People Ex Rel. Loudin v. Fisher

174 N.E. 33, 341 Ill. 621
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1930
DocketNo. 20412. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 174 N.E. 33 (People Ex Rel. Loudin v. Fisher) 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. Loudin v. Fisher, 174 N.E. 33, 341 Ill. 621 (Ill. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

The county collector of Wabash county filed in the county court a petition for a judgment and order of sale against two forty-acre tracts of land belonging to Reinhuld Fisher for a drainage tax of Special Drainage District No. 7, amounting to $241.97. The owner appeared and filed six objections, and later, by leave of court, filed three additional objections. On motion of the collector original objections 3, 4, 5 and 6 and additional objection 1 were stricken from the record, leaving original objections 1 and 2 and additional objections 2 and 3 standing. These original objections were as follows:

1. “That the commissioners of the said number seven (7) drainage district did not file any proper, legal and valid certificate of levy or other statement on or before December 1, A. D. 1927, or on or before December 1, A. D. 1928, or on or before December 1, A. D. 1929, with the county clerk of Wabash county, Illinois, the same being the county where said district was organized under and by virtue of section 70 of the Farm Drainage act.

2. “That the county clerk of said county of Wabash did not extend the said taxes alleged to be due thereon on said described lands on the collector’s books, the same as State, county and municipal or other taxes are extended, in appropriate columns, as required by section 70 of the Farm Drainage act.”

The additional objections remaining were as follows:

2b. “That no resolution has ever been filed by the commissioners of Special Drainage District No. 7 with the county clerk, who is ex-officio clerk of said drainage district, authorizing the dividing the levy of $9000 into three equal installments and the year or years to be paid.

3d. “That the certificate of levy filed on October 8, 1927, with the county clerk of Wabash county, Illinois, for $9000, fails to set forth the amount necessary for repairs and the amount necessary to build new concrete abutments to bridges and levees within said district, as required by law and as set forth in the contract of requirements as filed by said commissioners and the blue-prints thereof.”

On the hearing the collector introduced in evidence the delinquent list, the publication notice and certificates. The owner of the land objected to the introduction of the publication, but having filed objections to the merits without reservation he thereby entered his general appearance and waived any objection which might have been taken to the notice. People v. Southern Gem Co. 332 Ill. 370.

By introducing the delinquent list the collector established a prima facie case which entitled him to judgment in the absence of evidence showing a defense. It was stipulated that Special Drainage District No. 7 was organized under the Farm Drainage act. The first of the objections on which the cause was heard was that the commissioners did not file with the county clerk any certificate of levy or other statement on or before December 1 in either of the years 1927, 1928 or 1929, in compliance with section 70 of the Farm Drainage act. The objectors introduced the drainage commissioners’ record showing a certificate of the commissioners dated September 2, 1929, that they required $1000 to be levied as a special assessment or tax for drainage purposes for the specific purpose of keeping the work in said district in repair for the next ensuing year. There was no evidence that there were any notes, orders or bonds remaining unpaid, any amount necessary to meet the payment of interest for the ensuing year, no deficiency in the payment of interest before accrued or payment for repairs made, and no deficiency caused fey any judgment of the county court reducing the amount of any assessment. Guy McCoslin, the county clerk, testified that this certificate was filed with him as county clerk in September, 1929. The drainage record also contained a certificate of the commissioners of the levy of an assessment of $9000 on October 8, 1927, in the form prescribed by section 62 of the Farm Drainage act. The county clerk testified that the certificate was filed on that day. It is not shown by the express testimony of the county clerk whether either of these two certificates, or both, constituted the authority by virtue of which the county clerk extended the tax against the objector’s land. The burden of proof was on the objector to show that the tax was not properly extended against his land. If it was extended upon the authority of these two certificates no reason is shown why it was not properly extended. The objector introduced in evidence the tax list duly certified by the commissioners on October 10, 1927, in accordance with sections 26 and 62 of the Farm Drainage act. It is objected to the certificate of September 2, 1929, that the commissioners did not file a statement of the condition of the district as to “outstanding bonds, the amount necessary to repair, the amount necessary for interest to be levied for the payment of tax, bonds, if any bonds have been issued either for the years 1927, 1928 or 1929, under section 70 of the Drainage law.” The “amount necessary to repair” in 1929 was certified as $1000. From the fact that no statement is made as to bonds, interest or the other liabilities mentioned in section 70, it is to be presumed that no such liabilities existed at the time the certificate was made, otherwise they would have been mentioned.

(The second objection was that the county clerk did not extend the taxes alleged to be due on the collector’s books, the same as State, county and municipal or other taxes are extended, in appropriate columns, as required by section 70 of the Farm Drainage act. No evidence was introduced in support of this objection.

The second additional objection was, that no resolution was ever filed by the commissioners with the county clerk authorizing and dividing the levy of $9000 into three equal installments and the year or years to be paid. In support of this objection the county clerk was asked to state whether or not there was ever filed with him any tax list showing the amount of taxes to be paid or to be levied for the years 1927, 1928 or 1929. The objection was made that the tax list itself was the best evidence, but the court overruled the objection and he answered, “There is a list filed.” On cross-examination he stated that he had been county clerk since the first Monday in November, 1926; that he hardly thought there was a resolution filed in his office in which it was provided that the levy certified on October 10, 1927, was to be collected in three equal annual installments. He would not say positively, but he always made a point to record everything. He could not recall if one was filed, and what he meant to say was, if one was filed he did not recall it. This was falling far short of showing that no such list was filed. He further answered that he would not be positive that no resolution was filed; that it might have been misplaced, but he did not find it among the files. The tax list certified by the commissioners on October 10, 1927, is shown in the record to have been divided into three equal annual installments.

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174 N.E. 33, 341 Ill. 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-loudin-v-fisher-ill-1930.