People ex rel. Wies v. Bowman

93 N.E. 244, 247 Ill. 276
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 93 N.E. 244 (People ex rel. Wies v. Bowman) 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. Wies v. Bowman, 93 N.E. 244, 247 Ill. 276 (Ill. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

This appeal is from a judgment recovered against the appellant’s property for delinquent taxes levied by the East Side Levee and Sanitary District, claiming to be a municipal corporation organized under the act of May 17, 1907, entitled “An act to create sanitary districts in certain localities and to drain and protect the same from overflow for sanitary purposes.” Hurd’s Stat. 1909, p. 923.

It will not be necessary to mention in detail the numerous objections filed in the county court. Those urged here resolve themselves into an attack upon the existence of the East Side Levee and Sanitary District because, first, the act under which it purports to be organized was not passed in a constitutional manner by the legislature; second, the act is unconstitutional; third, the proceedings by which the organization of the district is claimed to have been accomplished were so irregular that the county judge and the board of commissioners provided for by the act never obtained jurisdiction in the matter, the elections held were void and no organization was or could be effected by those proceedings.

In regard to the' last class of objections it may be said that they cannot be considered in a case of the character of this. If it be conceded that the act is valid, then the regularity of the proceedings by which the organization of a municipal corporation is attempted cannot be drawn in question in a proceeding to collect taxes levied by such corporation, even though the objection goes to the jurisdiction of the tribunal through whose agency the organization is effected. It is not controverted that a petition was presented to the county judge of St. Clair county to submit to a vote the question whether certain territory should be organized under the act in' question as a sanitary district; that he called to his assistance a circuit judge and the county judge of Madison county; that the board thus constituted fixed the boundaries of the proposed district; that at an election called for the purpose a majority of votes ■was cast for the sanitary district; that trustees were elected at a later election, and that the East Side Levee and Sanitary District has ever since assumed to be lawfully incorporated and has exercised the’ privileges and franchises of a municipal corporation. An attempt was thus made to follow each step required by the statute. Section 3 of the act provides that if a majority of the votes cast shall be in favor of the incorporation of the proposed sanitary district, the district shall thenceforth be deemed an organized sanitary district under the act. By these proceedings a corporation was professedly brought into existence with all the powers conferred by statute. There was a law authorizing the organization of a sanitary district, there was an attempted organization and a user of the franchises of such a district. There being thus an acting de facto corporation, it is clearly not admissible in this form of action to question the existence of the corporation or its authority to exercise the powers conferred by statute upon such corporations. Blake v. People, 109 Ill. 504; Trumbo v. People, 75 id. 561; People v. Newberry, 87 id. 41; Osborn v. People, 103 id. 224; People v. Dyer, 205 id. 575; People v. Pederson, 220 id. 554.

Eor the same reason that the regularity of the incorporation cannot be inquired into, the evidence in regard to the sanitary purposes of Drainage District No. 1 and of the Outlet Sewer District of East St. Louis, and in regard to the sanitary conditions in and around the city of East St. Louis, was properly rejected. Such evidence merely went to the legality of the organization and was incompetent for that reason.

The journal of the senate of the Forty-fifth General Assembly was produced in evidence for the purpose of showing that the act was not passed in the senate in the manner required by the constitution. The journal shows that the bill was read a third tiirv, and the question being, ‘Shall this bill pass?’ it was decided in the affirmative by the following vote: Yeas 34. The following voted in the affirmative,” followed by the names of thirty-four senators. The constitution requires the vote upon the final passage of all bills to be by yeas and nays and to be entered upon the journal. The objection made is that the nay votes are not entered upon the journal and it is not expressly stated that there were none. It is competent to go behind the printed statute book and the enrolled act and to show by the journal of either branch of the legislature that the act was not passed in the mode prescribed by the constitution. The journals of the senate and house of representatives must be accepted as containing a true record of the proceedings of those bodies. They must show on their face a compliance with every requirement of the constitution, from the introduction of a bill until its final passage, or it will not become a law. The silence of the journal as to anything required to be shown is evidence of its non-existence. (Spangler v. Jacoby, 14 Ill. 297; People v. Starne, 35 id. 121; Ryan v. Lynch, 68 id. 160.) If the journal fails to show anything which, if it had occurred, should have appeared on the journal, the failure of the journal to show it is evidence that it did not occur. If there had been any negative votes upon the passage of the bill in question they should have been recorded in the journal. The fact that none are recorded is evidence that there were none. The effect of the record in the journal is that the bill was passed by a vote of thirty-four yeas and no nays.

It is insisted that the' act violates the constitutional requirement that no act shall embrace more than one subject, which shall be expressed in the title. It is said that the act includes the subjects of levees, drainage, the taking control of other drainage districts and the maintenance of a police force. All these subjects are dealt with in the act but only in a manner subsidiary to the general purpose of the act, which is indicated by its title. The legislation is not incongruous but is reasonably connected with the subject mentioned in the title. An act may contain many provisions and details for the accomplishment of the legislative purpose, and if they legitimately tend to effectuate that object the act is not contrary to the constitutional provision. (People v. McBride, 234 Ill. 146; Meul v. People, 198 id. 258; Town of Manchester v. People, 178 id. 285.) None of the objects mentioned can be said to be foreign to the purpose of 'providing for the public health and safety, by the prevention of overflow, the inauguration of a general system of drainage for sanitary purposes, and making provision for the protection of the levees, ditches and other improvements winch might be constructed.

It is. contended that the act has for its main purpose the drainage of lands; that the sanitary purposes are merely incidental; that the drainage designed by the act to be accomplished can only be. done, under the constitution, by special assessment, and that, since the act malees no provision for a special assessment but provides only for the levy of a general tax, it is unconstitutional. The act purports, in its title, to aúthorize the creation of sanitary districts for sanitary purposes only.

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Bluebook (online)
93 N.E. 244, 247 Ill. 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-wies-v-bowman-ill-1910.