Hammond v. Carter

44 N.E. 274, 161 Ill. 621
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 12, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 44 N.E. 274 (Hammond v. Carter) 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
Hammond v. Carter, 44 N.E. 274, 161 Ill. 621 (Ill. 1896).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was an action of ejectment, brought by Edward S. Carter on the 10th of August, 1893, against William P. Hammond and others, to recover the south-west quarter of section 8, township 3, north, range 9, west, in Hancock county. At the October term, 1893, of the Hancock circuit court a.trial was had before the court, without a jury, resulting in a judgment for the plaintiff, to reverse which the defendant Hammond appealed to this court, filing his bond December 23, 1893. At the October term, 1894, of the circuit court, within one year after the rendition of the first judgement of that court, the cause was re-instated upon the docket, and upon motion of the defendants, proof being made of the payment of all costs, the former judgment was by the court vacated and a new trial granted under the statute.. The cause was at that and subsequent terms continued until the October term, 1895, when another trial was had before the court, without a jury, again resulting in a judgment for the plaintiff, to reverse which Hammond again appealed.

Before the last trial, and on January 14, 1895, the judgment first rendered by the circuit court of Hancock county was affirmed in this court. (Hammond v. Carter, 155 Ill. 579.) The plaintiff claimed title to the land under a tax deed dated July 29, 1893, executed by the county clerk of Hancock county on a sale of the land for taxes on May 29, 1891. On the first trial various objections were interposed by the defendants to the tax title, and on the appeal we held these objections invalid. None of these objections are now relied upon, but on the second trial the plaintiff introduced the same evidence which was introduced on the first trial, but the defendants introduced evidence in regard to the “repair tax,” so-called, and the “town tax,” under which it is claimed the tax sale was invalid.

The judgment for taxes upon which the land was sold was rendered at the May term, 1891, of the county court of Hancock county. The judgment included an item of $18 for repair tax, and it is contended that the amount is $11.15 in excess of the sum authorized by law. In order to determine this question a brief reference to the facts upon which the tax is predicated seems to be required.

The Hunt drainage district, within which the land is located, was organized under an order of the county court November 17, 1879, under the provisions of an act entitled “An act to provide for the construction, reparation and protection of drains, ditches and levees across the lands of others, for agricultural, sanitary and mining purposes, and to provide for the organization of drainage districts,” approved and in force May 29, 1879. (Laws of 1879, p. 120.) Soon after the organization of the district, proceedings were instituted to raise money to construct a levee by an assessment of benefits on the property in the district. An assessment roll was made and returned and confirmed by the county court, payable in installments. Under the assessment first made the land in question was assessed, total benefits $576 and annual assessment for repairs $33.85. The first assessment proving insufficient to pay for the construction of the levee, a second assessment was made and confirmed on April 6, 1887, whereby there was charged against the land in question the sum of $824, and the same was made payable in installments. So, also, a third assessment was made and confirmed on January 7, 1889, under which the land involved was assessed $211.20, which was also made payable in installments. In the second and third assessments no allusion was made to the question of repairs. On July 9, 1890, the commissioners of the district presented to the county court their annual report showing the condition of the levee, in which they asked for an annual assessment of thirty cents per acre on all the lands of the district to pay for necessary repairs, etc. On August 1 the county court approved the report, and ordered that there be assessed and collected for the year 1890, of said repair tax, the sum of thirty cents per acre on all the lands within said drainage district. It is contended that the county court had no authority to make this order.

Section 16 of the Drainage act (Laws of 1879, p. 125,) provides, that upon the organization of a drainage district a jury may be empaneled, in the county court or before a justice of the peace, to make an assessment of damages and benefits. Section 17 provides that the jurors empaneled shall elect one of their number foreman, and proceed to examine the lands, and shall ascertain the damages and benefits, and shall make out an assessment roll, etc., “but the amount assessed for keeping said levee or ditch in repair shall not, in the aggregate, amount to a sum, in any one year, greater than would be produced by thirty cents per acre on all the lands so assessed.” Section 26 of the act provides, that the court, when the assessment is confirmed, may order the assessment of benefits to be paid in installments. The section then provides: “But in case where a levee or ditch has been heretofore built under any law of this State, or may be hereafter built under the provisions of this act, the annual assessments for keeping the same in repair shall be due and payable on the first day of September, annually, and shall be a lien on the lands upon which said assessments are made from and after the confirmation of the report. The court in which such proceedings are had shall require from said commissioners a report of the condition of the levee or ditch at its July term of each year, together with their estimate of the amount necessary to keep the levee or ditch in repair and pay all incidental and necessary expenses for the ensuing year. And if the court shall find that a less amount will be required for such ensuing year than the whole amount of the assessment for that year, then the court shall, by an order, fix the amount to be paid for such year, and only that amount shall be collected, and the excess of such assessment over and above the amount so fixed by said order for said year shall be remitted by law and shall not thereafter be collected.”

These sections of the law of 1879, which was in force when the district was organized and when the first assessment was made by the jury and confirmed by the court, authorize the jury, in assessing benefits, to also make an annual assessment for keeping the levee in repair. The statute is not as plain on this subject as it might be, but we are satisfied that the language employed will bear no other construction. The authorities of the drainage district evidently placed this construction on the act, otherwise no assessment for annual repairs would have been-made by the jury or confirmed by the county court.

The annual assessment for repairs having been made by the jury and confirmed by the court, had the county court power or authority to enlarge the amount in July, 1890? We find nothing in the statute conferring such authority. Here an annual assessment for repairs had been made by a jury on the land of $33.85, which had been confirmed by the court, and under the act the amount was payable annually, on the first day of September, and in the absence of a statute authorizing the county court to enlarge the amount, which we have not been able to find, no authority existed. (See Robeson v. People ex rel. ante, p.

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.E. 274, 161 Ill. 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammond-v-carter-ill-1896.