The People v. C.B. Q.R.R. Co.

53 N.E.2d 959, 386 Ill. 114, 1944 Ill. LEXIS 520
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1944
DocketNo. 27602. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished

This text of 53 N.E.2d 959 (The People v. C.B. Q.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. C.B. Q.R.R. Co., 53 N.E.2d 959, 386 Ill. 114, 1944 Ill. LEXIS 520 (Ill. 1944).

Opinion

The defendant, Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Company, objected to the county collector's application in the county court of Kane county for a judgment against, and an order for the sale of, its real estate for the non-payment of taxes for the year 1940. From the judgment overruling the objections and ordering the retention of $5298.43, the amount of the taxes previously paid in full, under protest, defendant appeals.

For the year 1940, the board of supervisors of Kane county, on September 11, 1940, passed an ordinance levying the county tax, and, on December 11, 1940, three months later, enacted a budget or annual appropriation ordinance. It is not disputed that the levy was passed at the proper time. The validity of the entire Kane county tax levy for the year 1940 is assailed on three grounds, (1) failure to pass a prior county budget; (2) passage of the county budget after the beginning of the fiscal year which it purports to cover, and (3) the claimed failure of the levy and budget to embrace a calendar year of 365 days. In its first contention, the railroad company insists passage of a proper budget ordinance is a prerequisite to a valid *Page 116 levy. By section 156 of the Revenue Act, (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1943, chap. 120, par. 637,) it is provided that the county board of counties containing less than 500,000 inhabitants shall annually, at the September session, determine the amount of all county taxes to be raised for all purposes. Section 1 of "An act in relation to the budgets of counties not required by law to pass an annual appropriation bill," as originally enacted July 10, 1933, (Laws of 1933, p. 417,) provided, among other things, "the annual tax levy shall be made only after the adoption of the budget," and "shall cover the fiscal year beginning with the first Monday of December, and ending with the Sunday preceding the first Monday of December of the succeeding year." This section was amended, in October of the same year, (Laws of 1933-1934, p. 23,) to read: "1. In all counties not required by law to pass an annual appropriation bill within the first quarter of the fiscal year, the board of supervisors or board of county commissioners, as the case may be, shall after July 1, 1933, adopt each year an annual budget under the terms of this Act for the succeeding fiscal year. The vote on such budget shall be taken by ayes and nays and entered on the record of the meeting. The annual budget adopted under this Act shall cover such a fiscal period of one year to be determined by the county board of each county and all appropriations made therein shall terminate with the close of said fiscal period, provided, however, that any remaining balances shall be available until thirty (30) days after the close of such fiscal year only for the authorization of the payment of obligations incurred prior to the close of said fiscal period." Ill. Rev. Stat. 1941, chap. 34, par. 110g.

The omission of the previously included provisions (a) requiring the adoption of a budget prior to the levy and (b) fixing the budget period for a fiscal year beginning with the first Monday of December, and ending with the Sunday preceding the first Monday of December of the *Page 117 succeeding year, effectually resulted in their repeal. (People exrel. Hines v. Baltimore and Ohio Southwestern Railroad Co.366 Ill. 318.) The only requirement as to time for passage is contained in the first sentence, namely, that it shall be passed after July 1.

Although conceding the County Budget Act no longer contains any specific provision that a budget shall be passed before the levy, defendant contends that the subsequent adoption of a budget defeats its underlying purpose and invalidates the levy. As a principal basis for its contention, it is argued that the provision in section 1 of the Budget Act to the effect that the budget ordinance must be enacted prior to the levy was inadvertently omitted from the amendment and that the requirement to file a prior budget is, by implication, extended, because statutes enacted for Cook county and the Cities and Villages Act contain provisions requiring passage of appropriation ordinances prior to levy. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1943, chap. 34, sec. 61.7, par. 64.7; chap. 24, secs. 15-1, 16-1.) From this premise it is argued that the legislative purpose underlying the requirement to first prepare a budget was to furnish the taxing officials information upon which to base a proper levy. Cases pertaining to these statutes (People ex rel. Stuckart v. Arnold Bros. 282 Ill. 305;People ex rel. Fuller v. Peoria, Decatur and Evansville RailroadCo. 116 Ill. 410,) are not analogous, as urged, and are not controlling. A special statute having been enacted governing budgets required to be passed by counties containing less than 500,000 inhabitants, this statute, alone, controls the making and filing of such budgets. The power to determine when a budget ordinance shall be passed, and the order of passage as between levy and budget ordinances, rests exclusively with the General Assembly. This power was exercised in section 1 of the County Budget Act, as originally enacted. A comparison of section 1, as it formerly obtained, with the language of the section as amended and now in force *Page 118 renders the conclusion inescapable that, subject to passage after July 1, as directed in the first sentence, the legislature intended it to be discretionary with the board of supervisors when the budget ordinance should be adopted. The time of passage of the budget, in the present instance, being within the scope of the discretionary power thus conferred, and neither the County Budget Act nor the Revenue Act containing anything to the contrary, it necessarily follows that passage of the budget after the levying ordinance does not render the latter illegal and void and that it is not necessary to base the levying ordinance upon the contents of the budget. It also follows that the levy, being governed by an independent statute, was unaffected by the subsequent passage of the budget.

It is next contended the levy is void because of the claimed invalidity of the budget owing to the passage of the latter December 11, nine days after commencement of the fiscal year for which prepared. Section 2 of the County Budget Act provides that the budget shall contain (a) statements of the receipts, payments, revenues and expenditures of the fiscal year last ended; (b) a statement of all moneys unexpended at the termination of the fiscal year last ended; (c) estimates of all probable income for the current fiscal year and for the ensuing fiscal year covered by the budget; (d) a detailed statement showing estimates of expenditures for the current fiscal year and separately for the ensuing fiscal year for which the budget is prepared, and (e) "a schedule of proposed appropriations * * *." In subparagraph (e) it is also specified that the schedule "shall be known as the annual appropriation ordinance." The taxpayer insists that a postponement of preparation of the budget until after the inception of a new fiscal year had the effect of setting the provisions back one year, thus "knocking awry" the entire system, constituting, it is claimed, an insuperable obstacle to the furnishing of the information intended. The figures for the fiscal year last *Page 119

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Bluebook (online)
53 N.E.2d 959, 386 Ill. 114, 1944 Ill. LEXIS 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-cb-qrr-co-ill-1944.