Indiana, Illinois & Iowa Railroad v. People ex rel. Baker

39 N.E. 133, 154 Ill. 558, 1894 Ill. LEXIS 1679
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 39 N.E. 133 (Indiana, Illinois & Iowa Railroad v. People ex rel. Baker) 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
Indiana, Illinois & Iowa Railroad v. People ex rel. Baker, 39 N.E. 133, 154 Ill. 558, 1894 Ill. LEXIS 1679 (Ill. 1894).

Opinion

Craig, J.:

This is an appeal by the Indiana, Illinois and Iowa Railroad Company from a judgment rendered by the county court of Livingston county for taxes due the village of Dwight for the year 1893. On the second day of May, 1894, the county collector of Livingston county filed in the county court of that county a list of lands and town lots upon which he had been unable to collect taxes. In this list he reported that he had been unable to collect §229.32 of the municipal taxes of the village of Dwight as extended against the Indiana, Illinois and Iowa Railroad Company. The railroad company appeared in the county court and filed objections to the application for judgment, but they were all overruled and judgment rendered on the application of the collector.

It is first contended by appellant that the county clerk had no authority to extend the tax, for the reason that the railroad company had filed no list or schedule in his office showing that the property taxed was within the limits of the village. Section 41 of the Revenue law requires railroad companies to make out and file with the county clerk, in the month of May, 1873, and at the same time in each year thereafter when required, a sworn list or schedule showing the property held for right of way, and the length of the main and all side and second tracks and turn-outs in such county, and in each city, town and village in the county through or into which the road may run, etc. Section 48 also requires sworn statements or schedules to be furnished by railroad companies to the Auditor. Section 50 requires these statements sent the Auditor to be placed before the State Board of Equalization, annually, on the meeting of the board, and-requires the board to assess. Section 109 provides that said board shall also assess the railroad-property denominated in this act as “railroad track” and “rolling stock.” The amount so determined and assessed shall be certified by the Auditor to the county clerks of the proper counties. The county clerk shall in like manner distribute the value so certified to him by the Auditor to the county, and to the several towns, districts, villages and cities in his county, entitled to a proportionate value of such railroad track and rolling stock, and said clerk shall extend taxes against such values the same as against other property in such towns, districts, villages and cities. See, also, ’ section 51.

On the hearing, Albert I. Baker testified that he was deputy county clerk of Livingston county, and had held that position since December 1, 1890. He also testified: “I have charge of the extension of taxes upon the tax books, and extended the taxes for the village of Dwight against the Indiana, Illinois and Iowa Railroad Company for the year 1893, for which judgment is now asked. I extended the taxes on the assessment made by the State Board of Equalization, and made distribution between the various townships and school districts from the schedule now shown me, returned to the county clerk’s office by the Indiana, Illinois and Iowa Railroad Company, dated May 1, 1893. There is no other schedule or list of any kind of property owned by said company filed in the county clerk’s office for the year 1893 than this one. The return made by the State Board of Equalization, to which I have referred, is made in gross for the whole county, and not distributed, when returned, between the particular townships or districts. The book marked ‘Railroad Tax Book,’ now shown me, on page 68 contains a list of the taxes extended by me against the Indiana, Illinois and Iowa Railroad Company within the county of Livingston, for the year 1893. After the extension of the taxes the book was delivered to the county treasurer and ex-officio collector of the county of Livingston.”

The schedule referred to by the witness was put in evidence, and shows it was made in pursuance of the act of the General Assembly requiring railroad companies to file schedules of their property for taxation, and contains railroad track belonging to or controlled by the company, and the listed value thereof; rolling stock belonging to or controlled by the company, and the listed value thereof; the length, in feet, of main track on which said rolling stock is used elsewhere ; tools and materials for repairs, and all other personal property except rolling stock, belonging to or controlled by the company, and the location and listed value thereof; all real estate, other than railroad track, belonging to or controlled by the company, its location and listed value ; a recapitulation showing the proportion of the several classes of property listed in the schedule, lying in each township, city or village in the county. It schedules or lists no property of the company within the corporate limits of the village of Dwight, except track tools of the value of §30.

The position of counsel for appellant, as we understand the argument, in substance, is: As the schedule filed by the railroad company under the requirements of section 41 does not disclose that the railroad track lies within the incorporated limits of the village of Dwight, the county clerk had no authority whatever, in distributing the amount assessed by the State board on railroad track in Livingston county, to extend any taxes for the village of Dwight against the railroad company. We do not concur in this view. As has been seen, the assessment is made by the State Board of Equalization. The county clerk has'nothing whatever to do with the making of the assessment, but after the amount the railroad shall be assessed has been determined and transmitted to the county clerk of the county, then it becomes the duty of the county clerk to make the distribution among the towns, incorporated towns, cities or villages through which the railroad runs. If the schedule, filed in the office of the county clerk shows what part of the railroad track runs through each town, village, incorporated town or city in the county, that may be followed by the clerk. But there is nothing in the statute which requires the clerk to follow the schedule returned. He may resort to other means in determining the fact. Ordinarily, a county clerk would have no trouble in ascertaining the correct location of a railroad through the county in which he was clerk, regardless of the schedules returned by the railway company; but if there should be doubt in any case, he would no doubt have the right to call to his aid a surveyor, and thus determine the fact by an actual survey. If the schedules returned by the railroad company were held to be conclusive, it would be within its power to defeat a proper distribution of the assessment among the different portions of the county, at any time, by making a false return. In 1893, when the county clerk of Livingston county received the amount of the assessment on the road in that county, the duty then devol ved on the clerk to make a distribution to the towns, cities and villages along the line of the road, and if the line of the road ran through the incorporated village of Dwight, it was the duty of the clerk to apportion a part of the assessment to that village. The question, then, to be determined is, whether the railroad runs through the village of Dwight, as determined by the county clerk.

It appears from the record that Richard P.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 N.E. 133, 154 Ill. 558, 1894 Ill. LEXIS 1679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indiana-illinois-iowa-railroad-v-people-ex-rel-baker-ill-1894.