People v. Board of Supervisors

19 Ill. App. 264, 1885 Ill. App. LEXIS 195
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 25, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 Ill. App. 264 (People v. Board of Supervisors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Board of Supervisors, 19 Ill. App. 264, 1885 Ill. App. LEXIS 195 (Ill. Ct. App. 1886).

Opinion

Pleasants, J.

This was a petition for mandamus to compel appellees to make an appropriation in aid of the repairing of a bridge over Sangamon river, in Decatur township, which the circuit court dismissed on demurrer; and the question is whether it was sufficient in law. .

The application for aid was made under section 19 of the Hoad and Bridge Act of 1883, so much of which as is pertinent is as follows:

“ When it is necessary to construct or repair any bridge over a stream, or any approach or approaches thereto, by means of an etnbankment or trestle work, on-a public road, in any town, or on or near to or across a town line, in which work the town is wholly or in part responsible, and the cost of which will be more than twenty cents on tlie one hundred dollars on the latest assessment roll, and the levy of the road and bridge tax for that year in said town was for the full amount of sixty cents on each one hundred dollars allowed by law for the commissioners to raise, the major part of which is needed for the ordinary repair of roads and bridges, the commissioners may petition the county board for aid, and if the foregoing facts shall appear the county board shall appropriate from the county treasury a sum sufficient to meet one half the expense of the said bridge or other work, on condition that the town asking aid shall furnish the other half of the required amount. * * * Provided, however, that before any bridge or approaches, as contemplated as above, shall be constructed or repaired under the provisions of this section, the commissioners shall make a careful estimate of the probable cost of the same and attach thereto their affidavits that the same is necessary and will not be more expensive than is needed for the purpose desired; and such estimate and affidavit shall be filed with the petition. ”

The petition for the writ represents that the petition, estimate and affidavits therein set forth in hceo verba, were presented by the relators to the appellees at their annual meeting in September, 1885; that the. statements therein contained were true; that there was then in -the county treasury, not otherwise appropriated, a sum sufficient to pay the amount asked for; that they demanded the appropriation, and that the board refused to make it.

Appellees here admit — what appears on the face — that this petition properly averred every ma ter that is by said section made a condition of the appropriation, and that the estimate of cost and affidavits thereto attached and filed with said petition were in proper form ; and the demurrer further admits that those statements were true in fact, and that they nevertheless refused the demand to make the appropriation, and yet they insist that relators are not entitled to a writ of mandamus nor to an answer to the petition for it. ™

This position rests wholly upon the phrase in the section above quoted “ and if the foregoing facts shall appear.”

It is claimed that this is a condition which makes the petition mere allegation; and requires evidence alimide of the facts alleged, to the satisfaction of the county board; from wliich it follows and is claimed that if mandamus will lie in any case of this kind the petition for it here is fatally defective in not averring that such evidence was produced, and that the facts did thereby “ appear” to the board; and further that the county board, having the right to require such evidence, and_ consequently to determine its sufficiency, must also'have the discretion to make or refuse the appropriation as it shall or shall not be satisfied by it; in short, that this section of the statute is not mandatory, but directory merely, and that therefore mandamus will not lie in any case.

From the premises assumed the conclusion is inevitable. If discretion is given its exercise in a particular way can not be compelled. The People, ex rel., v. Dental Examiners, 110 Ill. 180; Board of Supervisors of Will Co. v. The People ex rel., Ibid. 517; and the action of the board is final, for no provision is made for its review by appeal or otherwise.

Upon this view of the effect of the phrase in question, as is inferred from the argument here made, the circuit court sustained the demurrer. We do not concur in it. This section (19) is new and a substitute for the 110th of the act of 1879, which was as follows: “When it shall be necessary to construct or repair any bridge in any town, or to build a bridge over any stream between towns, or over streams on roads between towns in the same county, which would be an unreasonable burden to the same, the cost of which will be more than can be raised in one year by ordinary taxes for bridge purposes in such town or one of such towns, the commissioners of highways of either town desiring to build such bridge shall present a petition to the county board in which such town or towns is situated, praying for an appropriation from the county treasury to aid in the building, constructing and repairing of such bridge; and such county board shall, when one half of the necessary funds have been provided for by the town authorities of either or both such town or towns, appropriate the other half.”

Under that section the county board was not bound to make the appropriation upon a petition of the commissioners of highways merely asking for it, without averring the necessary facts. These must not only have existed, but also “appeared” to the body called on to make it by reason of them. Thus, they were justified in refusing it where it was shown, on proceedings for a mandamus, that the provision for the other half of the expense had not been legally made by the town authorities,Jmt only by private arrangement by the commissioners for the loan of it when needed. Board of Supervisors of Stark Co. v. The People ex rel, 110 Ill. 577. Tet it was also held that a petition for mandamus, setting forth a petition to the county board which properly averred all the facts indicated by the statute as conditions of the appropriation and a refusal of the demand thereon to make it, without showing the 'production of any other proof of these facts to the county board, was sufficient on demurrer. The People ex rel., v. The Board of Supervisors of Iroquois Co., 100 Ill. 640; Town of New Boston v. Supervisors, etc., 110 Id. 197.

Thus it is shown that under that section, although not in terms required, it was no less necessary than under the substitute now in force and the particular phrase therein relied on, that the facts should appear to the county board; yet the unsupported petition of the commissioners was sufficient, prima facie, as to all that were averred in it. In other words, that the facts did “appear ” prima facie, by means of the petition alone, when therein properly averred.-

It would seem that the phrase under consideration really made no change in the law, but only declared in terms what was before implied and still would be, without it. Section 110 of the act of 1879 imposed an imperative duty, upon the conditions or in the case therein specified, and mandamus would lie. Board of Supervisors of Will Co. v. The People ex rel., 110 Ill. 517, and cases supra and so, by parity of reasoning, does section 19 of the act of 1883. The clause in question invests the county board in such cases with no more discretion or right of final judgment as to the duty of making the appropriation, than is possessed by all parties charged with an imperative duty upon conditions or in a case prescribed.

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Related

Board of Supervisors v. Towns of Condit & Newcomb
24 Ill. App. 560 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1886)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 Ill. App. 264, 1885 Ill. App. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-board-of-supervisors-illappct-1886.