{
  "id": 861748,
  "name": "L. Knowles v. Village of Wayne City",
  "name_abbreviation": "Knowles v. Village of Wayne City",
  "decision_date": "1889-03-01",
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  "provenance": {
    "date_added": "2019-08-29",
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    "judges": [],
    "parties": [
      "L. Knowles v. Village of Wayne City."
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "Green, P. J.\nAs stated by appellant, the question submitted to us for decision is, had the Circuit Court jurisdiction to entertain the appeal and put appellant on trial fora violation of the village ordinance (by using profane and obscene language, etc.), notwithstanding he was acquitted of said charge by a jury in the justice\u2019s court?\nIt is contended on behalf of appellant that lie was there tried upon a criminal charge, and having been acquitted, no right to appeal on behalf of the village is given by the statute.\nThe complaint charged appellant with a violation of Sec. 2, Ordinance 8, of the village ordinance; it did not charge him with any crime, or violation of any provision of the criminal code of this State, and although the warrant issued under said complaint ran in the name of the people, it commanded his arrest to answer the charge ina'de in the complaint and none other. The mode adopted to bring into court one charged with such violation of an ordinance, whether it be by summons or warrant, does not change the character of the action. The authority to issue a warrant in such cases is given for the purpose of procuring the presence in court of defendants, who might not appear in obedience to the command of a summons, and also to secure a speedy disposition of the suit.\nWe have no doubt this action is a civil suit, brought to recover the penalty provided for violating the provisions of the ordinance in question, and such has been the character given to like cases by our Supreme Court. Hoyer et al. v. Mascoutah, 59 Ill. 137; Graubner v. Jacksonville, 50 Ill. 87; Town of Partridge v. Snyder, 78 Ill. 519. Being a civil suit before a justice of the peace, the right to appeal is given either party by Sec. 62, Chap. 79, Starr & C., Ill. Stats. Town of Partridge v. Snyder, supra; Webster v. People, 14 Ill. 365.\nIt is objected the action was not brought in the name of appellee, and the title of the suit was changed after it came up to the Circuit Court. The transcript of the justice\u2019s docket read in evidence shows the title, \u201cVillage of Wayne City v. L. Knowles\u2014Violation of Ordinance,\u201d and it is the same in the Circuit Court. The objection to the appeal bond (if a bond by the village in such cases is required) should have been made in the court below, and an opportunity given to furnish a good bond; it comes too late here. We perceive no reason for reversing the judgment appealed from, and affirm the same.\nJudgment affirmed.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "Green, P. J."
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "Mr. H. Tompkins, for appellant.",
      "Messrs. J. R. Creighton and Edwin Beecher, for appellee."
    ],
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    "head_matter": "L. Knowles v. Village of Wayne City.\nMunicipal Corporations\u2014Profane and Obscene Language\u2014Ordinance\u2014 Penalty\u2014Appeal by Municipality upo i Acquittal of Defendant\u2014Bond\u2014 Sec. 62, Chap. 79, Starr. & C. Ill. Stats.\n1. An action instituted for the recovery of a penalty provided for by a municipal ordinance prohibiting the use of profane and obscene language, is of a civil character.\n2. The mode adopted to bring into court a person charged with such breach, whether by summons or warrant, does not change the nature of the action.\n3. In such cases either party has the right of appeal.\n4. An objection to the appeal bond in a case of this sort, first made in this court, comes too late.\n[Opinion filed March 1, 1889.]\nAppeal from the Circuit Court of Wayne County; the Hon. C. C. Boggs, Judge, presiding.\nMr. H. Tompkins, for appellant.\nSeveral cases may be found where the town or village may appeal, hut in such cases the ordinance pi-ovides that an appeal may be had in the name of the People of the State of Illinois, such as the following cases:\nWebster v. The People, 14 Ill. 365, action for peddling meat without a license. The right to appeal here was giv.en in general terms to either party.\nTown of Jacksonville v. Block, 36 Ill. 507. The ordinance in this case allowe.d appeal in general terms. The same in case of Town of Partridge v. Snyder, the right of an appeal rvas especially enacted.\nHesing v. Att\u2019y Gen\u2019l, 104 Ill. 292. The right of appeal was denied the relator on dismissal of suit, no judgment for cost having been rendered.\nThe Legislature, by various acts, have extended the right of appeal in penal actions, such as violation of the road and bridge law, and qui tarn actions. The same with the ordinances of cities with penal actions.\nBut if there is no provision for an appeal granted to the people or informer by the general law or by the ordinance, and the cause proceeds as would a criminal action by a- warrant, arrest, bond for appearance, or execution for imprisonment, then, in that instance, an appeal will not lie to an informer, the people, nor the village, from a verdict of not guilty.\nThe defendant having been found \u201cnot guilty,\u201d this court had no jurisdiction on appeal even by the informer, and ceitainly none by a party who was not a party to the complaint, making the action one of \u201c appeal.\u201d\nThe village of Wayne City, the now defendant in .error, was not known in the case before the justice of the peace except by its ordinance. Ho cost was rendered against the village nor against the informer. The bond recites no judgment; it undertakes to say that a judgment was obtained against the president and board of trustees of the village of Wayne City in blank dollars and cents, while the transcript shows that no judgment was rendered.\nAgain, the summons issued from the Circuit Court is entitled a new party, Wayne City, appellee, instead of The People of the State of Illinois, requiring the plaintiff in error to appear in the Circuit Court to answer in a plea of an appeal, to the damage of said plaintiff in the sum of fifty dollars. This is the first that-the village of Wayne City is known in the case. Ho action is stated, whether it is a criminal action or one of assumpsit. But it would seem by the summons, in using the word damage, that it might be an action of assumpsit. If so, then no judgment could be entered against plaintiff in error that would imprison him under the ordinance, as is provided for by the ordinance Ho. 6, Sec. 17. We submit that the prosecution of the appellant under the criminal provision of the ordinance and his acquittal by a jury was the end of the case, without any right of appeal by the informer, as no cost was rendered against either the informer nor the village of Wayne City, neither is there any provision for an appeal by virtue of the ordinance. '\nMessrs. J. R. Creighton and Edwin Beecher, for appellee.\nThe record plainly shows that suit was instituted to recover the penalty provided for the violation of an ordinance of the village of Wayne City. In such case it can not be enforced in any kind of criminal proceeding. The act might have been a crime (which it was not in this case), but the offense against the village of Wayne City was a violation of its ordinance, and for such violation this suit was brought, and there is no semblance of a crime about it..\nThat such is the law seems so clear it is almost an insult to\" the court to cite authorities; but that appellant may not say \u2022 we are making assertions without proof, we refer to a few of the many cases to be found in our reports. In Hoyor v. Town of Mascoutah, 59 Ill. 137, the court said: \u201c It has been repeatedly held by this court that a proceeding to collect a penalty for the violation of a town ordinance is a civil suit. Such a penalty can not be recovered in any criminal proceeding.\u201d \u201c The fact that the offense charged was assault and battery does not change the character of the proceedings. It is still a civil suit. The town only acquires jurisdiction because the offense is prohibited by ordinance.\u201d Citing Town of Jacksonville v. Block, 36 Ill. 507; Graubner v. City of Jaeksonville, 50 Ill. 87. And in Town of Partridge v. Snyder, 78 Ill. 522, this language is almost literally repeated, quoting also from Ewbanks v. Town of Ashley, 36 Ill. 177.\nIn Starr & C. Ill. Stats. Chap. 79,Sec. 62,is the following:\n\u201c Appeals from judgments of justices of the peace to the Circuit Court, or County Court, if such jurisdiction shall be conferred upon the County Court by law, shall be granted in all cases, except on judgment confessed.\u201d See also same section, R. S. of 1874,647. This statute was examined and construed in Partridge v. Snyder, 78 Ill. 519, and after a full review of all the decisions it was held plaintiff has the right of appeal. This case has never been questioned, so far as we can learn.\nThe case of Webster v. People, 14 Ill. 365, also fully sustains us, if additional support were needed. In that case Cat\u00f3n, J., said: \u201cEven in cases of assault and battery, where the complainant has no pecuniary interest, and where no judgment for costs is rendered against him, he is still allowed to appeal to the Circuit Court, and compel the defendant again to answer there for the same offense for which he was tried in the justice\u2019s court.\u201d\nAs answer to the case of Ward v. People, 13 Ill., 635, and Edward v. Vanderneck, Id. 533, we say they were fully discussed by the court in Partridge v. Snyder, supra. There the court said these cases were decided under a law not now in existence, and virtually overruled them."
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