People Ex Rel. Toman v. M. Born & Co.

26 N.E.2d 848, 373 Ill. 490
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1940
DocketNos. 25426, 25432, 25435. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 26 N.E.2d 848 (People Ex Rel. Toman v. M. Born & 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. Toman v. M. Born & Co., 26 N.E.2d 848, 373 Ill. 490 (Ill. 1940).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Jones

delivered the opinion of the court:

The county court of Cook county overruled objections of M. Born & Company, appellant, in cause No. 25426, the Chicago Union Station Company, appellant, in cause No. 25432, and the Guardian Life Insurance Company of America, appellant, in cause No. 25435, to the 1935 taxes of the board of education of the city of Chicago. Separate appeals were prosecuted to this court. The contention of the objectors in each case is that the levy included taxes for interest on tax anticipation warrants for the year 1935 and prior years and, to that extent, is invalid. The issue being the same in each case, the causes have been consolidated for consideration.

Judgment overruling the objections made by the several appellants was entered on January 14, 1938. The judgment recites that the collector and the objectors jointly moved to vacate the judgment, and, by agreement, the motion was continued generally “until the final determination of test cases involving 1935 tax rates have been determined by the Supreme Court of Illinois.” After the test cases pending in this court were decided, the judgment was vacated on May 9, 1939, the causes were heard on the merits, and judgment overruling the objections was entered. Appellee contends that the written objections in cause No. 25426 were not sufficient to include the grounds of objection now urged by the appellant in that case; that in cause No. 25432 appellant is bound by a stipulation recited in an order of May 2, 1938, that the orders entered are to be finally governed and controlled by the judgments of this court “upon appeals to be taken either by the attorneys for the objectors herein or by attorneys representing similar objections, or by the relator,” and is thereby foreclosed from raising the objection now urged, and that in cause No. 25435 the objection argued here was not raised in apt time. The record shows a custom of the county court to hear all objections of the same class together. At one stage of the proceedings the court announced that if anything was omitted it would allow it to be inserted, in order to get a complete record. We think it is clear from the record that the trial court considered the objections now urged. None of the appeals mentioned in the stipulation in cause No. 25432, except those now at bar, involved the issue here. Appellee’s contentions in these respects are untenable. We therefore consider the causes on the merits.

The settled law in this State is that tax anticipation warrants may be issued only against taxes already levied, and the statute in mandatory terms requires that they shall show upon their face that they are payable solely from such taxes when collected and not otherwise. Such warrants do not constitute an obligation of the taxing body issuing them, but the holders must look solely to the specific levy against which they are issued. When the warrants are sold or accepted, they become a lien upon the taxes to be collected from such levies to the extent necessary for their payment, and the transaction is closed on the part of the taxing body, leaving no future obligation on it, either absolute or contingent. It follows, that if the interest on warrants issued in prior years is included in the 1935 levy, it results in void double taxation, because such interest has already been provided for in the levies made for the respective years in which the warrants were issued. People v. Wabash Railway Co. 368 Ill. 497.

The determination of the issue depends upon the construction and effect to be given the several tables and computations in the annual budget of the board of education for the year 1935, together with the subsequent levy ordinance made by the city council of the city of Chicago pursuant to the requirements of the statute. It was stipulated that the items set out in the budget for interest on temporary loans: Educational fund, $3,750,000, building fund, $800,000, playground fund, $35,000, were, in fact, appropriations for interest on warrants issued in anticipation of the collection of taxes for such funds in 1934 and prior years, and for interest on warrants to be issued in anticipation of the collection of the 1935 taxes. The question is whether these amounts were carried into and became a part of the 1935 levy of $43,000,000 for the educational fund, $4,000,000 for the building fund, and $594,091 for the playground fund.

Section 135^2 of the general School law, (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1939, chap. 122, par. 158a,) as then in force, so far as material here, provides that the board of education shall, within the first quarter of the fiscal year, adopt a budget and shall pass a resolution to. be termed the “annual school budget” in and by which the board shall appropriate such sums of money as may be required to defray all necessary expenses and liabilities of the board to be paid or incurred during such fiscal year. Such school budget' shall set forth estimates, by classes, of all current assets and liabilities of each fund as of the beginning of the fiscal year, and the amounts of such assets available for appropriation in such year, either for expenditures or charges to be made or incurred during such year or for liabilities unpaid at the beginning thereof. Estimates of taxes to be received from levies of prior years shall be net, after deducting amounts estimated to be sufficient to cover the loss and cost of collecting such taxes and also deferred collections thereof and abatements in the amount of such taxes extended or to be extended upon the collector’s books. This requirement does not permit any deduction for anticipation warrants in arriving' at the net value of such taxes. (People v. Peterson, 366 Ill. 613.) Estimates of the liabilities of the respective funds shall include (a) all final judgments, including accrued interest thereon, unpaid at the beginning of such fiscal year, (b) the principal of all tax anticipation warrants and all temporary loans and all interest thereon unpaid at the beginning of such fiscal year, and (c) any amount for which such board is required to reimburse the working cash fund from the educational purposes fund pursuant to the provisions of section 134J2 of the act. The section requires the board to set forth detailed estimates of all taxes and other current revenues to be derived from sources other than taxes, during the fiscal year, and that estimates shall be segregated and classified as to funds, to the end that no expenditure shall be authorized or made for any purpose in excess of the money lawfully available therefor. It further requires that the budget shall specify (a) the several organization units, purposes, and objects for which appropriations are made, (b) the amount appropriated for each organization unit, purpose or object, and (c) the fund from or to which each appropriation is to be paid or charged, and shall include appropriations for the liabilities above mentioned, including interest to accrue on tax anticipation warrants and temporary loans, and the other liabilities and losses in collection not material here.

These provisions were complied with in the 1935 budget of the board of education. The “Statement of estimate of current assets and liabilities as of January x, 1935, showing the amounts of such assets available for appropriation in 1935” includes, among other items, as assets for appropriation to the three particular funds in controversy, the net uncollected taxes of previous years itemized as to each year and fund from 1928 to 1934, both inclusive.

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

Related

People Ex Rel. Hamer v. Board of Education
316 N.E.2d 820 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1974)
People ex rel. Korzen v. Franklin
305 N.E.2d 384 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1973)
People Ex Rel. Schlaeger v. Frankenstein & Co.
72 N.E.2d 340 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1947)
People Ex Rel. Toman v. Granada Apartment Hotel Corp.
44 N.E.2d 606 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 N.E.2d 848, 373 Ill. 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-toman-v-m-born-co-ill-1940.