Hamilton v. Vermilion Special Drainage District

146 Ill. App. 84, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 411
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 17, 1908
StatusPublished

This text of 146 Ill. App. 84 (Hamilton v. Vermilion Special Drainage District) 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
Hamilton v. Vermilion Special Drainage District, 146 Ill. App. 84, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 411 (Ill. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Ramsay

delivered the opinion of the court.

Each of appellants, for himself, filed a bill in the Circuit Court of Ford county, against appellees, to compel the commissioners of the Vermilion Special Drainage District to make a new classification of the lands in such district; also to restrain the commissioners from using money that had been raised by taxation for “repairs and expenses” in the extending of line “E” in said district; also to restrain the commissioners from levying assessments, and the treasurer from collecting the same, and that the commissioners be ordered to spread new assessments upon the lands in said district according to their actual benefits. There was a demurrer filed to each bill, which upon a hearing was sustained and the bills dismissed for want of equity at the costs of complainants. An appeal was prayed by each appellant to this court, but as the bills are identical in form and substance they are treated here and determined as one cause.

In said bills it was averred in substance that said petitioners were landowners and taxpayers in said district and that all lands owned by them had been assessed for the construction, maintenance and repair of the system of drainage in said district for more than twenty years; that their lands had been inequitably assessed and they compelled to pay more than their proportion of the cost of the construction and repair; that the district was organized under the order of the County Court of Ford county in August, 1880; that special assessments were levied on all the lands in said district from 1882 upon the lands as first classified up to December, 1903, when a new classification was made and a new assessment levied for the purpose of extending the outlet of ditches then in use in the district. That on July 9, 1907, the commissioners of said district had adopted a resolution to expend $2,000 then on hand and to levy an additional assessment of $14,000 to further drain and improve the lands of the district; that the clerk of said district had caused such assessments to be made and had extended the tax on the basis of the last preceding assessment roll without any material change; that the said sum of $2,000 was by resolution of October 20, 1906, to be expended in extending line “E” a branch, for about one mile beyond the point to which it had been formerly constructed twenty years previously; that the extension of said line “E” would not be of any benefit to the taxable lands in the district or to the petitioners.

It is further alleged in said bills that -other lands, i. e. lands outside of the district, have made connection with ditches in the district and have been materially improved thereby without paying anything for such connection and that said commissioners of the district, although well knowing that such connection had been made, had refused to compel such connecting landowners to pay for such connections as they are required to do under the statute; that the commissioners, in allowing lands outside of the district to drain into the district, and in refusing to reclassify all the lands of the district on an equitable basis were guilty of a fraud upon the petitioners in making them pay more than their proportionate share of the cost, etc.; that the said commissioners had arbitrarily and wholly disregarded their statutory duty by refusing to reclassify the lands of the district.

It is further averred in said bills that in 1903 at a time when it was found necessary to extend an as-, sessment on the lands in the district, the commissioners agreed to make a new classification of the lands, and had made one, but that in doing so had adopted the old basis of classification which was fraudulent, unfair and inequitable; that on October 31, 1906, a levy had been made for a tax of $2,000 for “repair and expenses” in said district, which money had been collected and paid over to the treasurer of the district, and that on July 9, 1907, the commissioners by resolution declared that it was necessary to expend for proposed work in said district the sum of $16,000; that the $2,000 then on hand realized from the levy of October 31, 1906, made for “repairs and expenses” be expended and paid out to do the work of extending said line “E” and that a special assessment be extended upon the classification of 1903 and approved by the county court, to raise the sum of $14,000.

The contentions made by appellants which we deem it necessary to notice are these: That the classification of the lands in the district was unfair and fraudulent and that a new one should be made; that the commissioners had no power to extend the tax of $14,000 to carry on the work proposed; that the commissioners could not rightfully expend the $2,000 realized from the resolution of October 31, 1906, for “repairs and expenses” in extending said line “E”.

Upon the first and second of these claims we entertain no doubt that the ruling of the trial court was right. The lands in the district were first classified in 1880 under the direction and approval of the County Court of Ford county upon which classification all the assessments for money required to do the work in the district up to the year 1903 were extended. In December, 1903, a new classification was made which was in the main the same as the original or first classification, and during all this time appellants acquiesced in what was being done by the commissioners in the district, and took no appeal from either of said classifications as they had a right to do.

In Barber v. Chapman, 127 Ill. 387, which was a proceeding to restrain the collection of a tax extended by the commissioners of a drainage district like the one at bar, the court held that an objection that related to the classification of lands in the district came too late upon such a hearing. The court there said in substance that the law gave the landowners ample opportunity to "be heard touching the classification of lands before a tribunal with ample power to afford him relief, and also gave him the right to an appeal to correct any error shown to exist in the classification. Thus the rights of the landowner, in respect to the classification of lands within the district, were fully and fairly protected.

In the case before us appellants paid their assessments so far as necessary to do the work in the district for a period of twenty years, upon the basis of the first classification, and it would seem that if their lands were wrongfully classified in such first classification they would reasonably be expected, in the exercise of their legal right, to have been heard upon the second classification, and to have corrected upon such second classification any error that may have existed in the first classification.

Appellants argue at great length and aver many times in their bills that the classification was fraudulently made and the assessments inequitable and void. But no sufficient averment of facts is made to show that any requirement of the statute has not been observed in the extending of the taxes, or that any irregularity is involved in the application of any funds, except as to the $2,000 proposed to be used in the extension of line “E”, or to substantiate the charge of fraud in the petition. Such allegations of fraud are general in their nature, with no specific showing of facts to support them.

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Related

People ex rel. Barber v. Chapman
19 N.E. 872 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1889)

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Bluebook (online)
146 Ill. App. 84, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-v-vermilion-special-drainage-district-illappct-1908.