Pfeiffer v. People ex rel. McCormick

48 N.E. 979, 170 Ill. 347
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 48 N.E. 979 (Pfeiffer v. People ex rel. McCormick) 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
Pfeiffer v. People ex rel. McCormick, 48 N.E. 979, 170 Ill. 347 (Ill. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from the judgment of the county court of Madison county ordering the sale of certain lots for delinquent special taxes. The city of Alton had passed an ordinance for the improvement of a portion of Twelfth street, in that city, directing the cost to be raised. by special taxation. The proper legal steps were taken, an assessment roll was returned into court, and the same confirmed, no one objecting. Appellants defaulted in the payment of the special tax assessed against their property, and resisted the application of the county collector for an order of sale. The errors relied on in this court are, both the ordinance and the assessment roll are void.

The objection to the ordinance is, that under section 17 of article 9 of the act for the incorporation of cities and villages, as amended in 1895 by the addition of the proviso, the ordinance should have provided that the special tax levied on any piece of property should not exceed the special benefits which such property would receive from the improvement. That section, as amended, is as follows: “When said ordinance under which said local improvement shall be ordered shall provide that such improvement shall be made by special taxation of contiguous property, the same shall be levied, assessed and collected in the way provided in the sections of this act providing for the mode of making, levying, assessing and collecting special assessments: Provided, that no special tax shall be levied or assessed upon any property to pay for any local improvement, in an amount in excess of the special benefit which such property shall receive from such improvement. Such ordinance shall not be deemed conclusive of such benefit, but the question of such benefit and of the amount of such special tax shall be subject to the review and determination of the county court, and be tried in the same manner as in proceedings by special assessments.” (Laws of 1895, p. 100.)

The ordinance contained no reference to the question of benefits, but was somewhat loosely drawn, barely conforming to the practice which prevailed under the statute and decisions of this court prior to the enactment of the proviso to section 17, and after providing that the street intersections and crossings should be paid for by general taxation, and that the right of way of the street railway company should be improved at the cost of said company, it then provided that the rest of the improvement should be paid for by a special tax to be levied- upon the abutting lots and lands. We are of the opinion that this ordinance would have been sufficient prior to the amendment of section 17, for, as the law then stood, local improvements could be made and paid for by special taxation of contiguous property without any determination as to benefits, except such as was made by the council in passing the ordinance. (City of Galesburg v. Searles, 114 Ill. 217.) The only change introduced by the amendment in question is to limit the amount which may be assessed against any lot or tract to the amount it will be benefited by the improvement, and to make that question a subject for review and determination by the county court. Formerly the ordinance was conclusive as to the question of benefits,—now it is only prima facie evidence thereof; and if any land owner is not satisfied with the assessment against his property, he may appear in the county court and show, if he can, that his property has been assessed more than it will be benefited by the improvement. In view, however, of the construction which had been given to the statute by this court prior to the amendment, and from the language of the amendment itself, it seems clear that, where the ordinance and proceedings under it conform to the law as it stood before the amendment was adopted, and judgment has been rendered confirming the assessment, the judgment will be conclusive in a collateral proceeding, as in this case, that the property was not assessed in excess of the benefits to it. The amendment provides that the ordinance shall not be conclusive of the question, but that it shall be subject to the review and determination of the county court. It follows, we think, that the ordinance and assessment are still prima facie sufficient to support the judgment, though no reference to the question of benefits be made in the ordinance.

There is nothing in this record to show, and it could not have been shown in this collateral proceeding, that the total amount of the special tax required to be assessed exceeded the total amount of special benefits, and that the council exceeded its powers, and that the ordinance is void for that reason. It is therefore not necessary to decide what the effect of such a showing would be where the ordinance requires the whole cost to be assessed upon the contiguous property. The commissioners were bound to take notice of the statute, whether its provisions were incorporated in the ordinance or not, and in their report in this case they certified, among other things, that they made the assessment in accordance with the'statute.

We are referred to Greeley v. People, 60 Ill. 19, Crawford v. People, 82 id. 557, and other cases, as maintaining the contention of.appellants. Those were cases relating to special assessments, and not special taxation, and arose under different statutes.

The statute does not have the effect of abolishing all distinctions between special taxation and special assessments, as contended by counsel, but it takes from the city council the power to conclusively determine for itself the question of special benefits, and makes the question of such benefits and special tax subject to review and determination in the county court.

Nor is the objection well taken that the commissioners did not estimate what proportion of the total cost of the improvement would be of benefit to the public and what proportion to the property benefited. That question had been settled by the ordinance, and as it does not appear that the city council exceeded its powers in passing the ordinance, the judgment of confirmation is not void for the reason alleged. Watson v. City of Chicago, 115 Ill. 78.

In City of Sterling v. Galt, 117 Ill. 11, it was said (p. 17): “When the cost of a local improvement is to be raised, in whole or in part, by special taxation, the ordinance itself must either state the sum or give the data by which the commissioners can fix the amount to be thus raised, and when so fix'ed or ascertained, in conformity with the ordinance, it is conclusive on the property owners.” And it was there further said that in cases of special taxation the municipal authorities, if they think proper, may impose the whole burden upon the contiguous property. While this cannot now be done where such tax exceeds the benefits, in view of the amendment to section 17, it may, however, still be done when, as in this case, it does not appear that there is any such excess of the special tax over the special benefits.

In Neuman v. City of Chicago, 153 Ill. 469, it was held that where the ordinance provided that the improvement should be paid for by' special assessment, the commissioners might nevertheless assess a portion of the cost to the city, which would necessarily be paid by general taxation.

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Bluebook (online)
48 N.E. 979, 170 Ill. 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pfeiffer-v-people-ex-rel-mccormick-ill-1897.