People ex rel. Gannaway v. Glassco

203 Ill. 353
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 203 Ill. 353 (People ex rel. Gannaway v. Glassco) 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. Gannaway v. Glassco, 203 Ill. 353 (Ill. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilkin

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellee owned certain lands in Union Drainage District No. 3 of the towns of Seven Hickory and Humbolt, Coles county, this State. The district was organized under section 76 of the Drainage law, as amended May 11,. 1901, in force July 1, 1901. (Laws of 1901, p. 157.) The lands of the district were classified by the commissioners, and appellee, with other owners, was notified of the same, and also of the time and .place objections thereto would be heard. He appeared and filed objections to the classification of Ms land, but the commissioners overruled the same, and he thereupon appealed from their order by filing bond in the office of the town clerk of the town of Seven Hickory, that being the town in which his lands were situated. The town, clerk summoned three supervisors, who heard the appeal and reduced the classification on certain of the tracts. Thereafter the commissioners, in making their levy upon the lands of the district to raise funds to pay for work proposed to be done, disregarded entirely the appeal and order of the three supervisors and caused the levy to be spread on appellee’s lands in accordance with the classification made by them. He did not pay the assessment, but allowed the lands to be returned delinquent, and after-wards paid the amount due according to the order of the supervisors on his appeal, but refused to pay the remainder. That balance of the assessment was reported by the county treasurer to the county clerk, accompanied by his application for judgment of sale for the delinquency. Appellee there filed objections setting up the foregoing facts, under which he insisted his lands were not liable for the additional amount claimed. The contention of the county collector was then, and is now, that no appeal to three supervisors is authorized by the statute, and hence their order reducing the assessment on appellee’s lands was without jurisdiction, and void. The single issue in the county court was whether, under said amended section 76, an appeal would lie from the action of the commissioners in classifying the lands of the district, to three supervisors. That court decided the issue for appellee and denied the application for judgment of sale, and to reverse that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

There is no dispute whatever as to the facts, and the correctness of the judgment of the court below must be determined upon a construction of the language of said amended section. Appellee prosecuted his appeal under that provision of the section which says: “If any land owner of the district shall feel aggrieved at the assessment made by the commissioners, he may take an appeal to three supervisors, as provided in sections 24 and 25 of the act hereby amended.” The amendatory act is entitled “An act to amend section 76 of an act entitled ‘An act to provide for drainage for agricultural and sanitary purposes, and to repeal certain acts therein named,’ approved June 27, 1885.” Section 1 is as follows: “Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, 'represented in the General Assembly: That section 76 of an act entitled ‘An act to provide for drainage of agricultural and sanitary purposes, and to repeal certain acts therein named, ’ approved June 27, 1885, in force July 1, 1885, be amended so as to read as follows:” Then follows the amendment to section 76, containing, among other provisions, the language above quoted, authorizing an appeal to three supervisors. (Laws of 1901, p. 157.)

Section 24 of the act amended,—i. e., the act approved June 27, 1885,—provides: “At the time of meeting for re-. view, the commissioners shall hear whatever objections may be urged by any person interested, and if satisfied that any injustice has been done in the classification of the several tracts of land, or any of them, they shall correct the same in accordance with what is right; but if not so satisfied, they shall leave the classification as first made, and enter an order to that effect. Any person appearing and urging objections, who is not satisfied with the decision of the commissioners, may appeal .from their decision to three supervisors of the county, within ten days after the decision of the commissioners was rendered, by filing with the town clerk a bond with security conditioned to pay such tax as may finally be levied upon the land in question, and the costs occasioned by the appeal, in case the commissioners shall be sustained by the board of appeal.” Section 25 of the same act provides the manner of summoning three supervisors; how the hearing shall be had, etc., and authorizes the filing of their final determination, in writing, with the town clerk, to be recorded with other papers in the drainage record, which shall be conclusive. (2 Starr & Cur. Stat. p. 1546.)

On May 10, 1901, the day previous to the one on which the amendment to section 76 was adopted, the legislature passed another act entitled “An act to amend sections twenty-four (24), twenty-five (25), * * * and to repeal section twenty-seven (27) of an act entitled ‘An act to provide for drainage for agricultural and sanitary purposes, and to repeal certain acts therein named,’ approved June 27,1885, in force July 1,1885,” etc. Section 1 provides that the foregoing sections be amended to read as follows: Sec. 24. “At the time of meeting for review, the commissioners shall hear whatever objections may be urged,” etc., setting forth the language of section 24 above quoted from the act of 1885, and then provides: “Any person appearing and urging objections who is not satisfied with the decision of the commissioners, may appeal from their decision to the county court of the county in which the lands affected are situated, within ten days after the decision of the commissioners was rendered, by filing with the county clerk a bond with security conditioned to pay such tax as may finally be levied upon the land in question, and the costs occasioned by the appeal in case the commissioners shall be sustained by the court of appeal.” Section 25, as amended, provides for the manner of taking an appeal to the county court, the summoning of twelve land owners having certain qualifications, as a special jury to try the case on the appeal, and also, under certain conditions, for a further appeal to the circuit court. (Laws of 1891, p. 148.)

Upon the foregoing statement of facts counsel for appellant insist that an appeal by a land owner from the classification made by the commissioners in a district organized under said amended section 76 can only be taken to the county court of the proper county. It is undoubtedly true, as we held in Howard v. Drainage Comrs. 126 Ill. 53, that section 76 was intended to bring that particular class of drainage districts within the operation of the several preceding provisions of the act so far as they are applicable, and we there held that, in the absence of a provision in said section 76 (as it then existed) authorizing an appeal from the action of the commissioners in making a special assessment, the owner could lawfully prosecute an appeal to the county court under the preceding section 27. That case can, however, have no controlling influence upon this, because section 76, as amended, does expressly authorize an appeal to three supervisors.

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