the question whether the circuit court was being imposed upon by the bad faith and collusion of the parties to the certiorari proceeding could have been determined by the Appellate Court, and not have gone to the Appellate Court, as he did, and in that court sought to impeach the return of the civil service commissioners to the writ of certiorari by.his ex parte affidavit to the effect that the secretary of the civil service commissioners had stated to him facts which tended, in his judgment, to show that the return filed by the civil service commissioners to the writ of certiorari was collusive and fraudulent. The Appellate and Supreme Courts of this State are courts of review and determine causes brought into review in those courts only upon certified transcripts of the proceedings which take place in the inferior courts in this State, and those courts are not clothed with the power to set aside and vacate the judgment of the lower courts of the State on the ex parte affidavits of strangers to the record in the lower courts. To ingraft a practice of that kind upon the appellate practice in this State would be to render all judgments of the lower courts of this State liable to be set aside by the courts of review upon affidavits filed in those courts by strangers to the record, that the judgments of the inferior courts have been collusively entered. This would be revolutionary and such practice cannot be sustained by this court. If, however, it were permissible to entertain ex parte affidavits in courts of review as a basis for vacating the judgments of the trial courts of the State on the ground that they were collusively entered, the affidavit filed in this case does not show collusion. We therefore conclude the first contention of the appellant is without merit and must be overruled. It is next argued that the record filed in this court by Fleming shows upon its face that the judgment entered by the circuit court in the certiorari proceeding is erroneous, and for that reason it is urged the motion of Fleming should have been allowed. The question of the validity of the judgment in the certiorari proceeding was not presented to the Appellate Court for review and is not presented for review to this court, and the validity of the judgment entered by the circuit court in the certiorari proceeding is not here involved. The only question here involved is, did Fleming have the right to take charge of the certiorari proceeding in the Appellate Court, as a citizen and tax-payer, after the appeal had been abandoned by the civil service commissioners and the corporation counsel of the city of Chicago, who is the legal adviser of the civil service commissioners, and carry on that litigation in the Appellate Court for the benefit of himself and, the other citizens and tax-payers of the city of Chicago and against the objection of the civil service commissioners and the corporation counsel of the city, and did the Appellate Court err in declining to permit him so to do ? For the purposes of the motion by Fleming in the Appellate Court it was wholly immaterial whether the judgment of the circuit court in the certiorari proceeding was erroneous upon its face or not. We next come to the question, did Fleming have the right to prosecute the said appeal or sue out a writ of error to review the judgment in the certiorari proceeding ? In Roby v. City of Chicago, 215 Ill. 604, a bill in chancery was filed by Roby in the circuit court of Cook county for the purpose of controlling the defense of certain litigation which was proceeding in the United States courts in Chicago with reference to the rights of the traction system of that city in the streets of the city, on the ground that the law department of the city was not properly guarding the interests of the. city. In disposing of the right of the law department of the city to represent the city and control the litigation of -the city, this court, on page 606, said: “The city of Chicago has a law department, which is charged with the duty of representing said city in court in all suits at law, in equity or otherwise, which may be brought against it, and for a court of chancery, upon a bill filed for that purpose, to undertake to determine, at the suit of a tax-payer, what defense should be interposed in suits brought against the city, would be to usurp the functions of the law department of the city and would lead to hopeless and endless confusion. * * * The contention, therefore, between the appellant and the city is narrowed to this: that the appellant and the law officers of the city differ as to the most effectual manner of defending said suits on behalf of the city in the United States circuit court, and the appellant asks the court to decide that his theory of the defense of said suits is correct and require the law officers of the city to proceed with the defense of said actions in accordance with the view of appellant. In the litigation in the United States circuit court, the same as in this case and all others, the city must be represented by its law officers, and they must be permitted, without interference from the courts, by injunction or otherwise, to represent the city in such manner as in their judgment will best subserve and protect its interests, If the people of Chicago are not satisfied with the manner in which their interests are protected by the law department of that city, the law has pointed out a method whereby they may change that department; but each citizen, resident and tax-payer can not go into a court of chancery and obtain a decree commanding the said.law department what sort of a defense it shall interpose in the numerous actions which may be brought against the city, every time the city is sued.” It is,urged that the Roby case is not in point because, it is said, the litigation referred to in that case had not been abandoned but was being carried on in the courts at the time the bill was filed, while it is urged in this case the litigation had been abandoned. It is, at times, veiy desirable that litigation should be avoided and at others that litigation commenced should be abandoned, and we think the question whether pending litigation should be settled is necessarily one upon which the law department of the city must pass, and that in no case, unless it is apparent that the rights of a city are being fraudulently sacrificed, (which does not appear to be the case here,) should the court step in and in opposition to the desire of the city officials and the law department of a city assume to control the litigation of the city. We think the principle announced in the Roby case is applicable to the case at bar, and that the Appellate Court did not err in declining to permit Fleming to supersede the civil service commissioners and the law department of the city of Chicago in determining the question whether or not the judgment of the circuit court in the certiorari proceeding should be reviewed by the Appellate Court, but think that court properly left the determination of that question to the civil service commissioners and the law department of the city, as represented by the corporation counsel. In People v. County of Vermilion, 210 Ill. 209, it was held to be well established by authority that to entitle one to sue out a writ of certiorari he must have been a party to the proceeding of which he seeks a review and must have an interest in the proceeding that is direct and immediate. Fleming was not a party to the proceeding before the civil service commissioners, and we are of the opinion he had no interest in that proceeding that was direct and immediate. It must be conceded that where public funds are illegally disbursed the tax-payers of a municipality are injured, because to that extent must other public funds be contributed by them to meet the necessities of the municipality, which funds must be raised by taxation. But no such situation is presented here. The certiorari proceeding neither took a dollar out of nor put a dollar into the pockets of the taxpayers of the city of Chicag'o. The office involved in this litigation existed under the law. The office will be occupied by someone and such occupant will draw the salary of the office, and so far as the tax-payers are concerned it makes no difference to them whether the salary is paid to Solon or to someone else. There is no claim here that the salary of the office was being paid twice. The only question is who shall hold the office, and that question, from a financial standpoint, does not affect the tax-payers of the city, and the fact that a tax-payer would prefer that someone other than Solon should hold the office does not give such taxpayer an interest in the question to be decided in the certiorari proceeding, which is direct and immediate, 'hence a tax-payer has no standing in the present litigation which will authorize him to insist that the judgment of the circuit court be reviewed by the appellate tribunals of this State. It is, we think, plain that the Appellate Court did not err in declining to permit-Fleming to perfect and prosecute the appeal which had been prayed by the civil service commissioners, nor do we think he occupies any more favorable position with reference to his right to sue out a writ of error. At the common law the person entitled to a writ of error must be a party or privy to the record, or be one who is injured by the judgment or who will be benefited by its reversal or is competent to release errors. (Anderson v. Steger, 173 Ill. 112; Winne v. People, 177 id. 268; White Brass Castings Co. v. Union Metal Manf. Co. 232 id. 165.) Fleming was not a party to the record. He was not a privy to the record. He was not injured by the judgment of the circuit court nor will he be benefited by the reversal of the judgment nor could he release error upon the record, hence, within the doctrine of the foregoing authorities, he could not sue out a writ of error to review the judgment of the circuit court in the certiorari proceeding. It is apparent, under the rule announced in People v. County of Vermilion, supra, that Fleming could not have sued out the writ of certiorari which was issued by the circuit court, as he had no interest, as a citizen or tax-payer, which was direct and immediate in the proceeding which was sought to be reviewed, nor was he a party to the record made by the civil service commissioners. If he could not have commenced the certiorari proceeding, clearly he could not control that proceeding after it was commenced, either in the trial or Appellate Court. The judgment of the Appellate Court will be affirmed. Judgment affirmed.