City of Peoria v. Smith

83 N.E. 1061, 232 Ill. 561
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 83 N.E. 1061 (City of Peoria v. Smith) 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
City of Peoria v. Smith, 83 N.E. 1061, 232 Ill. 561 (Ill. 1908).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

The city of Peoria by an ordinance levied a special tax to pave a certain street. The tax was divided into ten installments. In the original proceedings for confirmation certain property owners filed legal objections and also objections as to benefits. The court overruled the legal objections and on the trial for benefits before a jury the assessment as to the objectors was reduced approximately twenty per cent, and thereupon judgment was entered for that reduced amount against said property for which objections had been filed and entered for the full amount against all the other property. When the work was completed the board of local improvements found that the original assessment would produce $359.55 more than the cost of the improvement, and thereupon ordered a rebate assessment roll to be filed by the superintendent of special assessments in the county court, prorating the rebate among the tracts of land for which no objections had been filed and on which the original assessment had not been reduced. Appellee herein, who is one of the property owners whose assessment was reduced by the jury, filed objections to this roll, claiming, under section 84 of the Local Improvement act, (Hurd’s Stat. 1905, p. 425,) that said rebate should be divided and credited among all the various lots and parcels of land assessed in the original proceedings, in the proportion that the assessment for each lot or parcel bore to the total revised assessment of $6032.98. Upon the hearing of objections filed by appellee to said rebate assessment roll, evidence was offered, over her objection, showing that all the property in the assessment roll was practically of the same grade and elevation and relatively of the same value, exclusive of improvements, and equally benefited per front foot. The court sustained the objections of appellee and ordered that the rebate assessment roll be stricken from the records, and that the superintendent of special assessments be ordered to re-cast and re-apportion said $359-55 so that each lot or piece of land should be given credit for such part of the rebate as the amount assessed against it bore proportionately to the total assessment as finally confirmed, viz., $6032.98. From this judgment an appeal was prayed to this court.

Said section 84 of the Local Improvement act provides that within thirty days after the completion and acceptance of the work the board of local improvements shall certify the cost thereof in writing, including the amount estimated for interest, etc., to the court in which the assessment was confirmed, and if the total amount assessed exceeds the cost so certified, all of the excess “shall be abated and the judgment reduced proportionately to the public and private property owners and shall be credited pro rata upon the respective assessments for said improvements under direction of the court.” It also provides that “the intent and meaning hereof being that no property owner shall be required to pay to the collector a greater amount than his proportionate share of the cost of said work and of the interest that may accrue thereon.”

It is contended by appellant that under these provisions of said section 84 the county court not only had the authority, but it was its duty on this hearing, to inquire into the benefits that each piece of property assessed in the original proceedings had received from such improvement, and on the showing made by the evidence introduced that each piece had.been substantially benefited the same amount per front foot, it would thereupon necessarily follow that the property which had had its original assessment reduced by the jury was not entitled to receive any of the rebate, the contention being that the fair meaning of this section, especially the sentence “that no property owner shall be required to pay to the collector a greater amount than his proportionate share of the cost of said work,” authorizes the court to give a rehearing on questions of benefits and divide the rebate accordingly. We cannot agree with this contention. The levy and collection of special assessments and special taxes under the Local Improvement act must follow the provisions of that act. Section 39 provides that the total cost of local improvements shall be proportioned equitably between the public and property assessed. Section 47 provides that when objections have been filed the court may revise and modify and re-distribute the total cost between the public and the property benefited, and may also change the manner of distribution among the parcels of private property so as to produce a just and equitable assessment. Sections 48 and 49 provide that if legal objections are overruled, the question as to whether the property is benefited the amount assessed or is assessed more than its proportionate share of the cost of the improvement shall be tried by a jury; and this court has repeatedly held that on this hearing no other questions except these two can be presented to the jury for their consideration. (Clark v. City of Chicago, 166 Ill. 84; Givins v. City of Chicago, 188 id. 348.) Section 50 provides that when the amount of the assessment has been reduced by the court or jury or has been canceled, and there shall be.a deficiency in the total amount assessed, the court may have the power to distribute such deficiency among the other property assessed. Section 52 authorizes the court to modify, alter, change, annul or confirm an assessment, “and make all such orders as may be necessary to malee a true and just assessment of the cost of such improvement, according to the principles of this act.” Section 56 provides that the judgment of the court “shall be final as to all the issues involved,” stating thereafter certain exceptions where the judgment may pe modified or set aside; but these exceptions, so far as they affect the present question, tend to weaken, rather than strengthen, the contention of the appellant. Section 66 provides, among other things, that on application for judgment of sale “no defense or objection shall be made or heard which might have been interposed in the proceeding for the making of such assessment, or the application for the confirmation thereof, and no errors in the proceeding to confirm, not affecting the power of the court to entertain and consider the petition therefor, shall be deemed a defense” to said application. This court, in construing this section, has more than once held that the question of benefits or division of the cost among property owners could not be raised on application for judgment. This holding has been made in special tax as well as special assessment matters. Pfeiffer v. People, 170 Ill. 347; Walker v. People, 170 id. 410; Johnson .v. People, 177 id. 64; Gage v. People, 207 id. 377.

Obviously, the intent of these sections, considered together with the rest of the act, was to require the question of benefits and the pro rata cost between the various pieces of property to be settled in the original confirmation proceedings and reviewed only by appeal or writ of error. The proportionate cost of the improvement between the public and private owners in special tax proceedings cannot be reviewed by the courts but the special assessment commissioner’s apportionment thereof is final, (City of Jacksonville v. Hamill, 178 Ill. 235,) while in special assessment proceedings such distribution of cost between the public and private property as made by the special assessment commissioner may be reviewed by the trial court, but the latter’s decision is final. (Graham v. City of Chicago, 187 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
83 N.E. 1061, 232 Ill. 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-peoria-v-smith-ill-1908.