McIntosh v. People ex rel. McCrea

93 Ill. 540
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 93 Ill. 540 (McIntosh v. People ex rel. McCrea) 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
McIntosh v. People ex rel. McCrea, 93 Ill. 540 (Ill. 1879).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sheldon

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This suit is prosecuted to reverse a judgment of the Appellate Court for the First District affirming a judgment of the county court of Cook county for taxes levied by the city of Chicago for the years 1873 and 1874, under an act of the General Assembly passed in the year 1877, (Laws 1877, p. 56.) The record in this case is identical with the record in the case of Fairfield et al. v. The People ex rel. MeCrea, heard and decided by this court at the June term 1879, except that this case is brought up by writ of error, while in the other case an appeal was prosecuted.

The questions now presented are mainly the same as those considered and decided in the former case. We have reconsidered t'hem in passing upon the present case, and find no reason to change our former decision except in a single particular, and with that exception we regard the opinion in the Fairfield ease as disposing of all the substantial questions raised in the case now. before us.

The mode prescribed by the act of 1877, in section 1, for determining the amount of back taxes, was, that the city or common council “may by ordinance ascertain and determine, and cause to be certified to the county clerk of the county in which such city is situated, on or before the second Tuesday in August in any year, the total amount which was required to be raised by taxation for all municipal purposes of said-city for any year or years prior to the year 1877, for or during which an assessment or levy was attempted to be made as aforesaid, the amount so certified for any year not to exceed the total amount of all appropriations made by such city for such year.”

It was not on the former occasion brought to our attention that the amount which was here ascertained. and determined and certified, under the above provision, as the total amount which was required to be raised by taxation for the year 1873, exceeded the amount of the levy ordinance in 1873; but it is now pointed out to us from the record that the amount so certified, and now being attempted to be collected as the tax for 1873, is by a considerable sum in excess of the amount of such levy ordinance.

The conclusion arrived at before was, that the amount which, under the act of 1877, was required to be ascertained and determined and certified as the amount which was required to be raised by taxation for ¿11 municipal purposes for any prior year, was the amount which by the action of the city council in such prior year was required to be raised by taxation •, and the levy ordinance was regarded as the action of the city council in that regard.

On the 22d day of December, 1873, the common council of the city of Chicago passed an ordinance, entitled “An ordinance levying taxes for the municipal year A. D. 1873.” It ordains that a certain number of mills on the dollar, 7making an aggregate of eighteen mills on the dollar, “be, and the same are hereby respectively levied and assessed upon all taxable real and personal estate in the city of Chicago, according to the assessed value thereof, for the municipal year eighteen hundred and seventy-three.” This, whether a valid levy of taxes or not, is the amount which was by the common council attempted to be raised by taxation for the year 1873, and it is a determination by them of the amount which was required to be raised by taxation for the year 1873, and, for the purpose of ascertaining what was the amount thus required to be raised, the levy ordinance may be looked to, and is the proper evidence of that fact.

On June 30, 1873, the common council passed an appropriation ordinance, and it is contended by defendants^ in error that it is this appropriation ordinance which shows the amount that was required to be raised by taxation for 1873, and some such view would seem to have been taken by the city council in their action under the law of 1877, as the total appropriation for 1873, less the miscellaneous receipts by the city applicable to the payment of appropriations, is the exact amount certified by the city council as the tax for 1873. This ordinance making appropriations was passed in pursuance of the charter of the city of Chicago, and did not purport to impose or levy taxes or to determine the amount of taxes which should be raised for the year 1873. By law it was but an estimate of expenditures, and fixed a limit to the expenses of the year. It was by law made the limit, not the measure, of taxation. The tax levy could not exceed the appropriations, but might be, and in practice always is, less than the appropriations, as the city has a large income to meet appropriations from sources other than taxation.

The appropriations are made'in the first quarter of the fiscal year, and based upon the estimated expenditures for the year; but the city, during the year, may diminish the number of employees, the compensation of employees and officers, and determine what improvements shall be made during the year, in all which ways the sum required to be raised by taxation may be reduced below the amount of the appropriation for estimated expenses; hence the necessity of some further action by the common council to determine and fix upon the amount which is required to be raised by taxation; and the further act in that regard, in the present case, was the levy ordinance of December 22, 1873. If no further action had been taken by the common council than the passage of the appropriation ordinance, it could not be said that any attempt had been made to levy or impose city taxes for the year 1873, or that there had been any determination by the council of the amount which was required to be raised by taxation for that year.

The levy ordinance of 1873 required eighteen mills on the dollar “ to be levied and assessed upon all taxable real and personal estate in the city of Chicago, according to the assessed value thereof, for the municipal year eighteen hundred and seventy-three.”

There were two assessments in Chicago in 1873—one legal, made by the town assessors, upon which the present taxes are extended; the other illegal, being made by the city assessor, under the unconstitutional “City Tax Act.” Upon which assessment is the computation to be made of eighteen mills on the dollar, in order to arrive at the amount which was required to be raised by taxation in the year 1873? Plaintiffs in error say, the legal assessment, made by the town assessors. As that assessment was less in amount than the one made by the city assessor, the computation on the former would make the excess of the amount certified as the tax for 1873 over the amount required to be raised by the levy ordinance larger than if the computation be made on the city assessment. It appears, from the record, that there was no attempt by the city of Chicago, in either of the years 1873 or 1874, to levy taxes under the general revenue law, but that -whatever was done towards levying taxes for those years was done under the act commonly known as the city tax act, which has been declared by this court to be unconstitutional.

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Related

Fairfield v. People ex rel. McCrea
94 Ill. 244 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1879)

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Bluebook (online)
93 Ill. 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcintosh-v-people-ex-rel-mccrea-ill-1879.