Tappan v. People

67 Ill. 339
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 67 Ill. 339 (Tappan v. People) 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
Tappan v. People, 67 Ill. 339 (Ill. 1873).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sheldon

delivered the opinion of the Court :

This was an action of debt, in the name of the People of the State of Illinois, for the use of the trustees of schools of township No. 12 north, of range No. 6 west of the third principal meridian, against Tapp an, the appellant, collector of taxes of Macoupin county, and his sureties, on the official bond of the former as such collector, to recover' the amount of district school taxes levied in eight several school districts of said township, alleged to have been collected by Tappan as collector of taxes for the year 1862.

A demurrer to the declaration was overruled by the court below. The defendants stood by their demurrer, and the court rendered judgment against them for the penalty of the bond, to be discharged upon the payment of $1217.50, the damages which had been assessed by a jury. Tappan appealed.

The errors assigned are, the overruling of the demurrer, and the rendering judgment for an aggregate sum without specifying the respective amounts recovered for the several school districts.

It is first objected, that the suit was wrongly brought for the use of the trustees of schools of the township ; that it should have been brought for the use of the township treasurer, Or for the use of the school districts.

It is true, that it is the duty of the collector to pay over the district school taxes collected to the township treasurer; and the statute provides that, on failure of the collector to pay such taxes to the treasurer on demand, it shall be competent for the treasurer or any authorized person to proceed against the collector and his securities, etc. Tet, it does not follow that the suit on the collector’s bond must be brought for the use of the township treasurer. The statute is silent as to the person for whose use the action is to be brought in such case. Neither the trustees of schools nor the township treasurer would recover the taxes for their private use. The recovery would be in trust for the several school districts wherein the taxes were levied. The trustees of schools of the township are made, by statute, a body corporate, with power to sue and be sued, etc. The township treasurer is appointed and removable by them, and is but the fiscal officer and clerk of the corporation. The avails of a recovery for the use of the trustees of schools would be paid into the hands of the township treasurer, to be by him held for the school districts, and to be paid out on the order of their boards of school directors.

Section 62 of the school act of 1857, provides that all suits brought, or actions instituted under the provisions of the act, maybe brought in the name of the board of trustees of township -, range-, except as is provided for actions qui tam in the act, or in favor of county superintendents. It is answered to this : that the present suit is not brought under the provisions of the school law, but that it is an action upon the collector’s bond. Granting that, still, the provision indicates, what also various other provisions of the school act which might be cited, go to show, that it is in consonance with the manifest spirit and intent of the whole tenor of the school law that the suit should be brought for the use of the trustees of schools, rather than for that of the township treasurer. There is an obvious fitness, too, that the body corporate, itself, should be the party to the suit, rather than its subordinate officer, as is the township treasurer.

We do not regard the objection as well taken, that the suit should have been brought for the use of the township treasurer instead of the trustees of schools. And we consider as equally unfounded the claim that the suit should have been brought for the use of the school directors of the districts. Although these district school taxes are levied by the school directors for the benefit of the school districts, they do not, under the statute, go into the hands or the keeping of the school directors, but they are paid into the hands of the township treasurer, to be by him kept, and only paid out upon the order of the proper board of school directors, stating the purpose for which, and on what account drawn. School districts, too, are subject to be altered or changed at any regular ses- ( sion of the school trustees, and in case of the formation of a new district from one or more districts, the township trustees of schools are required by the statute to make division of the tax funds in the hands of the township treasurer, or which may be received by him, and distribute them among the districts concerned according to a certain mode pointed out in the statute. In order, then, to meet the contingency of any alteration of the school districts by the township trustees, it is necessary that the taxes should go into the hands of the township treasurer where the trustees can control any division and distribution of them they may make.

We are of opinion that the suit was properly brought for the use of the trustees of schools of the township.

Section 45 of the school act of 1857, provides that, on or before the first day of April next after the delivery of the tax books to the ctillector, or so soon thereafter as the township treasurer shall present the county clerk’s certificate of the amount of district school tax due each district in his township, and make a demand thereof, the collector shall pay to the township treasurer the full amount of the tax so certified by the county clerk, retaining only his fees for collection. The next section, 46, provides that, if any collector shall fail to pay the amount of said tax, or any part thereof, as required in the aforesaid section, it shall be competent for the township treasurer, or other authorized person, to proceed against such collector and his securities in an action of debt, etc., and the said collector, so in default, shall pay twelve per centum upon the amount due, to be assessed as damages, which shall be included in the judgment rendered against him.

It is objected that the declaration is defective in not averring such demand, and the presentation of such certificate as named in the 45th section.

The declaration, we think, does sufficiently aver the demand, but it is silent as to presenting the certificate. But we can not regard that as an essential prerequisite to a right of action on the bond for the taxes collected. The only purpose of presenting the certificate would seem to be, to acquaint the collector with the amount of district school taxes due the school districts in the township. But the collector has the means of such information in his own hands by an inspection of the tax books in his possession. The tax books, as we understand, have set down in them the same statement of the amount of taxes as that contained in the certificate. We do not perceive that the presentation of the certificate is material in order to the paying over of the taxes by the collector. After the time limited by the statute for their payment by him, the collector should pay over these taxes which he has collected to the township treasurer on demand. He has no just claim to retain them afterwards, and his doing so, we are of opinion, should be regarded as a breach of his official duty as collector, for which he is liable' on his official bond, even though the treasurer may have neglected to present the certificate.

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

Related

School District No. 88 v. Kooper
43 N.E.2d 542 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1942)
Carter Oil Co. v. Liggett
21 N.E.2d 569 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1939)
The People v. Lee
190 N.E. 264 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1934)
Lynn v. Trustees of Schools
271 Ill. App. 539 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1933)
State Bank v. Brennan
7 Colo. App. 427 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1896)
Jerauld County v. Williams
63 N.W. 905 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 Ill. 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tappan-v-people-ill-1873.