County of Richland v. People

3 Ill. App. 210
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 15, 1878
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Ill. App. 210 (County of Richland v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County of Richland v. People, 3 Ill. App. 210 (Ill. Ct. App. 1878).

Opinion

Baker, J.

In this case is involved the question of the liability of the county of Biehland for an alleged subscription of $150,000 to the capital stock of the G-rayville & Mattoon Bail-road Company; that it is claimed was authorized by a vote of the people of the county at an election held on the 7th day of April, 1868, and made by an order of the Board of Supervisors of the county, on the 11th day of December, 1868.

It is evident that such subscription cannot be sustained under the general act of Hovember 6th, 1849, as under said act subscriptions could not exceed the sum of $100,000: Laws 2nd Sess. 1849, 28.

We. must look, therefore, for power to make said subscription either to the act approved March 1, 1867, amendatory of the act incorporating said railroad company, or to the provisions of the curative act of April 9,1869, P. L. 1867, Yol. 2,736; P. L. 1869, Yol. 2, 360. .

The second section of the act of March 1,1867, is' as follows:

“ Section 2. Cities, towns and counties shall he authorized to subscribe for stock in the said company, in like manner and with like effect as is provided in and by the act entitled An act to provide a general system of railroad corporations, approved November 5, 1849,’ and the several acts amendatory thereof. Provided, that the County Court of any county may, having first submitted the question of subscription to the vote of the people of the county, subscribe for stock in said company, payable in lands, or town or city lots, to be taken upon such terms and conditions, and be conveyed in such manner as the said court and the said company may agree upon, and that the said subscription shall not exceed two hundred thousand dollars; and the said subscription may be made partly payable in lands, and partly payable in money, as the said court and the said company may agree.” '

The body of this section, so far as the county is concerned, did nothing more than to expressly authorize it to do that which it was already fully authorized to do under the general law of 1849. If the section had stopped right there and had contained no further provision or proviso, the Board of Supervisors alone would have been authorized to call the election and the amount voted could not have exceeded $100,000. As the section stands with the proviso, the board of supervisors, and probably they alone, had authority, in so far as any power predicated upon the body of the section is involved, to call an election and subscribe. Prettyman v. Supervisors of Tazewell County, 19 Ill. 406; Supervisors of Marshall Co. v. Cook, 33 Ill. 44. Under the body of this section the powers of the Board of Supervisors were no way changed from what they were under the law of 1849, and they had no more authority to call an election for a subscription of $150,000 under the body of this section than they had under the general law.

We do not understand the proviso to this second section, to confer any additional power or authority whatever upon the Board of Supervisors. A proviso is something engrafted upon a preceding enactment, and .is legitimately used for the purpose of taking special cases out of the general enactments, and providing specially for them. Potter’s Dwarris, 118. Most usually a proviso has the effect of limiting, and not of enlarging the body of the act; but this maybe otherwise. Suppose the legislature had provided in express terms that the Supervisors of their own motion, and without any vote of the people, might subscribe not exceeding $100,000 to the capital stock of a railroad company, and at the same time had attached a proviso to the act providing that in case the proposition to subscribe was first submitted to a vote of the people, then, in the event such subscription was authorized by such vote, the subscription might be for some larger sum. In such a case the evident effect of the proviso would be to enlarge, at least so far as amount is concerned, the body of the act.

So, by the proviso in this section, we understand the body of the act to be enlarged, and the legislature to intend that the County Court, as distinguished from the Board of Supervisors, may submit to the vote of the people a proposition to subscribe for stock in' said company a sum that might be larger than $100,000, but not exceeding $200,000, said subscription to be payable in lands or town or city lots, or partly in lands and partly in money, upon such terms and conditions as the County Court and said company might agree. As to whether the power to call elections and make subscriptions vested in the Board of Supervisors under the act of ■ 1849, and recognized in the body of said second section of the act of 1867, and the power vested in the County Court by the proviso to said second section are cumulative, and might have been concurrently exercised, we are not called upon to determine;

The only power granted to call an election for a subscription in excess of $100,000, is vested by the terms of this proviso in the County Court. At the time that this act was passed the county of Richland was under township organization, and this Court is bound to take judicial notice of that fact. County of Rock Island v. The State Bank, 31 Ill. 343. And it m ust be presumed, also, that the legislature kne'w that fact, and shaped the act of 1867 accordingly. Supervisors of Schuyler Co. v. The People, 25 Ill. 181.

It is provided in this second section that “ the County Court ” having first submitted the question to a vote of the people, might subscribe for stock in said company upon certain terms, “ as the said court and the said company ” might agree upon, and that said subscription might be made partly payable in lands and partly in money,” as the said court and the said company might agree. It is provided in section three of the same act that “ any County Court subscribing for stock in said company shall be authorized to issue bonds in payment for the same, in the name of the county;” and it is provided in section four, that the county clerk shall from year to year extend a tax “sufficient to pay the interest accruing upon the bonds so issued by the County Court.” It is a well settled rule of construction that statutes extending the powers of corporations, or increasing the burdens of taxation, must be strictly construed. Smith’s Com. 818; Chestnutwood v. Hood, 68 Ill. 132.

We think it clear that this case falls within the rule announced in Supervisors of Schuyler Co. v. The People, supra. In that case all the acts required by the two laws then in question were required to be done by the County Court, and they were in fact done by the Board of Supervisors. In this case all the acts required to be done by the proviso to section two, and by the subsequent section, are required to be done by the County Court, and in so far as they have been done at all, have been done by the Board of Supervisors. Tn that case as in this, the legislative enactments were subsequent to the adoption of township organization. In that case it was presumed that the legislature knew that the county had adopted township organization, and that it intended to confer the power upon the County Court instead of the Board of Supervisors. In this case, the same presumptions must prevail.

It is true that, under the law of 1849, the County Court was required to call the election and make the subscription; also that in Prettyman v.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Township of Elmwood v. Marcy
92 U.S. 289 (Supreme Court, 1876)
Prettyman v. Supervisors of Tazewell County
19 Ill. 406 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1858)
Clarke v. Board of Supervisors
27 Ill. 305 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1862)
President of Keithsburg v. Frick
34 Ill. 405 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1864)
Charles H. Force & Co. v. Town of Batavia
61 Ill. 99 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1871)
Marshall v. Silliman
61 Ill. 218 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1871)
Wiley v. Silliman
62 Ill. 170 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1871)
Chestnutwood v. Hood
68 Ill. 132 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1873)
Board of Supervisors of Jackson County v. Brush
77 Ill. 59 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1875)
Cairo & St. Louis Railroad v. City of Sparta
77 Ill. 505 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1875)
Town of Middleport v. Ætna Life Insurance
82 Ill. 562 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1876)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Ill. App. 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-richland-v-people-illappct-1878.