People ex rel. Huck v. Trustees of the Estate of Newberry

87 Ill. 41
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 87 Ill. 41 (People ex rel. Huck v. Trustees of the Estate of Newberry) 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. Huck v. Trustees of the Estate of Newberry, 87 Ill. 41 (Ill. 1877).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The facts presented here, show that the school trustees of the town of Jefferson, during the year 1875, undertook to change the boundary lines of district No. 13, by adding thereto a portion of the territory embraced in district No. 2—and the territory thus embraced includes the property of the objectors. It is shown that the clerk of the board of trustees filed in the office of the county clerk a plat, upon which the property of the objectors is described as lying in district No. 13, and it is assessed and taxes extended against it as being within that district. It is, therefore, clear, that the present de facto district No. 13 includes the property of the objectors.

We think it is only pertinent to inquire whether, in this collateral proceeding, it is competent to determine the legality of the proceedings changing the boundaries of districts Nos. 2 and 13.

In Trumbo v. The People, 75 Ill. 561, a new district was formed, which was clearly within the prohibition of the statute, but it was said: “Yet, notwithstanding the school district was thus illegally formed, in violation of this statutory condition, a majority of the court are of opinion that, in this collateral proceeding, the legality of the formation of the district can not be inquired into, but that it must be taken as having been rightfully formed, and that the only mode in which the illegality can be inquired into and taken advantage of, is by an information in the nature of a quo warranto.”

We are unable to perceive why this principle should be applicable to the original formation of a district, and yet not applicable to its re-formation. The inquiry, whether it affects the whole or only a part, is the same; and the policy which forbids inquiry as to the lawfulness of the organization of the district, except by a direct proceeding for that purpose, equally forbids inquiry as to the lawfulness of the organization of a part of the district, except by a direct proceeding for that purpose.

District No. 13, as now recognized by the corporate authorities of the district and the township, embraces the lands of the objectors, and the corporate franchise of the district is exercised with reference to them, by imposing and seeking to collect taxes, to the same extent and in the same manner that it is exercised with reference to all other lands in the district.

There is no pretense that these lands are taxed as belonging to district No. 2, but the case presented shows that the proper corporate officers treat them as having been properly excluded from district No. 2, and included as a part of district No. 13.

The presumption in regard to the acts of school, as well as of all other public officers, when assailed collaterally, is, that they are lawful until the contrary is clearly established; and, hence, we can, in the present case, indulge in no presumption of irregularity except that which it is expressly agreed exists. The irregularity that is conceded here, is simply that a copy of the record of the proceedings of the board of trustees in reference to the plat and change of the boundary lines between districts Nos. 2 and 13, together with a list of the taxpayers, was not filed in the office of the county clerk. Since the plat that was filed with the county clerk, showing the change in the boundaries of the district, is the only record that seems to subserve any useful end, and the names of the tax-payers, who must necessarily change from time to time, can only be correctly obtained when taxes are due, from the assessor’s books, it is difficult to conceive what purpose is to be attained by filing the papers here omitted; and it is impossible to say that this omission prevents there being, at least, a defacto organization of district No. 13, extending over the objectors’ lands.

The objection seems to be purely technical, but, at all events, to have been availed of it should have been raised by quo warranto against the corporate authorities, to show by what authority they assumed to exercise the corporate franchise with reference to the objector’s lands.

The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.

Judgment reversed.

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Bluebook (online)
87 Ill. 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-huck-v-trustees-of-the-estate-of-newberry-ill-1877.