People ex rel. Lee v. Kankakee & Southwestern Railroad

237 Ill. 362
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 237 Ill. 362 (People ex rel. Lee v. Kankakee & Southwestern 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. Lee v. Kankakee & Southwestern Railroad, 237 Ill. 362 (Ill. 1908).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the court:

At the June term, 1908, of the county court of Kankakee county, Daniel G. Dee, the county collector of that county, made application for judgment against the lands of appellant for taxes for the year 1907 alleged to be delinquent. Upon a hearing the objections interposed were overruled, ' judgment entered for the taxes, and this appeal is prosecuted.

The appellant objected to certain taxes, amounting to $148.37, extended for county purposes under an item designated in the levy as “salaries of the officers,” on the ground that the purpose stated was not sufficiently specific. It also objected to the road and bridge tax of the town of Otto extended against its property, the amount of this tax so extended being $234.81. The basis of the objection to the last mentioned tax will be hereinafter stated.

The county board levied $12,500 for “salaries of the officers.” We are of opinion the purpose of this tax was sufficiently designated by the words just quoted. The taxpayer would understand therefrom that this sum was levied to pay salaries which were payable out of the county treasury from money raised by general taxation. He could ascertain the approximate amount so payable, and if the levy was greater than it should be he could then object to the excess.

The' town of Otto is operated under the “cash system.” The tax levied in that town for road and bridge purposes was one hundred cents on each $100, forty cents of the levy being made to meet an alleged contingency. The statute requires that the commissioners of highways shall certify the amount of their levy to the town clerk; that he shall keep that certificate on file in his office and that he shall certify the levy to the county clerk for extension. (Hurd’s Stat. 1905, chap. 121, sec. 16.) It is first objected to this tax that the town clerk filed with the county clerk the original of the certificate made by the commissioners instead of a certified copy thereof. It appears that the commissioners delivered to the clerk duplicate copies of the certificate to the auditors and assessor in reference to the alleged contingency, duplicate copies of the written consent of the auditors and assessor and duplicate copies of the certificate of the levy. Both copies of the certificate of levy were signed by each of the commissioners. One copy of each of these documents the town clerk placed on file in his office, and the other copy of each he transmitted to the county clerk in the manner hereinafter pointed out. At the town meeting in 1907 the voters of the town of Otto, being under a misapprehension as to their power, adopted a motion levying a road and bridge tax additional to the sixty cents on the $100. When the town clerk sent the duplicates of the certificates left with him by the commissioners to the county clerk he attached thereto a copy of that part of the record of the town meeting which pertained to this tax. All of the papers so sent were attached together and delivered as one document, and they were so arranged that in reading them the certificates and the consent of the board of auditors and assessor came first and appeared in their chronological order and the copy of the part of the record came last. Following that, and attached thereto, was the certificate of the town clerk stating that the document which purported to be a copy of a part of the record of the town meeting was such copy, and no other certificate of the town cleric accompanied the instrument. It is conceded that the action of the voters was without legal effect, and their action is only referred to here that the facts may be clearly understood in regard to the papers filed with the county clerk. Upon the hearing, on motion of appellee, leave was given the town clerk to amend his certificate so as to show that the duplicate of the commissioners’ certificate of levy on file was a copy of the original certificate of levy remaining in his office. Pursuant to that leave he did so amend his certificate.

We think the contention that the document filed with the county clerk was the original certificate of levy is without merit. When the certificate was made in duplicate and both copies delivered to the town clerk he might properly treat one copy as the original and use the other copy for the purpose of certifying the levy tó the county clerk. The copy which he filed in his office was an original. The fact that the copy which he sent to the county clerk was made and signed by the commissioners is immaterial. The original certificate actually filed with the town clerk was not filed with the county clerk and the document filed with the county clerk had attached thereto a certificate which was not as full and complete as it should have been, yet all the papers were filed with the county clerk as one document, and the certificate of the town clerk was to the effect that the last portion thereof was a copy of the record of the town meeting. The other instruments which preceded the copy of the record and were attached thereto did not bear the file-mark of the town clerk, as the original of the commissioners’ certificate of levy should have done. We think, under these circumstances, the presumption would be that the instrument filed showing the commissioners’ levy was a copy, and not the original. This case is in this way distinguished from People v. Belleville and Eldorado Railroad Co. 232 Ill. 454, where there was nothing whatever to show that the papers filed with the county clerk were copies rather than originals. In other cases relied upon by appellant the originals were, in fact, filed with the county cleric. The court was right in permitting the amendment of the town clerk’s certificate. Toledo, St. Louis and Western Railroad Co. v. People, 225 Ill. 425.

Forty cents on the $100 of this road and bridge tax is further objected to on the ground that the certificate of the highway commissioners to the auditors and assessor does not state the existence of a contingency, within the meaning of section 14 of chapter 121, Hurd’s Revised Statutes of 1905. This certificate recites that in the opinion of the commissioners the additional levy is necessary “in view of the contingency that it is necessary, on account of their destruction, to re-build immediately nine bridges.” The location of each bridge is then given, and it is further stated that to repair them will cost the town $1890, and that it will take all of the levy of sixty cents to pay for other repairs and road work. It is urged against this certificate that the necessity of re-building bridges that have been destroyed does not create a contingency unless the bridges were destroyed by storm -or fire or some like event, and that the certificate is entirely consistent with the destruction of the bridges by the natural processes of decay, in which event, it is urged, no additional levy is authorized by the law.

In Toledo, St. Louis and Western Railroad Co. v. People, 226 Ill. 557, we said the contingency contemplated is something that does “not occur regularly in the ordinary course of events.” In People v. Peoria and Pekin Union Railway Co. 232 Ill. 540, one of the contingencies mentioned in the certificate was the necessity of providing for the protection of the piers of a certain bridge.

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Bluebook (online)
237 Ill. 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-lee-v-kankakee-southwestern-railroad-ill-1908.