Gjellefald Construction Co. v. City of South Beloit

183 N.E. 211, 350 Ill. 350
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1932
DocketNo. 21474. Judgment modified and affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 183 N.E. 211 (Gjellefald Construction Co. v. City of South Beloit) 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
Gjellefald Construction Co. v. City of South Beloit, 183 N.E. 211, 350 Ill. 350 (Ill. 1932).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Jones

delivered the opinion of the court:

The city of South Beloit, through its proper officers, passed an ordinance on July 14, 1930, providing for the construction of a system of sewers in certain streets in that municipality. On July 24, 1930, it filed its petition in the county court of Winnebago county for a special assessment against the property to be benefited by the improvement. An assessment was confirmed in the sum of $126,363.41. On December 9, 1931, the board of local improvements of the city, in accordance with section 84 of the Local Improvement act, filed in the county court its certificate of the completion and cost of the improvement and asked for a hearing to determine whether the facts stated in the certificate were true. The certificate set forth that the work had been finally completed and accepted by the board; that its cost, including lawful expenses, was $92,133.61; that the amount estimated by the board which would be required to pay bonds and vouchers, and accruing interest thereon, issued to anticipate the collection of the assessment, was $21,593.45; that the total amount assessed for the improvement on public and private property was $126,363.41; that the total amount assessed exceeded the cost of the improvement and the amount estimated to be required to pay bonds and interest by $12,636.35, which sum should be abated; that the assessment had been certified for collection; that the first installment thereof had become due and payable, and the judgment entered in the proceedings should be reduced that amount pro rata upon the remaining nine installments. The certificate also stated that the improvement conforms substantially to the requirements of the original ordinance for the construction thereof.

The county court ordered a hearing on the certificate be had at ten o’clock A. M. on December 28, 1931, and that all objections thereto be filed prior to that time. Objections were filed December 16, 1931, by the appellant contracting company. Those objections were, that the amount estimated by the board of local improvements which will be required to pay bonds and vouchers, and accruing interest thereon, issued to anticipate the collection of the assessment, is insufficient and the amount recommended to be rebated should be correspondingly less. The hearing on the certificate was postponed from December 28 to December 30, 1931, and at that time, over the objection of counsel for the contracting company, the court authorized objections to be filed on or before January 5, 1932, on behalf of 164 property owners whose names appeared on the assessment roll filed in the proceedings and who had previously objected to the confirmation thereof. These objections, as filed, related to the cost of the improvement, and stated that the certificate did not set out in particular the various items making up the totals specified in the certificate, and that the item of $21,593.45 estimated by the board to be required to pay bonds and vouchers, and accruing interest thereon, issued to anticipate the collection of the assessment, was unreasonably excessive, and that it was illegal to include in this item anything except accruing interest. After one or more continuances a hearing was had on the certificate and the objections to it. The court overruled all objections except those which related to the estimated amount required to meet interest on bonds and vouchers.

The amount of the first installment was $15,633.62 and each of the other nine installments was $12,303.31. The first installment had been levied and all but $2557.54 had been collected prior to the application by the board of local improvements to the county court for confirmation of the certificate of final completion and acceptance of the work. It was agreed that if the last nine installments have the same percentage of delinquencies the sum delinquent on each installment would be $2021.33. The sum of $21,-593.45 set forth in the certificate of the board was intended to provide not only for interest but also for deficiencies and delinquencies in the collection of the assessment. The court cut the interest item from $21,593.45 to $8957.12, and found the total assessment exceeded the cost of the improvement, after allowing the amount for interest, by $25,272.68. Judgment was entered abating and reducing proportionately all the assessments by the amount of the excess and ordering each installment abated twenty per cent and the judgment correspondingly reduced. From that order of the county court the contracting company has perfected an appeal.

The objecting property owners have filed a motion in this court to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the objections of appellant only put in issue the amount required, to pay accrued interest on bonds or vouchers issued to anticipate collection of the assessment, which issue was but one of the three questions of fact to be heard and determined by the court pursuant to section 84 of the Local Improvement act. (Smith’s Stat. 1931, p. 521.) That motion has been reserved until the final consideration of the case. In opposition to it appellant asserts that the county court should not have permitted the objections of the property owners to be filed and should not have considered such objections, and that the court erred in ordering the first installment of the assessment to be reduced or abated when that installment had been placed in collection and a large portion thereof paid. It was held in Blackhawk Construction Co. v. Village of Homewood, 343 Ill. 182, that an order of the county court entered under section 84 of the Local Improvement act in regard to the completion of the improvement is conclusive only as to the facts required to be found by the court under that section and is not conclusive as to any other matter or thing not provided for in that section, but as to all such other matters there is a right of appeal under section 123 of the County Court act. In City of Alton v. Hellrung, 346 Ill. 325, this court said: “With respect to matters finally adjudicated upon or concerning the certificate and objections thereto filed under section 84 of the Local Improvement act but not within the scope of that certificate, a review may be sought by authority of section 123 of the County Court act and section 95 of the Local Improvement act.” In City of East Peoria v. Sheen, 299 Ill. 185, it was held that under section 84 the order of the county court was conclusive and not subject to appeal as to the cost of the improvement, the amount required to pay accruing interest on bonds or vouchers issued to anticipate collection, and whether or not the improvement conformed substantially to the requirements of the ordinance, and that section 84 relates only to the finality of the court order as to those facts and does not include any other matters, such as providing a rebate. Under those authorities the motion of appellees to dismiss the appeal is overruled.

Appellant’s contention that the court erred in filing the objections of the property owners and thereafter hearing and considering the same is based chiefly upon the wording of a part of section 84. That section provides that the board of local improvements shall make application to the court to determine whether the facts stated in its certificate of final acceptance and completion of the work are true. Thereafter the court shall fix a time and place for a hearing upon the application, and not less than fifteen days’ notice of the hearing by posting and publication must be given.

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Bluebook (online)
183 N.E. 211, 350 Ill. 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gjellefald-construction-co-v-city-of-south-beloit-ill-1932.