People Ex Rel. Brenza v. Gilbert

97 N.E.2d 793, 409 Ill. 29, 1951 Ill. LEXIS 322
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1951
Docket31871
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 97 N.E.2d 793 (People Ex Rel. Brenza v. Gilbert) 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. Brenza v. Gilbert, 97 N.E.2d 793, 409 Ill. 29, 1951 Ill. LEXIS 322 (Ill. 1951).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Gunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellant made certain objections to the Cook County collector’s application for judgment and order of sale of certain real estate for nonpayment of taxes for the year 1946. The objections pertain to (1) an alleged excessive county levy for the Cook County bond and interest fund; (2) the county levy to pay illegal advances made by the working cash fund of the county; and (3) failing to properly itemize the appropriations for repairs and replacements for the Chicago Sanitary District.' The county court overruled all objections. We will consider them in their relative order.

The first objection makes the claim that the Cook County levy for bond and interest requirements was excessive. The foundation for this claim is based upon section 17-10 of the Revised Cities and Villages Act, (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1947, chap. 24, par. 17-10,) which provides that whenever refunding bonds are purchased or redeemed and cancelled, the taxes thereafter to be extended for payment of the principal and interest on the remainder of the issue shall be reduced in an amount equal to the principal and interest that would have thereafter accrued upon the refunding bonds so cancelled.

In 1936, certain indebtedness of Cook County was refunded, and over $47,000,000 in bonds was authorized to be retired over a period of twenty years. The refunding ordinance provided after the second to the thirteenth year for a yearly levy of $1,925,676.40 for interest and $2,450,803.60 for principal, or a total of $4,377,480, for the purpose of retiring principal and interest on this refunding bond issue. For the remainder of the term the payments were reduced to meet the requirements of principal and interest as they might be lowered by previous payments. The bond ordinance also provided that the county had an option to call bonds in given amounts during each year, and in 1945 the principal of said refunding bonds was called for cancellation in the amount of $13,523,410, which with previous payments upon principal left a balance unpaid at that time of $5,126,900.

Fach year when the levy of taxes was made for the payment of the principal and interest the amounts set out in the refunding ordinance of 1936, vis., $2,450,803.60 for principal and $1,925,676.40 for interest, would be made by the county clerk, except for abatements and adjustments thereafter made, reducing the same to meet the exigencies of each year. Thus, in 1946, when the county levy was made for the bonds and interest payments the amounts fixed in the refunding ordinance of 1936 were reduced by the following amounts: the sum of $702,851.10, which applied to the 1945 bond and interest charge; and in February, 1947, by an abatement ordinance, in the sum of $1,943,434, the amount unneccessary to collect because of refunding bonds previously canceled or retired, and the interest which said retired bonds would have required had they remained unpaid.

The amount left in the levy for county bond and interest for 1946 was $1,731,195, to which was added 11.2 per cent loss and cost, or $190,431, and the total extended for this purpose was, therefore, $1,921,626. Appellant claims that the amounts that should have been extended by this levy for county refunding bond and interest was $544,647.92, made up as follows: Interest, $224,075; principal installments, $266,598.80; loss and cost, $53,974.12. Appellant reaches this result by assuming that the unpaid principal of bonds in the amount of $5,126,900 should be prorated over the remaining seven years of the term for which they were issued, and we take it this computation assumes that an equal amount of principal would be paid each year and the interest proportionately reduced as principal sums were paid, without any consideration given to the right to cancel and redeem bonds. Appellant assumes that the law requires a certain percentage of principal of the bonds should be paid each year, and therefore the unpaid amount of principal spread over the whole remaining term proportionately. It is the contention of appellant that it is only by this method that the statute above referred to can be made effective.

The provision of the statute relied upon by appellant was enacted in 1941, but the law in effect at the time of the issuance of the bonds did not require a reduction as to principal, but only as to interest, for it then read: “Whenever any refunding bonds are so purchased and/or redeemed and cancelled, the taxes thereafter to be extended for payment of interest shall be reduced in an amount equal to the interest that would have thereafter accrued upon such refunding bonds so cancelled, * * (Laws of 1935, p. 538.) It was only in 1941 that the statute was amended requiring the extension of taxes to be reduced for both principal and interest paid upon refunding bonds, and we believe that this change in the law is material to a proper consideration of the issues involved in this case.

The bond ordinance expressly incorporated the language of the 1935 law just above quoted, and also reserved the ' right to call and redeem a certain amount of said bonds yearly from 1937 to 1953, at which time they were all to be retired and cancelled. At the time this bond ordinance was adopted there was no requirement of statute that the levy should be reduced by the amount of the principal payments, but only by the amount of the interest payments that would have accrued upon retired or cancelled bonds. It is quite apparent that, if the full amounts provided in the bond ordinance were collected each year, a considerable sum would accumulate from that source over and above the amounts required to pay succeeding installments, and also from money available from uncollected taxes for previous years with which to discharge bonds prior to their due date. Undoubtedly, Cook County relied upon the fact there was no duty to reduce the levies required by the bond ordinance by the amount of principal paid, and should not be deprived of that right by subsequent legislation which might seriously jeopardize the provisions of the bond ordinance adopted in 1936.

While the case of Friedman v. City of Chicago, 374 Ill. 545, involved a controversy between an individual and the city, in which it was held that the amendments of section 89 of the Local Improvement Act allowing pro rata cancellation of bonds did not apply to bonds issued prior to the amendment, and is not precisely in point, still, it illustrates that statutes in the absence of express language will be given a prospective, and not a retrospective, construction. In that case the property owner could pay his assessment with a bond or voucher, which thereupon was cancelled. An amendment to the law after the assessment was levied permitted the amount thereof to be credited upon a bond reducing it pro tanto, but not requiring it to be wholly can-celled. Upon the objection of the city it was held this amendment could not be applied to a local improvement authorized before its enactment.

We are of the opinion that the county in enacting the bond ordinance of 1936 had a right to assume that the provisions of the law with respect to reductions in annual levies for principal and interest would be controlled by the law as it existed in 1935, and we think this is shown not only by reciting the language of the 1935 statute in the resolution, but also in the fact that the county retained the option to cancel bonds during each successive year.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lutkauskas v. Ricker
2015 IL 117090 (Illinois Supreme Court, 2015)
Lutkauskas v. Ricker
2013 IL App (1st) 121112 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2013)
Marotta v. Metropolitan Water Reclamation District
609 N.E.2d 664 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1992)
People Ex Rel. Redfern v. Penn Central Co.
266 N.E.2d 334 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1971)
People Ex Rel. Kucharski v. McGovern
245 N.E.2d 472 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1969)
People Ex Rel. Brenza v. Edwards
109 N.E.2d 754 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 N.E.2d 793, 409 Ill. 29, 1951 Ill. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-brenza-v-gilbert-ill-1951.