People ex rel. Moomey v. Illinois Central Railroad

133 N.E. 779, 301 Ill. 288
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1921
DocketNo. 14307
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 133 N.E. 779 (People ex rel. Moomey v. Illinois Central 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. Moomey v. Illinois Central Railroad, 133 N.E. 779, 301 Ill. 288 (Ill. 1921).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

The county court of Macon county overruled the objections of appellant, the Illinois Central Railroad Company, to the county tuberculosis sanitarium tax, the taxes for the Sanitary District of Decatur, and the school taxes levied by four school districts in said county, school districts Nos. 19, 42, 63 and 96, and entered judgment and order of sale against appellant’s property.

Section 25 of chapter 34 of Hurd’s Statutes of 1919, in paragraph 9 of that section, enumerates as one of the powers of the county boards in the several counties of this State, “to cause to be erected, or otherwise provided, and maintained, all suitable buildings for a sanitarium for the care and treatment of all persons suffering from tuberculosis who may be admitted to said sanitarium by, or under the direction of said board, and to provide for the maintenance and management of the same.” Paragraph 145 of the same chapter provides that the county board of each county in this State shall have power, in the manner hereinafter provided, to establish and maintain a county tuberculosis sanitarium, and branches, dispensaries and other auxiliary institutions connected with the same, for the use and benefit of the inhabitants thereof, for the purposes aforesaid, and power to levy a tax, not to exceed two mills on the dollar, annually, on all the taxable property of such county, which tax shall be in addition to all other faxes which such county is now or hereafter may be authorized to levy on the aggregate valuation of all property within such county. This paragraph further provides, in substance, that the taxes aforesaid shall not be subject to the scaling process under what is known as the Juul law. The next paragraph (146) provides that “when one hundred legal voters of any county shall present a petition, to the county board of such county, asking that an annual tax may be levied for the establishment and maintenance-of a county tuberculosis sanitarium in such county, such county board shall instruct the county clerk to, and the county clerk shall, in the next legal notice of a regular general election in such county, give notice that at such election every elector may vote ‘For the levy of a tax for a county tuberculosis sanitarium/ or ‘Against the levy of a. tax for a county tuberculosis sanitarium/ and provision shall be made for voting on such proposition, in accordance with such notice, and if a majority of all the votes cast upon the proposition shall be for the levy of a tax for a county tuberculosis sanitarium, the county board of such county shall thereafter annually levy a tax of not to exceed two mills on the dollar, which tax shall be collected in like manner with other general taxes in such county and shall be known as the ‘Tuberculosis Sanitarium Fund/ and thereafter the county board of spch county shall, in the annual appropriation bill, appropriate from such fund such sum or sums of money as may be deemed necessary to defray all necessary expenses and liabilities of such county tuberculosis sanitarium.” The next paragraph of the act provides that when in any county such a proposition for the levy of a tax for a county tuberculosis sanitarium has been adopted a board of three directors may be appointed by the chairman of the county board for such sanitarium, and the following paragraphs provide for the terms of office of such directors, how vacancies may be filled on the board, provide for the organization of the boards and for the control and regulation of the sanitarium so established.

It is clear that under the foregoing provisions of chapter 34 the county boards in the various counties have authority to establish and maintain county tuberculosis sanitariums when authorized by a vote of the people of the counties taken as provided in paragraph 146. Paragraph 145 only purports to give power to county boards to establish and'maintain such sanitariums “in the manner hereinafter provided.” “The manner hereinafter provided” is set forth in paragraph 146, and this court in construing paragraph 145 in People v. Wabash Railway Co. 286 Ill. 15, said: “That act provides that the county board of each county shall have power, in the manner therein provided, to establish and maintain a county tuberculosis sanitarium, and branches, dispensaries and other auxiliary institutions connected with the same, upon an affirmative vote of the people for the levy of a tax for that purpose.” The affirmative vote of the people is provided for in paragraph 146. In further confirmation of this construction, it will be noted that the next paragraph (147) gives the president and county board the authority to appoint a board of three directors for the sanitarium only “when in any county such a proposition for the levy of a tax for a county tuberculosis sanitarium has been adopted as aforesaid,” — that is, adopted as provided in paragraph 146. By the provisions of paragraph 146, when the people have voted for a county sanitarium the county board is thereafter authorized to levy annually a tax not exceeding two mills on the dollar for the sanitarium fund, which means that the county board has the right, after such a vote, to make such levy indefinitely and without any further vote of the people, and there is no authorization in any of the provisions of said paragraphs for increasing such levy above said rate, by vote of the people or'otherwise. The provisions of these paragraphs also make it clear that the levy is not subject to be scaled under the Juul law, and that the rate levied for sanitarium purposes, when added to the rate for the aggregate of all other county taxes, cannot exceed fifty cents, unless the county rate is increased by vote of the people under the provisions of paragraph 27 of the same chapter. People v. Wabash Railway Co. supra; People v. Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Co. 295 Ill. 191.

Under the facts as stipulated in this case the county board of said county had at the September meeting made a levy for county purposes for the year 1920 of $194,790, including an item of $30,000 “for building Macon county tuberculosis sanitarium,” and the county clerk extended a rate of fifty cents to meet that entire levy. The rate for building the sanitarium was eight and one-half cents and was not scaled and produced the entire $30,000. At the same meeting of the county board a resolution was passed authorizing the submission to the people, at the next regular general election, of the question of levying an additional tax for five years, not to exceed a rate of two mills on the dollar, “for 'county tuberculosis sanitarium,” which proposition was submitted to the voters of the county and was carried at the November election. Thereafter the county board by resolution instructed the county clerk to extend this additional two-mill tax for a sanitarium voted by the people, and it was so extended as an additional tax, making the total rate for county taxes, including this item, seventy cents. At the same election, upon a petition of more than one hundred legal voters of said county, the proposition for and against “the levy of a tax for a county tuberculosis sanitarium” was voted on by the people, as provided in paragraph 146, and it carried by a large majority. The objections by appellant are that eight and one-half cents of the twenty-eight and one-half cents levied for a county tuberculosis sanitarium is illegal and void, because under the vote taken by the people, and under paragraphs 145 and 146, the rate could not exceed twenty cents. That objection is well taken, as the statute only authorizes a rate of twenty cents for such purposes.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People ex rel. Nordstrom v. Chicago & North Western Railway Co.
142 N.E.2d 26 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1957)
People ex rel. Walsh v. Illinois Central Railroad
100 N.E.2d 562 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1951)
People Ex Rel. Goodman v. Wabash Railroad
70 N.E.2d 718 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1946)
People Ex Rel. Wangelin v. Baltimore & Ohio Southwestern Railroad
22 N.E.2d 699 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1939)
People Ex Rel Ward v. Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railway Co.
6 N.E.2d 119 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1936)
The People v. C., B. Q. R. R. Co.
154 N.E. 468 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 N.E. 779, 301 Ill. 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-moomey-v-illinois-central-railroad-ill-1921.