People Ex Rel. Schlaeger v. W. J. Dennis & Co.

75 N.E.2d 542, 397 Ill. 381, 1947 Ill. LEXIS 415
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 22, 1947
DocketNo. 30003. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 75 N.E.2d 542 (People Ex Rel. Schlaeger v. W. J. Dennis & 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. Schlaeger v. W. J. Dennis & Co., 75 N.E.2d 542, 397 Ill. 381, 1947 Ill. LEXIS 415 (Ill. 1947).

Opinion

Mr. Chiee Justice Gunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellee, W. J. Dennis & Co., filed a number of objections to the 1943 tax levy of the board of education of the city of Chicago, after first having paid .the same under protest. The county court sustained six of the objections made by appellee.1 The substance of all the objections was that liabilities had been overstated under circumstances when they could have been fixed with certainty instead of being estimated, and in this manner resulted in an excessive levy for the particular iterfts. The number and title of the objections are as follows: Objection No. IX, Building Fund “Audited Vouchers” estimated $1,429,052.60, actual figure $816,804.02; objection No. X, Building Fund “Asset Cash” estimated $11,094.35, actual figure $41,908.76; objection No. XI, Free Text Book Fund “Audited Vouchers” estimated $548,140.47, actual figure $286,027.08; objection No. XII, Free Text Book Fund “Purchase Orders Payable” estimated $306,923.68, actual figure $121,379.08; objection XIII, School Playground Fund “Audited Vouchers” estimated $164,845.82, actual figure $22,931.73; and objection XIV, School Playground Fund “Interfund Loans” estimated $164,191.55, actual figure $139,761.45. These objections were all sustained, and the collector appeals directly to this court since the revenue is involved.

Counsel agree that the same issue is involved in each of the six objections, and therefore have árgued only objection IX. This objection arises out of the fact that the building fund for the budget of 1943 contains the following: Under “Estimated Current Liabilities” is the item “Audited Vouchers $1,429,052.60.” The audit of the books of the school board, under, date of July 22, 1943, shows the actual amount of audited vouchers for the balance of 1942 to have been $816,804.02, thus creating, it is claimed, an overestimate of current liabilities in the sum of $612,248.58, which the county court held to be excessive, illegal, and sustained objections thereto.

The correctness of this decision depends upon the construction of certain sections of the law in force at' the time, applying to school districts having a population in excess of 500,000. Sections 129 and 130, of the School Law (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1941, chap. 122, pars. 152, 153,) provide for the appointment by the board of education of a business manager who shall have general charge and control, “subject to the approval of the board of education, of all purchases, the making of contracts and leases, the condemnation of sites, the erection, construction, alteration and repair of school buildings,” and “perform the duties prescribed in section 130^ of this Act.”

Section 130J2 (par. 153a,) requires the business manager on or before the first day of December of each year to submit to the board of education a -report containing, among other things, a separate balance sheet for each fund under the control of the board of education, showing by classes the estimated current assets and liabilities as of the beginning of the next fiscal year. The fiscal year involved began January a, 1943, as provided in section 135. (Par. 158.) The liabilities provided to be estimated by the business manager are: (a) final judgments and accrued interest; (b) the principal of tax anticipation warrants and temporary loans and accrued interest; (c) amounts for which the board of education is required to reimburse the working cash fund.

In addition to this balance sheet section 130^ requires detailed estimates, by funds, of all taxes to be levied, and also estimates, by funds, of the amount it will be necessary for the board of education to appropriate for expenditures or charges to be made or incurred during the next succeeding fiscal year, and “Such estimates shall be so classified as to show the different objects and purposes for which such expenditures or charges are to be made or incurred and the amount required for each object or purpose.” The section then provides that within the first fifteen days of each fiscal year “the business manager shall submit to the board of education a revised ■ report on all matters herein specified, upon the basis of such information as shall then be available/’ and “within ten days after the first regular meeting of the board of education occurring not less than seven days after the adoption of the school budget, to report to the board of education the extent to which and in what respects, if any, the appropriations contained in such school budget in his judgment exceed the appropriations which such board of education is by law authorized to make.”

The fiscal year of the school district begins on the first day of January. Section 135^ (par. 158a,), requires the budget to be made within the first sixty days of the fiscal year; and the statute provides the form of the budget, substantially along the lines of the report to be made by the business' manager. Section 134 (par. 157,) provides the board of education shall, as often as yearly, and may as often as is necessary, appoint certified public accountants to examine the business methods and audit the accounts'of the board, and report thereon, together with recommendations, etc., and to spread the same upon the records of the board.

The appropriation ordinance was adopted January 13, 1943. The record does show that the business manager of the board of education made a report on December 1, 1942, in which he estimated what the assets and liabilities of each fund would be on January 1, 1943; but there is no showing that the business manager, within the first fifteen days of the fiscal year, submitted a revised report, upon the basis of information he then had, to the board of education; nor is there any showing that within the time fixed by law, after the adoption of the appropriation ordinance, he made a report of the extent to which, and in what respects, if any, the appropriations in the budget, in his judgment, exceeded the appropriations which the board was authorized by law to make. Since the report of the business manager contained the information from which the budget was made, the record should show the board acted upon it, to comply with the law.

Appellee relies largely upon People ex rel. Schlaeger v. Bunge Brothers Coal Co. 392 Ill. 153, which, in substance, holds that an appropriation and levy, based upon an estimate of outstanding tax anticipation warrants and interest, is invalid and in excess of the amount actually outstanding upon the basis of what is required in section 9-68 of the Revised Cities and Villages Act, (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1941, chap. 24, par. 9-68,) which provision is almost identical in its terms with section 130 1/2 of the School Law.

Appellant relies upon People ex rel. Toman v. Mercil & Sons Plating Co., 378 Ill. 142, as sustaining their position, and quotes from page 152 to the effect that all liabilities shall be estimated. We have frequently held that a-decision of this court must be read in connection with what was actually decided, and with what the language used applied to. (City of Geneseo v. Illinois Northern Utilities Co. 378 Ill. 506; White v. Seitz, 342 Ill. 266.) In the Mercil case the objector contended there had been an overestimate of liabilities, and a consequent reduction in amount of available assets from former years. The assets estimated to be available were taxes of former years, $3,340,013.02. This is what was left after accounts payable of over $8,000,000 had been deducted.

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Bluebook (online)
75 N.E.2d 542, 397 Ill. 381, 1947 Ill. LEXIS 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-schlaeger-v-w-j-dennis-co-ill-1947.