People Ex Rel. Myers v. Pennsylvania RR Co.
This text of 166 N.E.2d 86 (People Ex Rel. Myers v. Pennsylvania RR Co.) 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.
Opinion
THE PEOPLE ex rel. C.H. Myers, County Collector, Appellee,
v.
THE PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY, Appellant.
Supreme Court of Illinois.
*123 ROBERT M. WERDEN, and CRAIG & CRAIG, both of Mattoon, for appellant.
WILLIAMS AND RESCH, of Casey, for appellee.
Reversed and remanded.
Mr. JUSTICE DAILY delivered the opinion of the court:
Appellant, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, appeals from a judgment of the county court of Cumberland County overruling its objection to the 1957 tax levied for educational purposes by Community Unit School District No. C-1, a district of less than 500,000 population and one which maintains grades 1 to 12, inclusive. The sole issue is whether, in 1957, the levy of a community unit district was governed by section 17-2 of the School Code, which permitted a maximum rate of 1.25 per cent for educational purposes, (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1957, chap. 122, par. 17-2,) or by section 8-13 of the Code which authorized a maximum rate of only 1.00 per cent (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1957, chap. 122, par. 8-13.) The district in this case extended its tax at a rate of 1.25 per cent and it is the appellant's contention that the rate was excessive by .25 per cent.
District No. C-1, embracing territory in Clumberland, Clark, Jasper, and Crawford counties, was organized as a community unit district in 1948 pursuant to the provisions of sections 8-9 to 8-14, inclusive, of the School Code. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1947, chap. 122, pars. 8-9 to 8-14.) Except for minor changes of no significance to the present problem, section 8-13, as it existed from 1948 to and including the time District No. C-1 levied its 1957 educational *124 tax, extended taxing authority to community unit districts as follows: "The board of education may levy a tax annually upon all the property of the district not to exceed, except as provided in Sections 8-9, 17-3, 17-4 and 17-5 of this Act, one per cent for educational purposes and .25 per cent for building purposes and the purchase of school grounds, upon full, fair cash value, as equalized or assessed by the Department of Revenue. Such rates may thereafter be increased or decreased in the same manner and within the same limits provided by Article 17 of this Act." Ill. Rev. Stat. 1957, chap. 122, par. 8-13.
Article 17 of the School Code deals with budgets, tax warrants and tax rates of school districts, generally, where the population of the district is less than 500,000 inhabitants. Section 17-2 thereof, during the period from 1948 through 1956, at no time authorized an educational rate in excess of .65 per cent. Sections 17-3, 17-4 and 17-5, specifically referred to in section 8-13, above, relate to the increase of tax rates for various purposes by means of referendum.
In the case of People ex rel. Moore v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Co. 414 Ill. 419, decided in 1953 and involving a dispute as to 1949 taxes, the court was called upon to resolve the identical issue presented in the instant case, viz., whether the tax levies for community unit districts were governed by section 8-13 or by section 17-2. Pointing out that the act relating to community unit districts deals with an entirely different subject matter than those sections of the school law relating to school districts generally, we held that community unit districts properly levied their taxes at the rates prescribed in section 8-13. In construing the latter section, we said that the reference therein to sections 17-3, 17-4, and 17-5, demonstrated positively that the legislature was considering article 17 at the time section 8-13 was enacted and deliberately chose to provide different building and educational *125 rates for community unit districts, while leaving the provisions for possible increase by referendum the same as applicable to school districts generally.
District No. C-1, in the instant case, concedes that its educational levy was controlled by section 8-13 from 1948 until 1957, indeed during that period it annually levied an educational tax at a rate far in excess of rates authorized by section 17-2, but insists that an amendment to section 17-2 enacted by the legislature in 1957 was designed to permit any school district maintaining grades 1 through 12, including community unit districts, to increase the maximum rate for educational purposes to 1.25 per cent, and thus, that the force and effect of the Moore decision has been overcome. In short, it is the district's position that the 1957 amendment reflects a legislative intention that tax levies for educational and building purposes of community unit districts are now to be governed by section 17-2.
As it was amended in 1957 by House Bill 706, the scope and effect of which was recently considered in People ex rel. Dickey v. Southern Railway Co. 17 Ill.2d 550, section 17-2 provided in part as follows: "The school board of any district having a population of less than 500,000 inhabitants may levy a tax annually * * * as hereinafter prescribed: (1) districts maintaining only grades 1 to 8, each inclusive, at a rate not to exceed .65% for educational purposes and .1875% for building purposes * * *; (2) districts maintaining grades 9 to 12, each inclusive, at a rate not to exceed .65% for educational purposes and .1875% for building purposes * * *; (3) districts maintaining grade 9 to 12, each inclusive, in addition to grades 1 to 8, each inclusive, at a rate not to exceed 1.25% for educational purposes and .25% for building purposes * * *." Ill. Rev. Stat. 1957, chap. 122, par. 17-2.
It may be seen that the amendment does not make section *126 17-2 applicable to community unit districts in express terms, and it is likewise to be observed that the legislature, in 1957, did not amend section 8-13 to include section 17-2 as a further exception to the limitations placed upon the taxing authority granted to such districts. Appellee contends, however, that a legislative intention to accomplish such result is made manifest when "the drastic rewording and revision" embodied in the 1957 amendment is compared with the language of section 17-2 in force when the Moore case was decided by this court. More concretely, it is urged that when the legislature undertook for the first time in the 1957 amendment to delineate specific tax rates for schools maintaining grades 1 through 12, it must have intended for the section to have application to all school districts maintaining such grades, including community unit districts. In our view, the legislative history of section 17-2 lends no support to such a conclusion.
When under consideration in the Moore case, wherein we found that it did not apply to community unit districts, section 17-2 provided as follows: "For the purpose of establishing and supporting free schools for not fewer than eight months in each year and defraying all the expenses thereof; * * * in each district * * * having a population of less than five hundred thousand inhabitants, the school board of such district * * * may levy a tax annually upon all the taxable property of the district * * * not to exceed, except as provided in Sections 17-3, 17-4 and 17-5, .50 per cent for educational purposes and .1875 per cent for building purposes * * *." (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1947, chap. 122, par.
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166 N.E.2d 86, 19 Ill. 2d 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-myers-v-pennsylvania-rr-co-ill-1960.