People ex rel. Applen v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad

360 Ill. 433
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1935
DocketNo. 22892
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 360 Ill. 433 (People ex rel. Applen v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad) 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
People ex rel. Applen v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, 360 Ill. 433 (Ill. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shaw

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from the county court of Bureau county, which overruled objections of the appellant to taxes extended against its properties under the levy for county purposes for the year 1933.

The first objection is that the .levy was not made on or before December 1, pursuant to section 135 of the Revenue act; and second, that a general deduction of $54,000 from the entire levy, made by amendment, rendered the remaining levy so uncertain as to be void. Objection was also made and overruled to the. tax levied for school district 99, on the ground that it was not made until after the first Tuesday in August, 1933.

The county tax levy resolution, which was adopted on December 13, 1933, at an adjournment of the regular September meeting, contained statements of many separate items and the separate amounts required for each, in the aggregate sum of $166,000 for general county purposes. Included therein was an item, “Mileage and per diem, $3000,” objection to which was sustained in the trial court. Included also were items of salary for “county clerk, $2000,” “circuit clerk, $1800,” “sheriff, $2000,” “county treasurer, $2000,” and expenses “county clerk’s office, $4000,” “circuit clerk’s office, $2000,” “sheriff’s office, $4000,” and “county treasurer’s office, $2000.” At the end of the statement of items after the total figure of $166,000 there appeared a deduction of $54,572.67 from that total for “estimated earnings of county officers,” leaving a levy of $111,427.33 for general county purposes.

The amendment to the levy adopted on December 22, after reciting that under the constitution of Illinois salaries of the county clerk, circuit clerk, sheriff and treasurer must be paid from fees earned by those officers, merely directed the clerk not to extend the sum $7800, the total of those salaries, as items “unlawfully included in the tax levy.” That was the only change effected by the resolution of December 22. No corresponding reduction was made by the amendment in the sum of $54,572.67, “estimated earnings of county officers,” deducted from the total sum of $166,000, not stated to be the amount of taxes to be raised but stated to be needed for all county purposes. The December 22 resolution did not eliminate or mention the expenses of the offices of the county clerk, circuit clerk, sheriff and treasurer included in the original levy, which appellant contends, under the constitution, are objectionable, as being payable only out of the earnings of the offices and not from taxes.

For the purpose of showing that the tax books could not be completed by the county clerk and turned over to the county collector on or before December 1 the collector introduced in evidence five exhibits, all of which were dated and filed in the office of the county clerk after the first of January, 1934. Included among them were the following: Certificate of State Auditor dated January 11, 1934, as to the amount needed to pay interest and principal on drainage district bonds; the State Tax Commission’s certificate of railroad valuations, filed January 19, 1934; certificate of Auditor of the amount necessary to pay interest and principal on bonds for school district 94, filed January 29, 1934; the State Tax Commission’s certificate of valuation of capital stock of corporations other than railroads, filed February 17, 1934, and notice from the Auditor of Public Accounts to the county clerk, dated March 12, 1934, showing the filing in the Auditor’s office of bond of John L. Applen, county collecter, filed in the county clerk’s office March 13, 1934.

All objections were ordered filed by September 18, and hearing on objections was set for the same day. Hearing was continued to the 19th. On the 19th, at 10:00 o’clock, hearing was continued until 1:30 to permit preparation and filing of written stipulation of facts, which stipulation was filed on the same afternoon.

On the afternoon of the 19th it was agreed that as an accommodation to one of the attorneys the objection to the levy for district 99 would be considered first. The stipulation as to that district was presented to the court and argument followed, neither party offering any evidence except the stipulation. Thereafter, without any formal motion or statement as to what would be proved, appellant’s counsel sought permission of the court to permit the heaing as to district 99 to go over to the next morning, for the purpose of getting the clerk of the school board in court with his records to show "the facts as to the meeting of the board at which the tax levy was passed. The court denied that permission, and, instead of waiting until the end of the hearing on all objections, at once announced his decision overruling objections to the tax for that school district.

Section 121 of the Revenue act makes it the duty of the county board to determine annually the amount of all county taxes to be raised for all purposes, and, when for several purposes, to determine the amount for each purpose and state it separately. This requirement of the statute is mandatory, and a material or substantial failure to comply with it invalidates the tax. People v. Baltimore and Ohio Southwestern Railroad Co. 356 Ill. 272; People v. Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railway Co. 326 id. 354; People v. Wabash Railway Co. 314 id. 388; People v. Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railway Co. 300 id. 251.

To sustain the levy for general county purposes the county collector relies upon Chicago, Peoria and St. Louis Railway Co. v. People, 225 Ill. 463. The facts in that case were similar to those in this one, but with the very important difference that no part of the original levy was either abandoned or held illegal. It was held in that case that although it would be better practice to include an itemized list in the tax levy ordinance, the tax then in question would not be invalidated, as the amount levied for each purpose might be found by a simple mathematical computation. It was said: “The amount of levy for a given purpose, say for the waterworks, will bear the same proportion to the amount appropriated for waterworks as the whole amount levied does to the whole amount appropriated, and the same would be true of every item on the list of appropriations.” The value of this case as a precedent has been considerably impaired by our later decisions, such as People v. Cairo, Vincennes and Chicago Railway Co. 266 Ill. 557, People v. New York, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad Co. 352 id. 603, and others, holding that the taxpayer has a right to know from the certificate the amounts levied without making computations. However, there is enough difference between the case relied upon and the facts in this one to make it unnecessary to determine the exact weight to be given to the authority cited.

In the case before us it cannot be said that the board determined the amount required for each separate purpose, and it is further apparent that neither of these amounts can be determined by mathematical calculations. Neither can it be said that these amounts were separately stated. The amendatory resolution of December 22 did not mention the items previously included for expenses of the county offices, which it is admitted by the parties on both sides were attempted to be levied in violation of section 10 of article 10 of the constitution. It neither did nor could mention the item of $3000 levied for mileage and per diem, which was later held illegal by the county court and which ruling is not questioned.

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360 Ill. 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-applen-v-chicago-burlington-quincy-railroad-ill-1935.