The People v. B. O.S.W.R.R. Co.

8 N.E.2d 655, 366 Ill. 318
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 1937
DocketNo. 23985. Reversed and remanded. No. 24049. Affirmed in part and reversed in part and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 8 N.E.2d 655 (The People v. B. O.S.W.R.R. 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
The People v. B. O.S.W.R.R. Co., 8 N.E.2d 655, 366 Ill. 318 (Ill. 1937).

Opinion

In cause No. 23985 the 1935 tax levy of Gallatin county for county purposes included twenty-five cents for general purposes, four cents for mothers' pensions, five cents for blind pension, and twenty-one cents for pauper aid, aggregating fifty-five cents. Objections of The Baltimore and Ohio Southwestern Railroad Company to the items for blind pension and pauper aid were overruled, judgment was rendered for the tax, and the railroad company appealed.

In cause No. 24049 objections of The Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railway Company to items *Page 320 of five cents for blind pension, fifteen cents for pauper relief, and five and one-half cents for tuberculosis sanitarium, in the 1935 Shelby county tax levy for county purposes, were overruled and judgment rendered for the tax. Other items of the county levy, not objected to, including twenty-five cents for general purposes, brought the total levy for county purposes to seventy-five cents. The railroad company has appealed.

In each cause the objector deposited, under protest, a sufficient amount to meet the statutory requirement before filing objections. In both cases it is claimed that the items for blind pension and pauper relief are illegal and void, and that such taxes must be included within the limitation of twenty-five cents for general county purposes provided by section 25 of the Counties act. (State Bar Stat. 1935 chap. 34, par. 25, p. 984.) The People claim that under section 25, as amended in 1935, those items are excepted from the limitation. The validity and effect of the amendents are questioned by the objectors.

In cause No. 24049 it is also claimed that the levy for tuberculosis sanitarium is void because the proposition to levy the tax was submitted to a vote in 1932, whereas the tax was not to be levied until 1933. It is urged that, to be valid, the tax must be levied in the year in which the proposition is submitted to a vote. The issues as to the county tax being the same in each case, the appeals have been consolidated for consideration.

A county has no powers except those expressly granted by statute and such powers as are necessarily incidental to carry out the express grants. (People v. Cleveland, Cincinnati,Chicago and St. Louis Railway Co. 360 Ill. 180; People v.Wabash Railway Co. 349 id. 93.) Section 25 of the Counties act defines the powers of the county boards of the several counties. Among them is the power to levy taxes for county purposes. It follows that the rate specified therein is a limitation of the tax that may be so levied. *Page 321

Section 25 provides for the annual levy for county purposes at a rate not exceeding twenty-five cents in counties having less than 135,000 inhabitants. Prior to the amendments of 1935, certain taxes for specific purposes, not necessary to be noted here, were excepted from the rate so limited. Each of the counties of Gallatin and Shelby have less than 135,000 inhabitants. It is agreed that no statute other than section 25 confers any authority upon a county to except taxes for blind pension, or for pauper purposes, from the twenty-five-cent general county rate. Three amendments to section 25 were adopted at the 1935 session of the General Assembly, prior to the tax levies for that year. Therefore, if the levies for blind pension and pauper relief are to be excepted from the twenty-five-cent limitation, the authority to do so must be found within the provisions of section 25 as in force at the time the levies were made.

Each of the three amendatory acts purported to amend section 25, and set it forth as amended in its entirety. The first of these acts, (H.B. 375,) was passed June 12, approved June 19. By paragraph 6 taxes for a county blind relief fund were added to the then existing exceptions to the limitation. A second amendatory act (H.B. 581) passed June 26, filed July 12, excepted levies for pauper relief, but omitted the exception for blind pension as contained in House Bill 375. A third amendatory act (H.B. 1147) passed June 28, filed July 19, excepted levies for mothers' pension fund, but omitted the exceptions for blind pension as contained in House Bill 375, and pauper relief as contained in House Bill 581. None of the amendatory acts expressly repeals any other act or section of an act. Each of them provides: "Section 25 of `An act to revise the law in relation to counties' approved March 31, 1874, as amended, is amended to read as follows." The objectors claim that each of the amendatory acts repealed the next preceding amendment, leaving in force only the third act *Page 322 excepting a mothers' pension fund from the limitation. In the alternative, they say that if that be not true, then all three of the acts must be held void as irreconcilable. The People invoke the general rules that repeals by implication are not favored and that statutes in pari materia which are not inconsistent with each other are to be construed as constituting one act.

The intent and purpose of section 25 is to fix a limitation on the rate to be extended for county purposes. The exceptions are not intended to authorize levies for the purposes mentioned in them. Authority for making levies for those purposes is found in other acts. The amendatory acts before us are manifestly inconsistent. The rule that statutes in pari materia are to be construed together as one act applies only to such statutes as are, in themselves, consistent with each other.(Green v. Black, 352 Ill. 623; People v. Chicago andNorthwestern Railway Co. 340 id. 102.) Cases in which separate consistent acts have been upheld have no application here.

It is a general rule that where an act, or section of an act, is amended so as to read as it is repeated in the amendatory act, all such portions of the old act or section as are not repeated in the new act are repealed without any express words for that purpose, but all such portions of the old law as are retained, either literally or substantially, are regarded as a continuation of the old law and not as a new enactment. (Miner v. Stafford, 326 Ill. 204; Northern Trust Co. v. ChicagoRailways Co., 318 id. 402; Merlo v. Johnston City and Big MuddyCoal Co. 258 id. 328.) We cannot, by judicial construction, legislate into existence an omitted provision. People v.Wiersema State Bank, 361 Ill. 75; First National Bank v.Hahnemann Institutions of Chicago, 356 id. 366.

The three amendatory acts are obviously repugnant as to the subject matter of exceptions. It is the rule that if inconsistent acts be passed at different times, the last one *Page 323 is to be obeyed. (Kepley v. People, 123 Ill. 367; Huston v.Newgass, 228 id. 575; People v. Illinois Central Railroad Co. 295 id. 408.) The act of June 28, 1935, is the last expression of the legislature and the one which must be given effect. It therefore follows that the objections to the taxes for blind pensions and for pauper relief, in each case, should have been sustained.

The Shelby county tax for tuberculosis sanitarium is based upon a favorable vote therefor at the general election in November, 1932.

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Bluebook (online)
8 N.E.2d 655, 366 Ill. 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-b-oswrr-co-ill-1937.