People ex rel. McCallister v. Wabash Railroad

118 N.E. 402, 282 Ill. 218
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1917
DocketNo. 11719
StatusPublished

This text of 118 N.E. 402 (People ex rel. McCallister v. Wabash 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. McCallister v. Wabash Railroad, 118 N.E. 402, 282 Ill. 218 (Ill. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a judgment of the county court of Hancock county overruling the appellant’s objections to judgment for certain taxes and rendering judgment therefor against appellant’s property.

The taxes objected to are the town tax of'the town of Prairie, the city tax of the city of Carthage and the road and bridge taxes of the towns of Chili, Harmony, Carthage, Prairie and Montebello. The aggregate of the taxes here involved for which judgment was asked amounted to $1548.49. They were taxes levied for the year 1914. The court overruled appellant’s objections and rendered judgment for the full amount of the taxes claimed, and for penalties, aggregating $393-43-

Appellant sought to prove on the hearing that the town tax of the town of Prairie was attempted to be levied by the board of auditors and that no town tax was authorized to be levied by a vote of the electors at the annual town meeting, but the proof offered to support that claim was objected to on the ground that there was no valid objection on file under which such proof could properly be made, and the objection was sustained.

In support of the appellant’s objection to the road and bridge taxes in the towns mentioned, appellant attempted to prove that the commissioners of highways of the respective towns did not hold two meetings, as required by sections 50 and 56 of the Road and Bridge act, within the time required, for the purpose of determining the rate and the amount of tax to be levied for road and bridge purposes. Appellee objected to this proof on the ground that under the written objections filed by appellant such proof was incompetent, and this objection also was sustained. Appellant asked leave to amend the objections, but the court denied the leave and entered judgment for the taxes, penalties, interest and costs.

Appellee 'insisted in the county court, and insists here, that the original objections filed to the town tax of the town of Prairie and the road and bridge taxes in the five townships mentioned did not raise the question whether the town tax of the town of Prairie had been authorized by a vote of the electors at the annual town meeting and certified by the town clerk, or whether the commissioners of highways had, at meetings held at the times required by law, determined the rate and fixed the amount of the road and bridge taxes, and that any amendment to authorize the admission of proof upon those questions would be the introduction of additional objections, and this seems to have been the view of the county court.

The original objections to the town tax of the town of Prairie stated the tax was extended upon a certificate of the board of town auditors; that said board was not authorized to make the levy, “and a valid levy can only be made at the proper annual town meeting by motion or resolution, after which it is the duty of the town clerk to malee due certificate of the amount of tax voted and file the same with the county clerk; that neither a valid levy was made or certified, and the extension of such tax is without authority of law and is void.” The objection to the road and bridge taxes stated that in each and all of the certificates of levy upon which the tax was extended it was stated that the commissioners had determined the amount necessary to be raised, but that it was not shown this was “determined and certified at a regular meeting held on the first Tuesday in September, as provided by section 56 of chapter 121 of the Revised Statutes, and that the commissioners held a regular semi-annual meeting between the first Tuesday in August and the first Tuesday in September for the purpose of determining the tax rate to be certified, as provided in section 50 of said chapter, and no rate is shown to have been determined and certified. These sections are mandatory, and a failure to comply with their provisions invalidates the tax.”

It is true the objections we have above quoted did not, as directly and specifically as might have been done, state the grounds upon which appellant offered proof to show the taxes were not legally levied, but the objection to the town tax of the town of Prairie stated a valid levy could only be made by a vote at the annual town meeting and a certificate of the town clerk of the amount of the tax voted filed with the county clerk, and that no valid tax was levied, and ‘the extension of it was therefore without authority of law. We think, notwithstanding any lack of being specific or definite, it raised the question of the validity of the levy not alone on the ground that the tax was extended upon a certificate of the board of town auditors, but also on the ground that it had not been authorized by vote of the electors at the annual town meeting. It also seems plain and to be clearly understood from the statement in the objection to the road and bridge tax, that the objection was based upon the claim that the tax was not levied in the respective townships pursuant to meetings of the commissioners of highways held as required by sections 50 and 56 of the Road and Bridge act. We do not think the statement in the objection that these facts were not shown by the certificates of levy limited the proof merely to the introduction of the certificates and rendered proof that the meetings were not held as required by law incompetent. At all events, those objections were stated, and if the court was of opinion they were not stated with sufficient certainty and directness the motion to amend in that regard should have been allowed. Section 191 of the Revenue act provides that if anyone offers any defense to a judgment being rendered for taxes he shall specify in writing the particular cause of the objection, but the same section permits all amendments to be made in such a proceeding for the collection of taxes which by law could be made in any personal action. . This authorizes amendments of objections to judgment of sale for taxes. (Chicago, Madison and Northern Railroad Co. v. People, 207 Ill. 312; Chicago, Peoria and St. Louis Railway Co. v. People, 214 id. 471.) It is within the sound discretion of the court, on the hearing, to allow or deny further or additional objections to be filed. (People v. Huey, 277 Ill. 561; People v. Campbell, 278 id. 56.) But this rule does not apply to an amendment which does not introduce any new or additional objection but merely states with greater clearness the original objection. The fact that a rule was entered by the county court that objections should be filed by a certain date, which was previous to the hearing, is of no significance. Appellant filed its original objections within the time fixed by the rule, but its right to amend the objections thereafter was not barred by said rule. Chicago, Peoria and St. Louis Railway Co. v. People, supra.

It is contended by appellant that if the judgment for taxes and order of sale had been proper the court erred in including in the judgment the statutory penalties because they were not set out or claimed in the delinquent list contained in the tax, judgment, sale, redemption and forfeiture record, which is in the nature of a declaration and states the cause of action. Section 177 of the Revenue act pror vides for a penalty on delinquent taxes at the rate of one per cent per month after May 1 until paid or forfeited. Section 188 does not require that the amount of the penalty shall be stated in the delinquent list contained in the judgment, sale, redemption and forfeiture record prior to the-rendition of judgment.

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Related

Chicago, Madison & Northern Railroad v. People ex rel. Elsesser
207 Ill. 312 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1904)
People ex rel. Stuckart v. Huey
115 N.E. 739 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
118 N.E. 402, 282 Ill. 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-mccallister-v-wabash-railroad-ill-1917.