Chicago & Alton Railroad v. People ex rel. Dennison

98 Ill. 350, 1881 Ill. LEXIS 264
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 98 Ill. 350 (Chicago & Alton Railroad v. People ex rel. Dennison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago & Alton Railroad v. People ex rel. Dennison, 98 Ill. 350, 1881 Ill. LEXIS 264 (Ill. 1881).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an application by the collector of McLean county for judgment against certain lands, for taxes, described as blocks one and two of the Chicago and Alton Eailroad Company’s survey of its grounds in the city of Bloomington, except a strip of land one hundred feet in width extending through blocks one and two, on which strip the company’s main line is located. The taxes are claimed to be due for the years 1873 to 1879 inclusive. Lot one lies in Bloomington township and lot two in Normal township. Both tracts, however, are within the city of Bloomington. The taxes for which application for judgment was made were assessed by the township assessors of the respective townships.

The principal objection urged by the Chicago and Alton Eailroad Company to the application for judgment in the county court, and the only one which we shall consider, is, that the property was land held by the railroad company for its right of way, and embraced in the class of property denominated by the Eevenue law as “ railroad track,” and, therefore, not assessable by local assessors. If the property in question belongs to that class known in the Eevenue law as “ railroad track,” then it was assessable by the State Board of Equalization, and the township assessors had no power to make the assessment, and the judgment based on such assessment is erroneous. If, on the other hand, the property is real estate belonging to the railroad company, other than railroad track, then the assessment by the township assessors was valid and the judgment rendered regular.

Under sec. 1, art. 9, of the constitution, an assessment must be made by the person or persons to be elected or appointed in such manner as the General Assembly shall direct, and not otherwise. It is therefore apparent that unless the assessment here involved was made by the person or persons authorized by law it is void.

Section 41 of the Revenue law, Rev. Stat. 1874, p. 865, requires that all railroad corporations owning, operating or constructing a railroad in this State, “ shall, in the month of May of the year 1873, and at the same time in each year thereafter, when required, make out and file with the county clerks of the respective counties in which the railroad may be located, a statement or schedule showing the property held for right of way, and the length of the main and all side and second tracks and turnouts in such county, and in each city, town and village in the county, through or into which the road may run, and describing each tract of land, other than a city, town or village lot, through which the road may run, in accordance with the United States surveys, giving the width and length of the strip of land held in each tract, and the number of acres thereof. They shall also state the value of improvements and stations located on the right of way.”

Section 48 of the same statute requires the railroad company at the same time to return a schedule to the Auditor of Public Accounts, of the property denominated “ railroad track/7 giving the length of the main and side or second tracks and turnouts, etc. Also showing the rolling stock, etc.

Section 50 requires the Auditor annually, on the meeting of the State Board of Equalization, to lay before the board the statements and schedule required to be returned to him and makes it the duty of the board to assess the property named in the schedule.

It will be observed, that by the terms of section 41 the railroad company is required to return to the county clerk and Auditor a statement or schedule showing the property held for right of way. This is followed by section 42, which undertakes to determine what property is know by the term railroad track, as follows:

“ § 42. Such right of way,.including the superstructures of main, side or second track and turnouts, and the station and improvements of the railroad company on such right of ■way, shall be held to be real estate for the purposes of taxation, and denominated ‘ railroad track/ and shall be so listed and valued; and shall be described in the assessment thereof as a strip of land extending on each side of such railroad track, and embracing the same, together with all the stations and improvements thereon, commencing at a point where such railroad track crosses the boundary line in entering the county, city, town or village, and extending to the point where such track crosses the boundary line leaving such county, city, town or village.”

What was intended by the enactment of this section of the statute by the use of the words here employed, “ such right of way?” Were these words intended to mean merely the strip of land a certain number of feet wide, upon which the railroad company had constructed its main track, or did the framers of the section intend to embrace not only the main line of the road but all side tracks, turnouts and switches which are connected with the main track and which are in actual use by the railroad company as a common carrier ?

We can see no reason why the term “right of way” should be confined to the land over which the main track of a railroad should be constructed. The land upon which a side track, a switch, or a turnout is built and in actual use by the company in the business for which it "was organized, for all practical purposes is as much held for right of way as is the land upon which the main track is constructed. In the operation of a railroad it is necessary that trains should pass each other, and hence the necessity of turnouts, switches and side tracks. In the loading of cars, transfer of cars, the making up of trains, and in innumerable other instances that might be named, in the prosecution of its business as a common carrier, side tracks, switches and turnouts are as indispensable to a proper transaction of its business as the main track itself. We are, therefore, of the opinion that the land held and in actual use by a railroad company for side tracks, switches and turnouts, must be regarded, within the meaning of the Eevenue law, as a part of the right of way of the company. It is used in the transportation of freight, and also for the purpose of carrying passengers, alike with the land upon which the main track is constructed, and upon what principle the land upon which the main track is laid can be held to be right of way, and the land over which a side track, switch, or a turnout passes can be termed something else, we are at a loss to understand.

Again, if the construction contended for by defendants in error be the correct one, the land upon which the side tracks and turnouts are constructed will have to be assessed by one set of assessors and the superstructures thereon by another board of assessors. Section 42, in express terms, requires the superstructures of the second track and turnouts, and the station and improvements on right of way shall be denominated railroad track, and railroad track can only be assessed by the State Board of Equalization. It is unreasonable to believe that the legislature ever contemplated that land upon which side tracks, turnouts and switches are constructed, should be assessed by township assessors, and the improvements thereon by another and distinct board of assessors. Such a practice would create confusion, and' a just and proper assessment could rarely, if ever, be made.

Section 43 seems to have an important bearing on the question under consideration. It provides:

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Bluebook (online)
98 Ill. 350, 1881 Ill. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-alton-railroad-v-people-ex-rel-dennison-ill-1881.