People ex rel. Owen v. Toledo, Peoria & Western Railway Co.

248 Ill. 105
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 248 Ill. 105 (People ex rel. Owen v. Toledo, Peoria & Western Railway 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.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Owen v. Toledo, Peoria & Western Railway Co., 248 Ill. 105 (Ill. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

The county collector of Iroquois county made application to the county court of the said county for judgment against the property of appellee for delinquent hard roads tax for the year 1909 levied by the township authorities of Sheldon township, in said county. Appellee objected to judgment. The total hard road tax extended against the appellee’s property was $749.69. It paid $449.81 of this amount' and filed objections to the remainder, $299.88. The court sustained the objections as to $224.91 of the amount objected to but overruled the objections as to $74.93, and this sum appellee paid. The collector has appealed from the judgment sustaining objections to $224.91 of the hard road tax.

It appears from a stipulation agreed to between the parties at the hearing that at the annual town meeting of said Sheldon township in 1909 the proposition of levying a tax of one dollar on each $100 assessed value of the property, for a period of five years, for the construction of two hard roads in said town, was voted upon and the proposition carried; that on the 8th of May, 1909, at a special election held for the purpose of voting upon the question of borrowing $32,700 for the purpose of constructing and maintaining two hard roads in said town, a majority of the votes were for borrowing the money; that on the nth day of August, 1909, bonds in the sum of $32,400 were issued and registered with the county clerk, as required by law. It is also stipulated 'that the commissioners of highways have disposed of the bonds issued and received the money therefor.

The town' clerk of the town of Sheldon certified to the county clerk, under date of July 30, 1909, a levy by the commissioners of highways, under authority of the election at the annual town meeting in 1909, of a special tax of one dollar on each $100 assessed valuation each year for five years, for the purpose of constructing and maintaining two gravel, rock, macadam or other hard roads in the said town. The roads to be constructed were described in the certificate of the commissioners of highways. This certificate of the town clerk was filed with the county clerk on July 31, 1909. Under this certificate the county clerk extended the tax of one dollar on each $100 assessed valuation. Appellee objected to the validity of a part of the tax thus extended on the ground “that the bonds issued in pursuance of the vote taken at the special election were for the same purpose as the original vote at the annual town meeting, and that by operation of law and by virtue of the Hard Road act the bonds took the place of the original tax levy, and no amount of tax could be legally levied or extended except such an amount as was required' to pay the bonds maturing in the year 1910, together with interest on all the bonds;” also “that at the time the original vote was taken authorizing- a tax of one dollar on each $100 valuation, the law provided that the taxable value of property should be one-fifth of the full valuation thereof, and that the vote taken was with reference to such taxable value, and that afterwards, and prior to the extension of the tax, the law was changed, making the taxable value one-third of the full actual valuation of the property, and that consequently, by operation of law, the rate was reduced so that only such an amount as would have been .raised under the original valuation could legally be levied and extended.” This last objection has been disposed of contrary to the appellee’s contention in People v. Cairo, Vincennes and Chicago Railway Co. 247 Ill. 327, and People v. Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad Co. (post, p. 118.)

The -bonds bore interest at the rate of five per cent per annum, payable semi-annually, and eleven bonds, of $500 each, matured August 2, 1910. Others mature each year thereafter until 1914, when the last of them becomes due.

Appellee’s position is, that the only tax 'that could be levied by Sheldon township for hard roads was a tax sufficient to pay the interest on all bonds and, the principal of those maturing in 1910; that the money received from issuing and selling the bonds was simply anticipating the hard road tax authorized to be levied at the rate of one dollar on each $100 assessed valuation, and that that tax could not be levied and an additional tax to meet the principal and interest of the bonds. The principal and interest of the bonds payable in 19x0 was $7120. Sixty cents on each $100 of the assessed valuation of Sheldon township would have produced that sum, and appellee insists that to the extent the levy exceeded sixty cents on each $100 assessed valuation it was invalid. Upon that basis appellee concluded $299.88 of the tax extended against its property wTas unauthorized and illegal, and after paying the excess above that amount objected to judgment against its property for $299.88. The county court adopted the view of appellee, except it held that the tax should have been extended sufficient not only to pay the interest and principal-of bonds maturing in 1910, but the semi-annual interest maturing in February, 1911. For that reason the court overruled the objection as to the sum of $74.93 of the amount for which it was sought to recover judgment and sustained the objections as to the residue, $224.91. The question presented, then, is, whether a township having voted a tax of one dollar, on each $100 assessed valuation for five years, for hard roads, and having also, by authority of a vote held in accordance with the statute, issued bonds for hard road purposes, may levy a tax of one dollar on each $100 assessed valuation for five years and also an additional tax to pay the principal and interest of the bonds.

The first section of the amended Hard Roads act of 1909 (Hurd’s Stat. 1909, p. 1955,) authorizes an election to be held at the annual town meeting to vote on the proposition “for or against levying a tax not to exceed one dollar on each $100 assessed valuation of all the taxable property, including railroads, in the township or road districts, for the purpose of constructing and maintaining gravel, rock, macadam or other hard roads.” The petition of the land owners for the holding of such election is required to describe the location and route of the proposed road or roads, and to state the rate per cent, not exceeding one dollar on each $100 of the assessed valuation, and the period of years, not exceeding five, for which the tax shall be levied. Section 2 prescribes the form of the ballot to be' used at the election, and section 3 provides that if a majority of the ballots cast at said election are in favor of the special tax, it shall be the duty of commissioners of highways to levy a tax in accordance with the vote and to certify the same to the town clerk in counties under township organization, and the town clerk is required to certify the amount levied to the county clerk, who shall cause the same to be extended on the tax books for the current year. The time for which the special tax levied shall continue is limited to not exceeding five years.

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Bluebook (online)
248 Ill. 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-owen-v-toledo-peoria-western-railway-co-ill-1910.